| Abstract:
This paper develops a blueprint for the historical development of physics in general, highlighting present-day contributions from NPA participants in particular. The metaphor for physics as a building project involves a number of unwieldy building blocks in not-completely-stable relation to each other. Stresses and strains are pointed out, and redesign/rebuilding efforts are recommended.
|
| Abstract:
After 15 years of nurturing within the NPA, some of my ideas are now getting some mainstream attention. How did such a thing ever start to happen? For what it may be worth to other NPA people with similar goals, I will opine a bit on that question.
|
| Electric and Magnetic Fields According to Hermann Minkowski |
(2008)
Prof. Dr. hab. Zbigniew Oziewicz
calle Roble 13A, Ex-Hacienda San Miguel, UNAM, Facultad de Esudios Superiores, Cuautitlan Izcalli, Estado de Mexico 54715, Mexico; oziewicz@unam.mx, +52 (55) 2611-0352
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Proceedings of the NPA, Volume 5, No. 2, pp. 183-194
2008, 15th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Albuquerque, NM, United States
Keywords: history of of relativity theory, group-covariance, groupoid category, relativity groupoid, reference frame, observer, tetrad versus monad, electric and magnetic fields
Lookup: groupoid category (5),
reference frame (9),
observer (7),
tetrad versus monad (2),
relativity (606),
theory (243),
covariance (15),
electric (121),
magnetic (177),
category (5),
frame (43),
group (12),
groupoid (5),
history (23),
reference (23)
| Abstract:
Since Heaviside it is well known that the electric and magnetic fields are observer-dependent. Einstein in 1905 using Lorentz group deduced the same observer-dependence as Heaviside 17-years before. Minkowski in 1908 derived another expressions for the ob-server-dependence of the electric and magnetic fields. Well known textbooks, like Jackson, and Landau and Lifshitz, are presenting now the observer-dependence that is distinct of Minkowski. Ivezic since 2001 observed illogical mathematical reasonings of textbooks, where the group-covariance is interpreted not as proposed originally by Minkowski in 1908. In this paper we are comparing three dif-ferent relativity theories, on example of the observer-dependence of the electric and magnetic fields.
This paper aka "The Lorentz-Group Relativity Versus Groupoid-Relativity: Electric and Magnetic Fields"
|
(2005)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Proceedings of the NPA, Volume 2, No. 2, pp. 235-239
2005, 12th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Storrs, CT, United States
Keywords: Newton, Euclid, Galileo, Einstein, Rosetta Stone
Lookup: einstein (135),
newton (87),
euclid (2),
galileo (8),
rosetta stone (2)
| Abstract:
The history of mathematical physics has seen its Newtonian era, with its Euclidean concept of Space, its Universal Time, and its Galilean Velocity, and then its Einsteinian era, with its relativistic concepts of spacetime and velocity. The present-day understanding is that these two eras represent two different and incommensurable worldviews; that the Einsteinian worldview can completely replace the Newtonain worldview, because the Newtonian worldview is at best a limiting approximation to the ‘correct’ Einsteinian worldview. By contrast, the present author believes that the two worldviews are exactly that: two views of one reality, expressed in two different mathematical languages. But once a ‘multilingual dictionary’, a ‘Rosetta Stone’, is provided, the two different worldviews can produce the same mental understanding. The key ingredient for such a ‘Rosetta Stone’ is a third worldview. One possible basis for such a third worldview is a revised postulate about the way in which light propagates. This author presented one such postulate to this audience at our last conference, and the present paper gives the resulting ‘Rosetta Stone’. Once the ‘Rosetta Stone’ is in hand, all the worldviews can produce the same, though new, mental understanding. This new mental understanding can be re-expressed in natural (verbal) language that is more nuanced and precise, less paradox-ridden and confusing, than was heretofore imagined.
|
(2005)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Proceedings of the NPA, Volume 2, No. 2, pp. 240-243
2005, 12th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Storrs, CT, United States
Keywords: Gravitational Potential, GRT, Atomic Clock
Lookup: general relativity (76),
atomic clock (6),
gravity potential (8),
gravity (474),
relativity (606),
atomic (25),
clock (56),
general (93),
potential (54)
| Abstract:
In classical physics, a potential is an entity whose physical effects are revealed by its derivatives. For example, the gradient of Newtonian gravitational potential is gravitational force per unit mass responding, the gradient of Coulomb potential is an electric field, the time derivative of Ampere vector potential augments that electric field, and the curl of that vector potential is the magnetic field. In quantum physics, the vector potential can produce an effect directly: a phase shift. This is, perhaps, an example of a potential producing a physical effect without any differentiation. Likewise in GRT, the gravitational potential can produce physical effects directly: it can slow clocks, redden light emitted, or bend light passing by, and contribute to orbit precessions. All this is very confounding. We might, perhaps, be well advised to create a different word for ‘potentials’ that require no differentiation to cause a physical effect. On the other hand, it could be that the physical effects observed ought to be attributed, not to potentials per se, but rather to appropriate second derivatives thereof. This paper discusses candidate second order expressions to account for the GRT effects. The new second-order expressions work in the scenarios for which we presently have data (primarily GPS scenarios), but could be discriminated from GRT in a new, but available, scenario: we need to document how an atomic clock runs at the saddle-point of the gravitational potential between two source masses, such as Earth and Moon.
