Ether hypothesis and M/M Experiment not needed

In summary, Galileo formulated the Principle of Equivalence which says that the laws of motion are the same in all inertial frames of reference. This is in contrast to the Principle of Relativity which states that the speed of light is observer dependent.
  • #1
Bible Thumper
88
0
...For Relativity...
In fact, Relativity should have come about even if there was no ether hypothesis to justify the Law of the Constancy of the Velocity of Light. In fact, I'm kind of surprised James Clerk Maxwell didn't come up with Special Relativity himself in 1857...
 
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  • #2
Relativity comes about if you assume Maxwell's laws work in every inertial frame, but there's no reason to assume this should be true in the absence of experimental evidence. The idea of the ether hypothesis is that they would only work precisely in the rest frame of the ether, in other frames you'd have to modify them with a Galilei transform.
 
  • #3
Hello Bible Thumper

The existence of the ether as a propagating medium for EM radiation led to the prediction that the speed of light, while constant relative to the ether, would be observer dependent. That is dependent on the observers motion relative to it (the ether), which is what the MM experiment was expected to find. I don't see how the ether hypothesis, and i take this to mean the existence of the ether, was required to justify the constancy of c.

However one could use the term constancy of the speed of light to mean that it is constant in any particular frame, but different between frames. In the light of SR this interpretation would be wrong.

Matheinste.
 
  • #4
JesseM said:
Relativity comes about if you assume Maxwell's laws work in every inertial frame, but there's no reason to assume this should be true in the absence of experimental evidence. The idea of the ether hypothesis is that they would only work precisely in the rest frame of the ether, in other frames you'd have to modify them with a Galilei transform.

You'd think that the ether would be the first and most intuitive explanation for the constancy of c. But! Suppose Maxwell did consider time and space, and that he came up with the Principle of Relativity, which is an idea completely independent of any experiment (Michelson/Morley) or hypothesis (ether).
All he'd have to do is intuitively connect his nascent Law to the idea of the Principle of Relativity, and voila! The Special Theory of Relativity! :)
 
  • #5
No ether or experimentation needed.
 
  • #6
matheinste said:
Hello Bible Thumper

The existence of the ether as a propagating medium for EM radiation led to the prediction that the speed of light, while constant relative to the ether, would be observer dependent. That is dependent on the observers motion relative to it (the ether), which is what the MM experiment was expected to find. I don't see how the ether hypothesis, and i take this to mean the existence of the ether, was required to justify the constancy of c.

However one could use the term constancy of the speed of light to mean that it is constant in any particular frame, but different between frames. In the light of SR this interpretation would be wrong.

Matheinste.

The Principle of Relativity, which A. Einstein said "sounded so simple and natural" that it had to be true, automatically generates independent frames of reference. No ether needed.
 
  • #7
Bible Thumper said:
...For Relativity...
In fact, Relativity should have come about even if there was no ether hypothesis to justify the Law of the Constancy of the Velocity of Light. In fact, I'm kind of surprised James Clerk Maxwell didn't come up with Special Relativity himself in 1857...

If you're going to make bold assertions, then you need to back them up.
 
  • #8
Bible Thumper said:
You'd think that the ether would be the first and most intuitive explanation for the constancy of c. But! Suppose Maxwell did consider time and space, and that he came up with the Principle of Relativity, which is an idea completely independent of any experiment (Michelson/Morley) or hypothesis (ether).
All he'd have to do is intuitively connect his nascent Law to the idea of the Principle of Relativity, and voila! The Special Theory of Relativity! :)
To get the principle of relativity he'd also have to postulate that all the other laws of physics are invariant under the Lorentz transformation too, not just Maxwell's laws. This is a pretty big leap, considering that the non-electromagnetic Newtonian laws known in Maxwell's time didn't have this property (though they turned out to just be approximations to Lorentz-invariant laws).
Bible Thumper said:
The Principle of Relativity, which A. Einstein said "sounded so simple and natural" that it had to be true
Did Einstein really say it "had to be true"? Where?
 
  • #9
Bible Thumper said:
Suppose Maxwell did consider time and space, and that he came up with the Principle of Relativity

Schutz, Gravity from the Ground Up, p6, http://assets.cambridge.org/97805214/55060/sample/9780521455060ws.pdf

Apparently the Principle of Relativity was known before Maxwell, having been enunciated by Galilei. Do you think Maxwell was unaware of it?

Galilei also formulated the Principle of Equivalence. Newton was aware of this, stated it in his Principia, and used it to solve a problem.
 
