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Archive for May 16th, 2017

The Failed Experiment That Changed The World

In science, we don’t simply perform experiments willy-nilly. We don’t put things together at random and ask, “what happens if I do this?” We examine the phenomena that exist, the predictions our theories make, and look for ways to test them in ever-greater detail.

Sometimes, they give extraordinary agreement to new precision, confirming what we had thought. Sometimes, they disagree, pointing the way to new physics. And sometimes, they fail to give any non-zero result at all.

In the 1880s, an incredibly precise experiment failed in exactly this fashion, and paved the way for relativity and quantum mechanics in doing so.

Ethan Siegel, Contributor

The orbits of the planets and comets, among other celestial objects, are governed by the laws of universal gravitation.

Kay Gibson, Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp

The orbits of the planets and comets, among other celestial objects, are governed by the laws of universal gravitation.

Let’s go even farther back in history to understand why this was such a big deal. Gravitation was the first of the forces to be understood, as Newton had put forth his law of universal gravitation in the 1600s, explaining both the motions of bodies on Earth and in space.

A few decades later (in 1704) Newton also put forth a theory of light — the corpuscular theory — that stated that light was made up of particles, that these particles are rigid and weightless, and that they move in a straight line unless something causes them to reflect, refract or diffract.

Light's properties, such as reflection and refraction, appear to be corpuscular-like, but there are wave-like phenomena it exhibits as well.

Wikimedia Commons user Spigget

Light’s properties, such as reflection and refraction, appear to be corpuscular-like, but there are wave-like phenomena it exhibits as well.

This accounted for a lot of observed phenomena, including the realization that white light was the combination of all other colors of light. But as time went on, many experiments revealed the wave nature of light, an alternative explanation from Christiaan Huygens, one of Newton’s contemporaries.

Light's properties, such as reflection and refraction, appear to be corpuscular-like, but there are wave-like phenomena it exhibits as well.

Wikimedia Commons user Lookang

When any wave — water waves, sound waves, or light waves — are passed through a double slit, the waves create an interference pattern.

Huygens proposed instead that every point which can be considered a source of light, including from a light wave simply traveling forward, acted like a wave, with a spherical wavefront emanating from each of those points.

Although many experiments would give the same results whether you took Newton’s approach or Huygens’ approach, there were a few that took place beginning in 1799 that really began to show how powerful the wave theory was.

Light of different wavelengths, when passed through a double slit, exhibit the same wave-like properties that other waves do.

MIT Physics department Technical Services Group

Light of different wavelengths, when passed through a double slit, exhibit the same wave-like properties that other waves do.

By isolating different colors of light and passing them through either single slits, double slits or diffraction gratings, scientists were able to observe patterns that could only be produced if light was a wave. Indeed, the patterns produced — with peaks and troughs — mirrored that of well-known waves, like water waves.

The wave-like properties of light became even better understood thanks to Thomas Young's two-slit experiments, where constructive and destructive interference showed themselves dramatically.

Thomas Young, 1801

The wave-like properties of light became even better understood thanks to Thomas Young’s two-slit experiments, where constructive and destructive interference showed themselves dramatically.

But water waves — as it was well-known — traveled through the medium of water. Take away the water, and there’d be no wave! This was true of all known wave phenomena: sound, which is a compression and rarefaction, needs a medium to travel through as well.

If you take away all matter, there’s no medium for sound to travel through, and hence why they say, “In space, no one can hear you scream.”

In space, sounds that are produced on Earth will never travel to you, since there's no medium for sound to travel through between the Earth and you.

NASA/Marshall Space Flight Centre

In space, sounds that are produced on Earth will never travel to you, since there’s no medium for sound to travel through between the Earth and you.

So, then, the reasoning went, if light is a wave — albeit, as Maxwell demonstrated in the 1860s, an electromagnetic wave — it, too, must have a medium that it travels through. Although no one could measure this medium, it was given a name: the luminiferous aether.

Sounds like a silly idea now, doesn’t it? But it wasn’t a bad idea at all. In fact, it had all the hallmarks of a great scientific idea, because it not only built upon the science that had been established previously, but this idea made new predictions that were testable! Let me explain by using an analogy: the water in a rapidly moving river.

The Klamath River, flowing through a valley, is an example of a rapidly moving body of water.

Blake, Tupper Ansel, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

The Klamath River, flowing through a valley, is an example of a rapidly moving body of water.

Imagine that you throw a rock into a raging river, and watch the waves that it makes. If you follow the ripples of the wave towards the banks, perpendicular to the direction of the current, the wave will move at a particular speed.

But what if you watch the wave move upstream? It’s going to move more slowly, because the medium that the wave is traveling through, the water, is moving! And if you watch the wave move downstream, it’ll move more quickly, again because the medium is moving.

Even though the luminiferous aether had never been detected or measured, there was an ingenious experiment devised by Albert A. Michelson that applied this same principle to light.