|
| On What Optical Systems Can See |
(2006)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Proceedings of the NPA, Volume 3, No. 2, pp. 303-309
2006, 13th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Tulsa, OK, United States
Keywords: Special Relativity, inertial motion, luminiferous aether
Lookup: special relativity (214),
luminiferous aether (2),
inertial motion (3),
aether (279),
motion (109),
relativity (606),
special (276),
inertial (57)
| Abstract:
It is a dictum of Einstein’s Special Relativity Theory (SRT) that the strictly inertial motion of any physical system cannot be detected without some reference external to the system. This dictum has been tested through the years by a variety of optical experiments. Usually, the motivation has been to re-open the case with regard to the concept of a ’luminiferous aether’, which had dominated much of scientific thought in the century before Einstein’s revolution. Results have generally been proclaimed ’null’, although in actuality they have sometimes been rather ambiguous, and the more so the more recent the work is. But aversion to anything like the old ’luminiferous aether’ still hinders acknowledgment of any such results. It is my belief that any linear velocity with respect to which an optical system can be reversed can indeed be sensed, but that the proper inference to be drawn from that fact does not concern any kind of ’luminiferous aether’, or even modern ’physical ether’. Instead, the proper inference is that revision of Einstein’s light speed postulate is needed. A modified postulate, different but still ether-free, is shown to lead to observed results.
|
| On What Electromagnetic Systems Can Feel |
(2006)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Proceedings of the NPA, Volume 3, No. 2, pp. 310-316
2006, 13th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Tulsa, OK, United States
Keywords: electromagnetic fields, Poynting vector, Lienard and Wiechert
Lookup: lienard wiechert (7),
poynting vector (2),
electromagnetic (86),
vector (23)
| Abstract:
Within the classical description of the electromagnetic fields that are created by a rapidly moving source, there exists a fascinating curiosity. The curiosity is revealed in a simple scenario in which the source traverses a sinusoid in a plane as viewed by a stationary observer. This motion is a superposition of two basic parts: a high-speed linear translation, plus a low-amplitude harmonic oscillation. The linear translation creates Coulomb-Ampere fields, and the oscillation creates radiation fields. The curiosity is that, while the Poynting vector for the radiation is always pointing from the ’causally-connected’, or ’retarded’, position of the source, the Coulomb attraction/repulsion never is. The classical description that produces this curiosity dates from the turn of the twentieth century, with the work of Lienard and Wiechert. Although their work predates Einstein’s work, it is nevertheless consistent with his light speed postulate, and so has survived along with his Special Relativity Theory (SRT) for all this time, despite any curiosities that ensue. It is my belief that appropriately revising the postulate can remove this curiosity, as well as all other curiosities attendant to SRT.
|
| The Twins, the Mesons, and the Paradox |
(1997)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Apeiron, Volume 4, No. 2-3, pp. 104-109
Keywords: Special Relativity, Time Dilation, Twin Paradox
Lookup: special relativity (214),
time dilation (25),
twin paradox (18),
relativity (606),
special (276),
time (239),
dilation (31),
paradox (55),
twin (20)
| Abstract:
Einstein's special theory of relativity has left us with an enduring topic of concern in its prediction of time dilation. This prediction appears well validated in the apparently slow decay of rapidly moving unstable particles. But the prediction also apparently leads to the well-known “Twin Paradox”, which confounds ordinary logic. The present paper attempts to shed new light on this subject.
|
| A Quantum of Light Shed on Classical Potentials and Fields |
(1997)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Apeiron, Volume 4, No. 1, pp. 16-21
Keywords: quantum concept, photon, retarded electromagnetic potentials
Lookup: photon (88),
quantum (225),
electromagnetic (86),
concept (13)
| Abstract:
The quantum concept of light as photon, elaborated with possibly non-zero rest mass, is used to re-examine the classical problem of retarded electromagnetic potentials. A conflict with the classical Lienard-Wiechert formulation is revealed. An alternative formulation is recommended.
