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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 October 2008
I think that some light may be thrown on a recent paper of Professor Whittaker's by giving concrete examples. The first example considered belongs to a transformation, which I gave some years ago, whereby a constant acceleration is incorporated in Einstein's form. Opportunity is taken to develop some features of the kinetic form of solution, in which all space coordinates are relative to a source, and the time of the latter is the only time appearing. This is carried as far as the treatment of energy.
* “The Electromagnetic Equations as Basis of Einstein's Quadratic Form”, Proc. Camb. Phil. Soc., 22 (1924), 154.Google Scholar
* But note that r′ X=(z′ b – y′ c)+ex′ (1 – Σu 2)/(r′ – Σux′).