The Earth, moving in its orbit around the Sun and spinning on its axis, should provide an extra motion if there's any medium that light travels through.

Larry McNish, RASC Calgary

The Earth, moving in its orbit around the Sun and spinning on its axis, should provide an extra motion if there’s any medium that light travels through.

You see, even though we didn’t know exactly how the aether was oriented in space, what its direction was or how it was flowing, or what was at rest with respect to it, presumably — like Newtonian space — it was absolute. It existed independently of matter, as it must considering that light could travel where sound could not: in a vacuum.

So, in principle, if you measured the speed at which light moved when the Earth was moving “upstream” or “downstream” (or perpendicular to the aether’s “stream”, for that matter), you could not only detect the existence of the aether, you could determine what the rest frame of the Universe was!

the speed of light is something like 186,282 miles-per-second (Michelson knew it to be 186,350 ± 30 miles-per-second), while the Earth’s orbital speed is only about 18.5 miles-per-second, something we weren’t good enough to measure in the 1880s.

But Michelson had a trick up his sleeve.

The original design of a Michelson interferometer.

Albert Abraham Michelson, 1881

The original design of a Michelson interferometer.

In 1881, Michelson developed and designed what’s now known as a Michelson interferometer, which was absolutely brilliant. What it did was built on the fact that light — being made of waves — interferes with itself. And in particular, if he took a light wave, split it into two components that were perpendicular to one another (and hence, moving differently with respect to the aether), and had the two beams travel exactly identical distances and then reflect them back towards one another, he would observe a shift in the interference pattern generated by them!

You see, if the entire apparatus was stationary with respect to the aether, there would be no shift in the interference pattern they made, but if it moves at all in one direction more than the other, you would get a shift.

If you split light into two perpendicular components and bring them back together, they'll interfere. If you move in one direction versus another, that interference pattern will shift.

Wikimedia commons user Stigmatella aurantiaca

If you split light into two perpendicular components and bring them back together, they’ll interfere. If you move in one direction versus another, that interference pattern will shift.

Michelson’s original design was unable to detect any shift, but with an arm length of just 1.2 meters, his expected shift of 0.04 fringes was just above the limit of what he could detect, which was about 0.02 fringes.

There were also alternatives to the idea that the aether was purely stationary — such as the idea that it was dragged by the Earth (although it couldn’t be completely, because of observations of how stellar aberration worked) — so he performed the experiment at multiple times throughout the day, as the rotating Earth would have to be oriented at different angles with respect to the aether.

The null result was interesting, but not completely convincing. Over the subsequent six years, he designed an interferometer 10 times as large (and hence, ten times as precise) with Edward Morley, and the two of them in 1887 performed what’s now known as the Michelson-Morley experiment.

They expected a fringe-shift throughout the day of up to 0.4 fringes, with an accuracy down to 0.01 fringes.

Thanks to the internet, here are the original 1887 results!

The lack of an observed shift, despite the necessary sensitivity and the theoretical predictions, was an incredible achievement that led to the development of modern physics.

Michelson, A. A.; Morley, E. (1887). “On the Relative Motion of the Earth and the Luminiferous Ether”. American Journal of Science 34 (203): 333–345

The lack of an observed shift, despite the necessary sensitivity and the theoretical predictions, was an incredible achievement that led to the development of modern physics.

This null result — the fact that there was no luminiferous aether — was actually a huge advance for modern science, as it meant that light must have been inherently different from all other waves that we knew of.

The resolution came 18 years later, when Einstein’s theory of special relativity came along. And with it, we gained the recognition that the speed of light was a universal constant in all reference frames, that there was no absolute space or absolute time, and — finally — that light needed nothing more than space and time to travel through.

Albert Michelson won the Nobel Prize in 1907 for his work developing the interferometer and the advances made because of his measurements. It was the most important null result in scientific history.

Nobel foundation, via nobelprize.org

Albert Michelson won the Nobel Prize in 1907 for his work developing the interferometer and the advances made because of his measurements. It was the most important null result in scientific history.

The experiment — and Michelson’s body of work — was so revolutionary that he became the only person in history to have won a Nobel Prize for a very precise non-discovery of anything. The experiment itself may have been a complete failure, but what we learned from it was a greater boon to humanity and our understanding of the Universe than any success would have been!

Astrophysicist and author Ethan Siegel is the founder and primary writer of Starts With A Bang! Check out his first book, Beyond The Galaxy, and look for his second, Treknology, this October!

Notes and comments on FB. Part 29

La langue vulgaire “de la nourrice et du Paradis”. After Beatrice, Dante’s love, died in 1290, Dante started to write in Italian instead of Latin.

After Dante’s love Beatrice died in 1290, a century of Florence enlightenment ended by the start of civil war that lasted for decades. Most of the other cities in North Italy followed suit in social strife: The people wanted to overthrow the nobility that owned the horses, Capital and the weapons.