|
| On the Visual Images that Atoms Create |
(2007)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Proceedings of the NPA, Volume 4, No. 2, pp. 284-289
2007, 14th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Storrs, CT, United States
| Abstract:
Every element in the Periodic Table admits a set of ‘ionization potentials’ (IP’s), the number of them being equal to the element nuclear charge Z. If we knew all the IP’s for all of the known elements, we would have on the order of 5000 data items. We do not presently have nearly that many of them, since most of them are as yet too difficult to measure. In fact, less than 400 of them are readily available. Nevertheless, this is a rich database for study in parallel with study of physical theory. It reveals a recurring regular pattern, with clarity sufficient to imply plausible predictions about all the thousands of IP data points not yet measured. It proves that existing theories are wrong in several respects, and it can guide the development of a better theory. I first began talking about this exercise to this audience here at Storrs four years ago, and the present paper is a further update. The developing physical theory avoids the unprovable postulates concerning constant light speed c and action quantum h that were so basic to physics in the 20th century, and replaces them both with just one possibly provable new postulate concerning light propagation. The new theory is more consistent with the observable behavior of IP’s. It also explains the stability of neutral atoms overall, and recently also the stability of same-sign charge clusters, which I believe are constituents of all trans-Hydrogenic atoms.
|
| On the Visual Images that Galaxies Create |
(2007)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Proceedings of the NPA, Volume 4, No. 2, pp. 290-295
2007, 14th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Storrs, CT, United States
| Abstract:
The visual image of a spiral galaxy is one of the most tantalizing images in Nature. And it is very pervasive. Whether large or small, young or old, heavily or sparsely populated with stars, galaxies usually show spiral arms. And this is true despite the fact that galaxies are not rigid bodies, so any particular structure ought to unravel over time, and so ought not to appear pervasive at any moment in time. The mechanism that creates and sustains the pervasive spiral galaxy form is presently a subject for debate. Candidate mechanisms include both gravitational and electromagnetic ones. With several candidates on the table, I feel free to add another. It is my belief that common results usually arise from common causes. So what else is common in cosmology? Two-body systems are. I believe the common mechanism behind spiral galaxy structure is provided by a super-massive two-body system at the heart of every such galaxy. If there is any non-infinite speed associated with gravity, then the same kind of analysis that my first paper discusses for electromagnetic stability in atoms and charge clusters also applies to galaxies. A super massive two-body system at the heart of a galaxy leads to a spiral shaped background field that the normal sized stars of the galaxy fall into, thereby creating the spiral appearance. I first began writing about this subject in the 1980’s, but have so far not reprised it for this audience. My thanks go to Alexander Scarborough for rekindling my enthusiasm.
|
| An Astronomy Model within an Infinite Universe |
(2004)
Eit Gaastra
eitgaastra@gmail.com, +31/(0)505771724, www.eitgaastra.nl
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Proceedings of the NPA, Volume 1, No. 1, pp. 21-24
2004, 11th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Denver, CO, United States
Keywords: infinite universe, galaxies, stars, pulsars, AGN
Lookup: galaxies (38),
infinite universe (2),
infinite (16),
universe (96)
| Abstract:
In a Universe infinite in space and time, Population II stars may blacken, cool down, assemble hydrogen, and ignite as Population I stars, which finally blacken too, assemble hydrogen, etc. In this way, stars with very big heavy-element cores may come to existence, which may explain the intrinsic (gravitational) redshift of white dwarfs as well as the intrinsic (gravitational) redshift of bright blue stars. When celestial objects (with heavy elements) become very big, the gravitational contraction may become so high that endothermic reactions start: elements may fuse into elements higher than iron while absorbing low temperature (CBR) radiation, which may explain pulsars. When celestial objects become extremely big, then a reaction may start that turns elements higher than iron into very small elements, mainly HII and electrons, which then may explain radio loud activity by AGNs. Shrunken remnants of old galaxies may become the nuclei of new galaxies as well as the nuclei of AGNs. The cause of solar system formation may by objects (future planets) that travel through interstellar space, attracted to stars.
|
| This is NOT Einstein's Postulate |
(2004)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Proceedings of the NPA, Volume 1, No. 1, pp. 114-118
2004, 11th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Denver, CO, United States
| Abstract:
Einstein's Special Relativity Theory (SRT), with light-speed constant c, is founded on Maxwell's equations, with light-speed constant [ ]. Maxwell's equations proved insufficient for atomis physics, and that insufficiency provoked the development of a whole new theory going beyond Maxwell; namely, Quantum Mechanics (QM). So the same insufficiency really ought to provoke some development beyond SRT, too. This author thinks Einstein's 'relativity principle', namely, that the laws of Nature are the same for all observers, is fine, but that Einstein's light-speed postulate, namely, that light travels in vacuum at constant speed c with respect to any inertial observer, irrespective of source motion, is questionable. The mechanism for getting to QM was a completely new postulate; namely Planck's postulate, so the mechanism for developing a new theory beyond SRT may also lie in the choice of one or more different postulates. The paper explores one possible alternative postulate about the light propagation process; namely that it occurs in two symmetrical steps: emission/expansion (relative to source), followed by collapse/absorption (relative to receiver).