  • #10
JesseM said:
To get the principle of relativity he'd also have to postulate that all the other laws of physics are invariant under the Lorentz transformation too, not just Maxwell's laws. This is a pretty big leap, considering that the non-electromagnetic Newtonian laws known in Maxwell's time didn't have this property (though they turned out to just be approximations to Lorentz-invariant laws).

Did Einstein really say it "had to be true"? Where?

This book:
Relativity: The Special and the General Theory--A Clear Explanation that Anyone Can Understand
Written by The Man himself.
If you can get it on-line thru Google books, read the part about the Principle of Relativity. In it, he tells us he came by the idea before he read about the results of the Michaelson/Morley experiment. He described the idea (as best my memory can serve) as the Principle whereby all natural laws have to be maintained, regardless of what reference frame the observation of the experiments on the natural law is taking place.
And since c=300K regardless, it stands to reason that time and space have to go thru contractions relative to observers.
 
  • #11
atyy said:
Schutz, Gravity from the Ground Up, p6, http://assets.cambridge.org/97805214/55060/sample/9780521455060ws.pdf

Apparently the Principle of Relativity was known before Maxwell, having been enunciated by Galilei. Do you think Maxwell was unaware of it?

Galilei also formulated the Principle of Equivalence. Newton was aware of this, stated it in his Principia, and used it to solve a problem.

I thought the Principle of equivalence was strictly 1906 thought-experiment work?
 
  • #12
Bible Thumper said:
Written by The Man himself.
If you can get it on-line thru Google books, read the part about the Principle of Relativity. In it, he tells us he came by the idea before he read about the results of the Michaelson/Morley experiment. He described the idea (as best my memory can serve) as the Principle whereby all natural laws have to be maintained, regardless of what reference frame the observation of the experiments on the natural law is taking place.
And since c=300K regardless, it stands to reason that time and space have to go thru contractions relative to observers.
The book is online here, can you find the part where he said it "had to be true"? I note that on this page he seems to say there is no way to rule out the possibility the principle of relativity might be wrong a priori, although he then gives some reasons why we might consider "a priori not very probable" that it'd be false:
As long as one was convinced that all natural phenomena were capable of representation with the help of classical mechanics, there was no need to doubt the validity of this principle of relativity. But in view of the more recent development of electrodynamics and optics it became more and more evident that classical mechanics affords an insufficient foundation for the physical description of all natural phenomena. At this juncture the question of the validity of the principle of relativity became ripe for discussion, and it did not appear impossible that the answer to this question might be in the negative.
 
  • #14
Bible Thumper said:
The Principle of Relativity, which A. Einstein said "sounded so simple and natural" that it had to be true

I don't know about Special Relativity, but there's a famous quote to this effect for General Relativity: "Then I would feel sorry for the good Lord. The theory is correct anyway. (1919, reply to his assistant, Ilse Rosenthal-Schneider, who asked what he would have done had Eddington's eclipse measurements not supported general relativity)" http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/print/23008

I think JL Martin's GR text says that Maxwell knew gravity was a "kinematic force" like the centrifugal force, and was working on a modification of Newton's gravity that had waves like electromagnetism or something like that. He even wonders what would have happened if Maxwell had not died at age 48.

Bible Thumper said:
No ether or experimentation needed.
I personally would not accept the Principle of Relativity without experimental evidence, though I think I'd be quite disturbed if it had been found to be false. But I'm fond of absolute space too - relativity let's us have our cake and eat it, since every inertial frame is as good as absolute space.
 
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  • #16
Bible Thumper said:
In fact, Relativity should have come about even if there was no ether hypothesis to justify the Law of the Constancy of the Velocity of Light.
The invariance of c was not known at the time of Maxwell. Why would he have tried to justify a strange experimental result that had not yet been discovered and was not predicted by any theory of the time?
 
  • #17
JesseM said:
The book is online here, can you find the part where he said it "had to be true"? I note that on this page he seems to say there is no way to rule out the possibility the principle of relativity might be wrong a priori, although he then gives some reasons why we might consider "a priori not very probable" that it'd be false:

Here's what I paraphrased:
Those of you who have carefully followed the preceding discussion are almost sure to expect that we should retain the principle of relativity, which appeals so convincingly to the intellect because it is so natural and simple.
Here, Einstein said the Principle should be retained by sheer virtue of its simplicity and naturalness.
Immediately after, he says this:
The epoch-making theoretical investigations of H. A. Lorentz on the electrodynamical and optical phenomena connected with moving bodies show that experience in this domain leads conclusively to a theory of electromagnetic phenomena, of which the law of the constancy of the velocity of light in vacuo is a necessary consequence.
Which stemmed from this:
As long as one was convinced that all natural phenomena were capable of representation with the help of classical mechanics, there was no need to doubt the validity of this principle of relativity. But in view of the more recent development of electrodynamics and optics it became more and more evident that classical mechanics affords an insufficient foundation for the physical description of all natural phenomena.

