قراءة كتاب The Ether of Space
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FIG. | Illustrations of Aberration. | |
1. | Cannon shots | 35 |
2. | Boats or Waves | 36 |
3. | Lighthouse beams | 37 |
4. | Ray through a moving stratum | 40 |
5. | Wave-fronts in moving medium | 41 |
6. | Normal reflexion in moving medium | 43 |
Experiments on Ether drift. | ||
7. | Interference Kaleidoscope | 51 |
8. | Hoek's experiment | 53 |
9. | Experiment of Mascart and Jamin | 54 |
10. | Diagram of Michelson's experiment | 61 |
Illustrations of Ether Machine (Lodge). | ||
11. | Diagram of course of light | 69 |
12. | General view of whirling part of Ether Machine | 72 |
13. | General view of optical frame | 73 |
14. | Drawing of optical details | 74 |
15. | View of Ether Machine in action | Frontispiece |
16. | Appearance of interference bands and micrometer wires | 76 |
17. | Iron mass for magnetisation | 77 |
18. | Appearance of bands | 76 |
19. | Arrangement for electrification | 78 |
INTRODUCTION
"Ether or Æther (αιθηρ probably from αιθω I burn,) a material substance of a more subtle kind than visible bodies, supposed to exist in those parts of space which are apparently empty."
So begins the article "Ether," written for the ninth edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica, by James Clerk Maxwell.
The derivation of the word seems to indicate some connexion in men's minds with the idea of Fire: the other three "elements," Earth, Water, Air, representing the solid, liquid, and gaseous conditions of ordinary matter respectively. The name Æther suggests a far more subtle or penetrating and ultra-material kind of substance.
Newton employs the term for the medium which fills space—not only space which appears to be empty, but space also which appears to be full; for the luminiferous ether must undoubtedly penetrate between the atoms—must exist in the pores so to speak—of every transparent substance, else light could not travel through it. The following is an extract from Newton's surmises concerning this medium:—
"Qu. 18. If in two large tall cylindrical Vessels of Glass inverted, two little Thermometers be suspended so as not to touch the Vessels, and the Air be drawn out of one of these Vessels, and these Vessels thus prepared be carried out of a cold place into a warm one; the Thermometer in vacuo will grow warm as much and almost as soon as the Thermometer which is not in vacuo. And when the vessels are carried back into the cold place, the Thermometer in vacuo will grow cold almost as soon as the other Thermometer. Is not the Heat of the warm Room conveyed through the Vacuum by the Vibrations of a much subtiler Medium than Air, which after the Air was drawn out remained in the Vacuum? And is not this Medium the same with that Medium by which Light is [transmitted], and by whose Vibrations Light communicates Heat to Bodies?... And do not the Vibrations of this Medium in hot Bodies contribute to the intenseness and duration of their Heat? And do not hot Bodies communicate their Heat to contiguous cold ones by the Vibrations of this Medium propagated from them into the cold ones? And is not this Medium exceedingly more rare and subtile than the Air, and exceedingly more elastic and active? And doth it not readily pervade all bodies? And is it not (by its elastic force) expanded through all the