*Based on the first two of my essays collected in Galilean Electrodynamics 16, Special Issues 3, (Winter 2005).
|
| A New Michelson-Morley Experiment |
(1992)
Wilbur Silvertooth
Orcas, WA 98280, United States; shekinah2@rockisland.com, 360-376-2797
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Physics Essays, Volume 5, No. 1, pp. 82-89
Keywords: Michelson-Morley
Lookup: michelson morley (39),
michelson (45)
| 'Light' is the Subject, not the Object! |
(1997)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
1997, 4th (B) Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Storrs, CT, United States
Keywords: Light
Lookup: light (261)
| Abstract:
Is propagating light an infinitely extending wave? Or a collection of compact particles? The conventional twentieth-century answer has been "both": a wave -expanding spherical, plane, or converging spherical, as needed -or a photon bullet, as needed. We know that light emission and absorption apparently come in quanta. This behavior seems inconsistent with a continuous oscillating wave, and that is why we have imagined the photon bullets. But we know also that interference effects occur, and they seem inconsistent with independent photon bullets -which is why we still use the wave model.
But the truth about light may really be "neither". This paper explores an obvious variation on the existing models: light not as a "thing" (e.g. amplitude, phase, energy), but rather as a "process· (i.e. the propagation process).
Imagine two steps: a period of expansion/extension, followed by a period of contraction/collapse. Such a model turns out to be extraordinarily rich with implications. All of the familiar features of special relativity theory follow without mystery: apparent clock slowing, length contraction, velocity limitation, etc. In addition, important features of general relativity theory also follow: apparent gravitational effects on clocks, gravitational red shifts, light bending, etc.
|
| Editorial Comments (of NPA Conference #10 Proceedings) |
(2003)
Hal Fox
2823 East 3335 South, Salt Lake City, UT 84109, United States; eemf@earthlink.net, (801) 467-3338
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Journal of New Energy, Volume 7, No. 3, pp. 2-4
2003, 10th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Storrs, CT, United States
| Spectroscopy's 'Relativistic' Keystone |
(2003)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Journal of New Energy, Volume 7, No. 3, pp. 200
2003, 10th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Storrs, CT, United States
Keywords: Spectroscopy, Relativisty
Lookup: spectroscopy (2)
| Finding Absolution for Special Relativity Theory - Part I |
(1996)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Galilean Electrodynamics, Volume 7, No. 2, pp. 23-29
Keywords: special relativity, Sagnac effect, Galilean relativity
Lookup: special relativity (214),
sagnac effect (21),
galilean relativity (10),
relativity (606),
special (276),
sagnac (32),
effect (138),
galilean (20)
| Abstract:
Einstein's special theory of relativity is shown to be one member from a larger family of coordinate-transformation theories that arise from a weaker but more fully plausible postulational basis. A different family member is shown to be required by the well-known Sagnac experiment. This experiment-based coordinate-transformation theory embraces all types of scenarios, whether with linear motions, rotations, or more arbitrary accelerations. It differs from special relativity theory only slightly in numerical terms, but greatly in conceptual terms. For example, light is described only in terms of observable interference effects, and not in terms of complex amplitudes endowed with absolute phases. There is no phase velocity of light, only a signal velocity, and it can differ from isotropic constant c if clocks are not resynchronized following a change in motion state. Optical evidence of such a change is described in terms of a velocity-dependent refractive index.
|
| Finding Absolution for Special Relativity Theory - Part II |
(1996)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Galilean Electrodynamics, Volume 7, No. 4, pp. 63-69
Keywords: special relativity, Sagnac effect, Galilean relativity
Lookup: special relativity (214),
sagnac effect (21),
galilean relativity (10),
relativity (606),
special (276),
sagnac (32),
effect (138),
galilean (20)
| Abstract:
Einstein's special theory of relativity has been shown to be one member from a larger family of coordinate-transformation theories that arise from a weaker but more fully plausible postulational basis. A different family member has been shown to be required by the well-known Sagnac experiment. This experiment-based coordinate-transformation theory embraces all types of scenarios, whether with linear motions, rotations, or more arbitrary accelerations. It differs from special relativity theory only slightly in numerical terms, but greatly in conceptual terms. For example, we find that for every problem there is as preferred coordinate frame through which all other coordinates frames must relate. This preferred coordinate frame superficially resembles the absolute space that appears in Galilean analyses, but the present theory actually differs from the traditional Galilean theory in significant ways. Here, for example, we definitely do not have universal time.
