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An Overlay of Fieldlets: Difference between revisions

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==Abstract==
==Abstract==


'''Summary: '''Grave sacrifices were made in order to formulate a self-consistant description of electrodynamics after the Michelson-Morley experiment refuted the existence of an ether. In an alternate view submitted here, the superimposed electrostatic fields of individual charged particles are offered as the long-sought medium. The interaction of one electric "fieldlet" moving with respect to all others is discussed. A crucial experiment is suggested, and the gravitational bending of light is reinterpreted.[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
'''Summary: '''Grave sacrifices were made in order to formulate a self-consistant description of electrodynamics after the Michelson-Morley experiment refuted the existence of an ether. In an alternate view submitted here, the superimposed electrostatic fields of individual charged particles are offered as the long-sought medium. The interaction of one electric "fieldlet" moving with respect to all others is discussed. A crucial experiment is suggested, and the gravitational bending of light is reinterpreted.
 
[[Category:Scientific Paper|overlay fieldlets]]


[[Category:Gravity]]
[[Category:Gravity]]
[[Category:Aether]]
[[Category:Aether]]

Revision as of 12:00, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
TitleAn Overlay of Fieldlets
Author(s)Lee Shimmin
Keywordsoverlay of fieldlets, electrodynamics, individual charged particles, gravitational bending
Published1990
JournalGalilean Electrodynamics
Volume1
Number2
Pages21-26

Abstract

Summary: Grave sacrifices were made in order to formulate a self-consistant description of electrodynamics after the Michelson-Morley experiment refuted the existence of an ether. In an alternate view submitted here, the superimposed electrostatic fields of individual charged particles are offered as the long-sought medium. The interaction of one electric "fieldlet" moving with respect to all others is discussed. A crucial experiment is suggested, and the gravitational bending of light is reinterpreted.