If you have followed me up to this point, you will note that A. Einstein favored the Principle of Relativity, but it was the then-recent research from Lorentz that caused him to create the Special Theory; to unify Lorentz's work and the Principle of Relativity.

Could he have done this without Lorentz's work? As my quoting shows, he could have; the only thing required is a formal, rigorous definition of time in physics. Here's what Einstein says with regards to the idea:
As a result of an analysis of the physical conceptions of time and space, it became evident that in reality there is not the least incompatibility between the principle of relativity and the law of propagation of light, and that by systematically holding fast to both these laws a logically rigid theory could be arrived at. This theory has been called the special theory of relativity to distinguish it from the extended theory, with which we shall deal later.

And that quote came after this one:

If every ray of light is propagated relative to the embankment with the velocity c, then for this reason it would appear that another law of propagation of light must necessarily hold with respect to the carriage—a result contradictory to the principle of relativity.
 
  • #18
DaleSpam said:
The invariance of c was not known at the time of Maxwell. Why would he have tried to justify a strange experimental result that had not yet been discovered and was not predicted by any theory of the time?

Maxwell created the "invariance of c". He called it, The Law of the Constancy of the Velocity of Light. This law states that c is invariant. It stemmed from Maxwell dividing the equations for electricity and the equations fro magnetism.
A constant, c, was the result of that division.
 
  • #19
Could you give a reference for Maxwell's "Law of the Constancy of the Velocity of Light" that you mentioned above?

As far as I know Maxwell supported the idea of the luminiferous aether. I.e. he believed EM waves require a medium and that his equations predicted the speed of light only wrt that medium. So in a reference frame moving wrt the aether the speed of light would be something other than c.
 
  • #20
DaleSpam said:
Could you give a reference for Maxwell's "Law of the Constancy of the Velocity of Light" that you mentioned above?

As far as I know Maxwell supported the idea of the luminiferous aether. I.e. he believed EM waves require a medium and that his equations predicted the speed of light only wrt that medium. So in a reference frame moving wrt the aether the speed of light would be something other than c.

I got the reference from a lecturer at Cal Tech. He said the Law was initially Maxwell's idea. Maxwell allegedly got the idea after dividing his two equations and unifying magnetism/electric fields.
I tried googling it; couldn't find anything on paper, either.
 
  • #21
Interesting. I am not a historian, so I could easily be wrong.

The http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Clark_Maxwell" article in Wikipedia says "At that time, Maxwell believed that the propagation of light required a medium for the waves, dubbed the luminiferous aether." That is obviously not a strong reference, but if it is correct hopefully you understand why Maxwell would have had no reason to develop relativity.
 
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Related to Ether hypothesis and M/M Experiment not needed

What is the Ether hypothesis?

The Ether hypothesis was a scientific theory proposed in the late 19th century that suggested the existence of a medium, called ether, that permeates through all space and allows for the propagation of electromagnetic waves.

Why was the Ether hypothesis proposed?

The Ether hypothesis was proposed in order to explain how electromagnetic waves, which were already known to travel through a vacuum, could also travel through space. At the time, it was believed that all waves required a medium to travel through.

What was the M/M Experiment?

The M/M Experiment, also known as the Michelson-Morley Experiment, was a scientific experiment conducted in the late 19th century to test the existence of the ether. It involved measuring the speed of light in different directions to see if there was any variation due to the movement of the Earth through the ether.

Why is the M/M Experiment not needed?

The M/M Experiment is not needed because subsequent experiments, such as the Kennedy-Thorndike Experiment and the Sagnac Experiment, have shown that there is no detectable ether. Additionally, the development of Einstein's theory of relativity provided a different explanation for the propagation of electromagnetic waves without the need for an ether.

What is the current scientific consensus on the Ether hypothesis and the M/M Experiment?

The current scientific consensus is that the Ether hypothesis has been disproven and the M/M Experiment is no longer considered necessary. The theory of relativity has been widely accepted and has provided a more accurate explanation for the behavior of electromagnetic waves.

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