|
(2009)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
2009, 16th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Storrs, CT, United States
Keywords: special relativity, maxwell, speed of light
Lookup: speed of light (44),
special relativity (214),
maxwell (85),
light (261),
relativity (606),
special (276),
speed (86)
| Abstract:
This paper looks in detail at the situation that develops with Maxwell’s coupled field equations when the
initial condition constitutes a pair of field pulses, in E and B, with finite total energy, such as would be needed
to plausibly model a light signal for SRT, or a photon for QM. What emerges from the analysis is that, during
propagation, the initial pulses always tend to spread longitudinally into complex waveforms exhibiting oscillation.
So ‘light in flight’ is never a simple pair of pulses. It is a pair of spread-out waveforms, with maxima in
the middle and long oscillating tails fore and aft. The waveform centroid may be said to travel at light speed c,
but that fact alone does not at all adequately characterize light signals for SRT, or photons for QM.
|
| Special Relativity Theory Aberrated |
(1994)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
(Absentia)Galilean Electrodynamics, Volume 5, No. 5, pp. 98-102
1994, 1st Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, San Francisco, CA, United States
Keywords: special relativity, absolute space, Doppler shifts
Lookup: special relativity (214),
absolute space (15),
relativity (606),
space (224),
special (276),
absolute (61),
doppler (47)
| Abstract:
Stellar aberration has been the subject of recent critiques of special relativity theory because of its apparent inconsistency with Doppler shifts. Careful analysis can remove this conflict. But the analysis requires unwelcome recourse to an unwanted coordinate frame reminiscent of absolute space. So even if reconciled with Doppler shifts, stellar aberration remains an embarrassment to special relativity theory.
|
| What's Wrong With Standard Relativistic Fields? |
(1992)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Galilean Electrodynamics, Volume 3, No. 5, pp. 89-92
Keywords: standard Lienard-Wiechert formulation, electromagnetic fields, relativistically moving charge
Lookup: charge (143),
electromagnetic (86),
moving (23),
standard (8)
| Abstract:
A previous paper exposed some surprisingly counter-intuitive behavior exhibited by the standard Lienard-Wiechert formulation for electromagnetic fields generated by a relativistically moving charge. The implication is that something is wrong with the standard formulation. The present paper speaks to the issue of what exactly the source of difficulty is.
|
| A Gedanken Experiment With Relativistic Fields |
(1991)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Galilean Electrodynamics, Volume 2, No. 2, pp. 28-29
Keywords: Gedanken experiment, relativistic fields, classical electrodynamics
Lookup: classical electrodynamics (13),
classical (37),
relativistic (57),
experiment (170)
| Abstract:
Simple example scenarios permit explicit investigation of the actual behavior of standard formulations from classical electrodynamics. The present note examines the properties of the universally accepted Lienard-Wiechert fields in one example scenario. The results are surprisingly counter-intuitive, and invite further investigation via real experiments.
|
| If Sagnac and Michelson-Gale, Why Not Michelson-Morley? |
(1990)
Dr. Howard C. Hayden
Univ. of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269-3046, United States; corkhayden@comcast.net, (860) 429-1635, www.phys.uconn.edu/people/faculty/emeriti/hayden
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Galilean Electrodynamics, Volume 1, No. 6, pp. 71-75
Keywords: Sagnac, Michelson-Gale, Michelson-Morley, special relativity, light speed
Lookup: special relativity (214),
michelson morley (39),
sagnac (32),
light speed (7),
light (261),
relativity (606),
special (276),
michelson (45),
speed (86)
| Abstract:
Anisotropy in the speed of light due to coordinate frame rotation has been amply demonstrated throughout the present century. The original experiment by Sagnac used a rotating table in a laboratory setting. The first of several subsequent experiments using instead the diurnal rotation of the earth was performed by Michelson and Gale. Predating both of these early rotation-sending experiments was the famous Michelson-Morley experiment, whose null result is often cited as experimental proof for the constancy of light speed otherwise assumed in special relativity theory. But since it was conducted on the surface of the earth, the Michelson-Morley experiment was also conducted in a rotating frame. Although not sensitive enough to pick up diurnal rotation, the experiment should have seen the orbital motion of the earth rotating around the sun. How exactly did the null result then come about?