Sans folie, personne ne posera des questions provocantes ou renouvellera ses pensées.  Qui oserait penser a l’amour si la folie ne lui fait bouillonner le sang?

Il ne faut pas etre superstitieux: Si tu réve d’un médecin de l’hopital, ne court pas chez le notaire pour faire ton testament.

Lorsque passaient les Croisés, les populations d’Europe se precipitaient dans les églises pour y chercher refuge: Ces Coeur de Lion de chevaliers étaient obligés de laisser des victims en se dirigeant vers le soleil couchant (le Levant).

Incest is already part of our genes: No need to overblow our preference for our close relatives, in adolescence.

Why “al Jarida al Rasmiyya” has stopped being delivered to the library of Fares Zoghbeh? Late Maitre Phares Zoghbeh is turning mad in his tomb. A few lawyers want to read it in this library.

La premiere partie du corps que mes yeux contemple sont les pieds et la cheville. Si j’en suis satisfait, tout le reste est acceptable. Les femmes le  savent implicitement et prennent grand soin

I’m observing a strange cycle on Tweeter. For 2 weeks now, the number of Followers increase every day and the next day drops to this magic number of 221? Any explanations?

Si on garde un petit coin de dignité, c’est pour qu’on ait quelque chose a céder, le temps voulu.

Aprés avoir accepté la lacheté, la servitude, la bombe a hydrogen, les genocide… on comprend mal de quel droit on ferait les dégoutés et les difficiles

Je me prenais trop au sérieux et manquais d’humour et d’humilité. Je n’avais pas explore la génerosité de la nature humaine.

Les gens doivent avoir le droit de manger sans conditions.

Je n’avais pas mange depuis la veille. J’ai vu un brave bourgeois manger un chateaubriand aux pomme-vapeur. Et je m’ évanouis. Pas de faim, mais de rage, d’indignation et d’humiliation.

Il me fallut beaucoup de temps pour admettre que le lecteur avait droit a certains égards: comme lui indiquer le numero de la chamber, lui donner la clef et l’accompagner a l’étage et lui montrer les objects de premiére necessité. Bref, je n’ai cure de ce type de lecteur paresseux: c’est pas moi qui va l’instruire.

J’ai toujours eu faim devant le spectacle de la beauté, surtout d’une beauté

La plupart du temps je suis un athée invetéré. Et pourtant, le mot athée est insupportable quand je l’entend des bourgeois suffisants.

Avant sa crise religieuse, ma mére parlait de Dieu avec un respect bourgeois de quelqu’un qui a trés bien réussi.

La jolie fille de la charcutiére fit a ma mére une grande scene de larmes, de menaces de suicide et d’autodafé: ma mére fut trés flattée

La jolie fille dit a ma mére: Ton fils m’a fait lire du Proust, du Tolstoi et du Dostoieski. Qu’est-ce-que je vais devenir s’il ne m’épouse pas?

I know my limitations. My capacities? None. I know though my character.

The US is luring the foreign Daesh fighters in Syria into operations of mass suicides: Deir el Zour, Tadmor… Purpose? Exhausting Syrian army and delaying the Re-conquista

The foreign fighters in Syria prefer to die in the battle fields: their home States want Nothing to do with them, Not even be returned in coffins

Erdogan of Turkey will be remembered as a leader of infamy: He let the foreign fighters cross the borders into Syria, a one-way ticket, for assured perdition

Un écrivain renomé me dit: Rapelles-toi mon garcon que toutes les femmes sont des garces. et ells ont le monopole. J’ai écrit 7 roman lá-dessus. Prenez cela comme une promesse d’avenir

Les femmes experimentées préferent les hommes qui ont acquis la patience et ont l’autorité calme et assuré: des murriers mature?

Le mot de passe autour du basin Mediterraneen pour eviter les amandes: Eh quoi, la vie est belle.

Je n’ai plus jamais été trompé par une femme depuis: je n’ai plus jamais attend sous la pluie pour les surveiller ou les retrouver.

Dans ce déreglement generalise, peut-etre aimer quelqu’un est le dernier recours de resister au désespoire. C’est comme chercher un resistant plus acharné.

On sent la déveine et le destin fané, avant de voir la demeure, un parfum de vieille école, croulant sous l’impuissance de l’intention bien, mais mal active.

Un recouvreur de dette: Mon boulot est d’éviter que les choses se gates. La chemise des documents est gonflée a 90% de papiers qui n’ont rien a voir avec le dossier: un gros dossier impressionne méchamment.

Marie-Therese d’Autriche (1717-1780) n’était pas seulement la mere de Marie-Antoinette de France: elle regna en souveraine absolue Durant 40 ans sur l’empire le plus vaste d’Europe et avait due gérer 16 enfants.

La Florence Republicaine de 1295, les nobles devaient s’inscrire a une corporation, pour la forme, afin d’avoir le droit d’occuper les postes éphemere de charge publique de 3 mois (Faire de la politique)


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