it was actually designed to test the speed of earth through the aether.Rekkusu said:Lol definitely ^^ You're quite lucky to have a whole year ahead of you. Its always better to start preparing in Year 11, saves you a countless number of hours...
Though, since this is good practice for my hsc, I'll state it out briefly:
The Michelson & Morley experiement was designed specifically in order to test for the existence of an Aether / Ether, which was believed to be a medium in which it filled all space and was stationary in space, it completely permeates all matter, has a low density and is also able to propagatate light waves easily. Basically they believed that light being a waveform required such a medium.
In the end, they could not prove the existence of Aether..
Yep, the relative speed of the earth and the thought that aether wind would have an effect on the speed of lightnosadness said:it was actually designed to test the speed of earth through the aether.
Einstein didn't make any inference based on the results of the MM experiment.jzi said:undefined
what is the significanceog the michelson- morley experiment?
what inference did einstein make??
The significance is that all that time dilation, length contraction, relativity stuff follows from that assumption. If you assume that the speed of light is constant relative to an observer then other quantities have to become variable. The derivation of time dilation which I quite like, for it's simplicity, is this one.Abtari said:oh, and what was the significance of einstein's assumption of constancy of speed of light
Well, quoting from the jacaranda text:Abtari said:ok cool. i hope we don't need to know these derivations, i don't think we do anyway. you mentioned galilean relativity - in my original post, i asked about the principle of relativity. are these related in any way? what is the principle of relaitivity? i am assuming it is not special relativity, which is a different concept?!
It's the idea that underpins all that basic Galilean style relativity we did in 'moving about' in the prelim course. If you remember it you had questions like 'Aircraft A is travelling north at v ms-1 and aircraft B is travelling east at u ms-1 - what is the velocity of B relative to A?'. The extension of the principle would then be that your observations of the velocity of other objects is relative to your own frame of reference.Galileo posed a simple idea, now called the 'principle of relativity', which states that all steady motion is relative and cannot be detected without reference to an outside point.