|
| Abstract:
The present paper continues on from my 2004 PIRT paper entitled “Can Chemical Data Support a ‘PIRT’?”. The present paper first provides more detail on the variation of ionization potentials within the periods of the Period-ic Table. The description developed refers to the standard quantum numbers n,l,s ( n=1 to infinity, l=0 to n−1, s=−1/2,+1/2) for single-electron states that are incorporated into successively larger atoms. The empiri-cal Madelung and Hund rules that are found in today’s chemistry textbooks provide the nominal filling order for sin-gle-electron states. Using this filling order, a simple empirical formula is developed for the local slopes on a log plot of the ionization potentials. The formula is quite accurate for first ionization potentials, but becomes less accurate for higher-order ionization potentials. This fact could well be related to the fact that the filling order that actually occurs in Nature departs from the standard one for about 20% of the known elements. Accordingly, the filling order for single-electron states is itself investigated next. A more efficacious empirical rule is developed. Like the stan-dard one, it involves sums of traditional quantum numbers, but unlike the standard one, judiciously chosen coeffi-cients that are powers of 2 provide the needed improvements. The resulting formulation automatically directs atten-tion to the elements for which the departures from the textbook rules actually do occur. The paper concludes with an indication of future work.
|
| Abstract:
When Einstein began his construction of Special Relativity Theory in 1905. he used just logic plus the then-known facts about light. At the time. light was deemed describable by Maxwell's equations reduced to a wave-equation. wherein there was a product parameter (epsilon)0(mu)0 that was apparently the same for any observer, and should be interpretable as the inverse square of a wave speed c. Einstein sidestepped the question of what was waving (the aether?) and focused on the speed. thereby arriving at SRT.
Just a year later. Einstein was beginning to delve into new and previously unanticipated characteristics of light: it's apparently quantum character in black body radiation and in atomic emission and absorption. Apparently, light was not a wave but a particle. The photon was born. Later Einstein recognized photons to be indistinguishable, and participated in the development of Bose-Einstein statistics. He proposed the phenomenon of light amplification by stimulated emission, which led ultimately to the technology of lasers and all their present-day applications in coherent optics.
Today we know that all light sources are at least a little bit coherent, and we know there are non-local effects in systems involving multiple and entangled photons. There is convincing evidence that light is not a point particle but rather some sort of extended body, within which communication is instantaneous.
What if all this had been known before the development of SRT? Would things have looked different?
|
(2000)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Journal of New Energy, Volume 5, No. 2, pp. 56-63
2000, 7th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Storrs, CT, United States
2000, INE Symposium for New Energy, United States
| Abstract:
In-physics we are sometimes confronted with situations that obviously raise some questions. But too often we just don't see the obvious questions. Accepted paradigms just blind us. This paper takes note of several example situations and the questions they obviously raise: 1) The "shell" structure of the Periodic Table of the chemical elements is not matched by the "radial quantum number states" offered by Quantum Mechanics. 2) Spectral lines are characterized in part by the so-called Rydberg factor, which involves the square of the naked nuclear charge, showing no effect of nuclear shielding by inner electron shells. 3) In some situations, like charges sometimes seem to cluster together, contrary to prevailing theories about electromagnetics. 4) The so-called "arrow of time" seems to conflict with the apparent time-reversibility of so many equations in physics. Some candidate explanations for such anomalies are developed within the context of simple Galilean, non-relativistic theory.
