Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Introduction
- ELECTROSTATICS AND CURRENT ELECTRICITY
- MAGNETISM
- ELECTROMAGNETISM
- CHAP. XIII The Magnetic Field Produced by Electric Currents
- CHAP. XIV Induction of Currents in Linear Circuits
- CHAP. XV Induction of Oueeents in Continuous Media
- CHAP. XVI Dynamical Theory of Currents
- CHAP. XVII Displacement Currents and Electromagnetic Waves
- CHAP. XVIII The Electromagnetic Theory of Light
- CHAP. XIX The Motion of Electrons
- CHAP. XX The Theory of Relativity
- CHAP. XXI The Electrical Structure of Matter
- INDEX
CHAP. XX - The Theory of Relativity
from ELECTROMAGNETISM
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Introduction
- ELECTROSTATICS AND CURRENT ELECTRICITY
- MAGNETISM
- ELECTROMAGNETISM
- CHAP. XIII The Magnetic Field Produced by Electric Currents
- CHAP. XIV Induction of Currents in Linear Circuits
- CHAP. XV Induction of Oueeents in Continuous Media
- CHAP. XVI Dynamical Theory of Currents
- CHAP. XVII Displacement Currents and Electromagnetic Waves
- CHAP. XVIII The Electromagnetic Theory of Light
- CHAP. XIX The Motion of Electrons
- CHAP. XX The Theory of Relativity
- CHAP. XXI The Electrical Structure of Matter
- INDEX
Summary
MOTION THROUGH THE ETHER.
The Michelson-Morley Experiment.
When we have spoken of a system at rest we have so far meant, for all practical purposes, a system at rest in our laboratories. But if we have been right in conjecturing that all electromagnetic phenomena have their seat in the ether, then a system at rest would most naturally be taken to mean a system at rest in the ether. We have so far made no clear distinction between the conceptions of rest in the ether and rest relative to the walls of a laboratory.
The view was at one time held that a moving body drags the ether along with it. If this were a true view the distinction just referred to would not arise; a body at rest relative to the walls of a laboratory would also be at rest in the ether. But in time it was found that this was not a true view; it could not be reconciled simultaneously with results of laboratory experiments such as Fizeau's water-tube experiment (cf. § 687 below), and with the astronomical theory of the aberration of light (cf. § 689 below). Finally it became established that the ether, if one existed at all, could not share in the motion of moving bodies ; it must be stagnant, and moving bodies must simply move through it without setting up mass-motions in it.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Mathematical Theory of Electricity and Magnetism , pp. 593 - 628Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1908