|
| General Considerations about Mass Variation |
(2000)
Prof. Franco Selleri
Dept. of Physics, INFN, Via G. Amendola 173, Bari I-70126, Italy; Franco.Selleri@ba.infn.it, +39 (080) 544-3226
Dr. Georg Galeczki
Am Plankengarten 18, D-51061 Cologne, Germany; galeczki@gmx.de, +49 (221) 66-8243, www.helmut-hille.de/publications.html
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Dr. Clarence L. Dulaney
2226 Fairgreen Drive, Missouri City, TX 77489, United States; cldtx1@sbcglobal.net, (281) 437-7422
2000, 7th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Storrs, CT, United States
Keywords: Mass Variation
Lookup: mass variation (7),
mass (180),
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| Discussion Between C. K. Whitney and S. Marinov on Silvertooth's Experiment |
(1993)
Dr. Stefan Marinov
Graz, Austria, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stefan_Marinov
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Deutsche Physik, Volume 2, No. 8
Keywords: Silvertooth Experiment
Lookup: silvertooth experiment (5),
experiment (170)
| Abstract:
First in a series of articles:
- V10, 91-93 (1987)
- V10, 289-290 (1987)
- V11, 101-107 (1988)
- V11, 147-151 (1988)
- V11, 257-261 (1988)
- V12, 297-300 (1989)
|
| Relativistic Dynamics in Basic Chemistry |
(2007)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Foundations of Physics, Volume 37, No. 4/5, pp. 788-812
Keywords: Relativistic Dynamics, Electrodynamics, Quantum MEchanics of Atoms, Potentials
Lookup: relativistic dynamics (6),
mechanics (112),
quantum (225),
relativistic (57)
| Abstract:
This paper revisits the historical sequence in which some of the major developments of 20th-century physics occurred, and explores how theories could have turned out differently , if the sequence of developments had been different. It shows how a delay in founding special relativity theory until after (1) at least one puzzling problem in electrodynamic theory could be acknowledged, and (2) at least some of the experimental observations pertinent to the development of quantum mechanics had become well known, could have resulted in a larger theorythat covers both domains in a manner quite different from that of any of the theories we use today. The revised theory dispenses witha separate postulate introducing Planck's constant h, identifying instead a physical mechanism that implies the constant. some important aspects of quantum chemistry then follow.
|
| Abstract:
2005 ANPA Proceedings
|
| Distinct Questions in Relativity Theory |
(1998)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Physics Essays, Volume 1, No. 1, pp. 15-17
Keywords: relativity theory, electrodynamics, Lienard-Wiechert
Lookup: lienard wiechert (7),
relativity theory (14),
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theory (243)
| Abstract:
This note presents a simple scenario illustrating two distinct types of questions of interest in relativistic problems. Such distinctions are not always explicitly discussed, and such omission can create a risk of mismatch between question-type required and answer-type applied It is argued here that such a mismatch has actually occurred, and persisted, in at least one important area of physics.
|
| Manifest Covariance in Relativistic Potential Theory |
(1988)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Physics Essays, Volume 1, No. 1, pp. 18-19
Keywords: relativity theory, electrodynamics, Lienard-Wiechert
Lookup: lienard wiechert (7),
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theory (243)
| Abstract:
This note reexamines the covariance of commonly used formulae for relativistic potentials in light of a difficulty pointed out in the companion note, “Distinct Questions in Relativity Theory.” It is argued that the covariance of the accepted formulae is not at all manifest as was previously believed, and that the accepted formulae are in fact not properly covariant. But slightly different formulae, based on the companion note, are manifestly covariant.
|
| A New Perspective on the Hydrogen Atom |
(1988)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Physics Essays, Volume 1, No. 2, pp. 52-55
Keywords: Zitterbewegungen, quantum hypothesis, Planck's constant
Lookup: planck constant (16),
quantum hypothesis (3),
quantum (225),
constant (86),
planck (46),
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| Abstract:
The concept of Zitterbewegungen has long been used to interpret quantum mechanics in classical terms. The present paper attempts to advance current understanding in two ways: 1) by providing a mechanism for driving the Zitterbewegungen without external collisions or internal energy sources, and 2) by suggesting a methodology for predicting the numerical value of Planck's constant.
|
| Harmonics in the Hydrogen Atom |
(1988)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Physics Essays, Volume 1, No. 2, pp. 56-59
Keywords: quantum hypothesis, Planck's constant
Lookup: planck constant (16),
quantum hypothesis (3),
quantum (225),
constant (86),
planck (46),
hypothesis (28)
| Abstract:
This paper develops a new relativistic model for the hydrogen atom, motivated by a recent observation that Zitterbewegungen could be driven by a relativistic torque mechanism. The present paper seeks a steady state balance between the torque effect and radiative losses. The ultimate result is a determination of Planck's constant as a dependent function of other elementary constants.
|
| Multiple States in the Hydrogen Atom |
(1988)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Physics Essays, Volume 1, No. 2, pp. 60-63
Keywords: quantum hypothesis, Planck's constant
Lookup: planck constant (16),
quantum hypothesis (3),
quantum (225),
constant (86),
planck (46),
hypothesis (28)
| Abstract:
This paper extends a previously presented nonlinear relativistic model for the hydrogen atom in order to reproduce the full spectrum of quantum states known to exist in the hydrogen atom, including the half-integer spin states of the constituent particles. It therefore supports the conjecture posed in the earlier work namely, that Planck's constant is not an independent constant of nature, but rather a function of other fundamental constants.
|
| Inner Products in Relativistic Field Theory |
(1989)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Physics Essays, Volume 2, No. 1, pp. 47-50
Keywords: relativity theory, electrodynamics, Lienard-Wiechert
Lookup: lienard wiechert (7),
relativity theory (14),
relativity (606),
theory (243)
| Abstract:
The covariant formulation of relativistic field theory involves the identification of constructs such as Lorentz four-vectors and inner products thereof that form Lorentz-invariant scalars. The present paper argues that such identifications have not always been done correctly.
|
| Finding Absolution for Special Relativity Theory - Part III |
(1997)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Galilean Electrodynamics, Volume 8, No. 1, pp. 9-14
Keywords: special relativity theory, Sagnac effect, Galilean relativity
Lookup: sagnac effect (21),
special relativity theory (12),
galilean relativity (10),
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effect (138),
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| Abstract:
In Parts I and II of this series, Einstein's special theory of relativity has been identified as just one member from a larger family of coordinate-transformation theories that differ only in the details of a single parameter pertaining to clock desynchronization. A different family member has been shown to be required by the well-known Sagnac experiment. The present paper shows how the corresponding single parameter of the new theory can also be obtained from a postulational basis different from that of SRT, but nevertheless perfectly plausible. This is important because we now have both an experimental basis and a theoretical basis for a new coordinate-transformation theory that avoids some of the criticisms often leveled at SRT. For example, the present theory does not have a twin paradox.
|
| On The Properties of Retarded Coordinates |
(1989)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Physics Essays, Volume 2, No. 3, pp. 246-248
Keywords: relativity theory, electrodynamics, Lienard-Wiechert
Lookup: lienard wiechert (7),
relativity theory (14),
relativity (606),
theory (243)
| Abstract:
It is well known that an observer witnessing a source on a four-space trajectory detects potentials and fields determined by the retarded source coordinates. It is generally assumed that the function of retarded coordinates commonly used has the same transformation properties as do coordinates themselves, which are Lorentz four-vectors. The present paper examines this assumption.
|
| Radiative Reaction in Classical Electrodynamics |
(1989)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Physics Essays, Volume 2, No. 3, pp. 249-253
Keywords: radiation, radiation reaction, Larmor, Abraham-Lorentz
Lookup: radiation reaction (3),
radiation (70),
reaction (26),
lorentz (148)
| Abstract:
Radiative reaction is a phenomenon not yet definitively modeled in any classical theory, whether gravitational or even electrodynamic. The existence of runaway solutions for trajectories of radiating sources, for example, remains a topic of current literature. In this paper the author tries to improve this situation by offering a potentially more adequate modeling method. The method is based on fourfold conservation involving source energy-momentum four-vectors, electromagnetic four-vector potentials, and the integrated field energy and momentum. The present paper demonstrates the method by reproducing the Abraham-Lorentz radiative reaction force on a single radiating source.
|
| Radiative Reaction on Fields |
(1989)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
Physics Essays, Volume 2, No. 3, pp. 254-257
Keywords: radiation, radiation reaction, vacuum energy, conservation
Lookup: radiation reaction (3),
conservation (28),
vacuum energy (7),
radiation (70),
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reaction (26),
vacuum (53)
| Abstract:
Radiation reaction in a two-body system includes some terms that can be dissipative to the fields distributed throughout space, rather than just to the orbits of the bodies. As a result, it is possible to have field-to-matter energy transfer that opposes radiation. This effect generalizes to N-body systems as well.
|
| Maxwell Theory and Galilean Relativity |
(2010)
Dr. Cynthia Kolb Whitney
141 Rhinecliff Street, Arlington, MA 02476-7331, United States; galilean_electrodynamics@comcast.net, (781) 643-3155, mywebpages.comcast.net/adring
 (7 pages)
2010, 17th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference, Long Beach, CA, United States
Keywords: electrodynamics of moving bodies, special relativity theory.
Lookup: special relativity theory (12),
relativity (606),
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| Abstract:
This paper revisits the relationship between Maxwell's Electromagnetic Theory (EMT) and coordinate
transformations that can be implemented via tensors. It is well known that under Lorentz transformation,
Maxwell's equations are form-invariant (although of course not invariant in numerical values, except for a few
one-dimensional constructs). That fact means Maxwell's EMT fits well with Einstein's Special Relativity Theory
(SRT). This paper shows that the situation is almost the same under Galilean transformations, and possibly
other plausible transformations that may be considered in the future. The only difference is that some constructs
that are number-invariant under Lorentz transformation become only form-invariant under Galilean
transformation. Thus the issue of form invariance for Maxwell's equations is not a strong indicator in favor of
any particular kind of coordinate transformation. That fact means Maxwell's EMT fits well with just about any
reasonable variant of SRT. Key Words: electrodynamics of moving bodies, special relativity theory.
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