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On Fresnel's Theory of the Aberration of Light

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2010

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Summary

The theory of the aberration of light, and of the absence of any influence of the motion of the earth on the laws of refraction, &c, given by Fresnel in the ninth volume of the Annales de Chimie, p. 57, is really very remarkable. If we suppose the diminished velocity of propagation of light within refracting media to arise solely from the greater density of the ether within them, the elastic force being the same as without, the density which it is necessary to suppose the ether within a medium of refractive index μ to have is μ2, the density in vacuum being taken for unity. Fresnel supposes that the earth passes through the ether without disturbing it, the ether penetrating the earth quite freely. He supposes that a refracting medium moving with the earth carries with it a quantity of ether, of density μ2- 1, which constitutes the excess of density of the ether within it over the density of the ether in vacuum. He supposes that light is propagated through this ether, of which part is moving with the earth, and part is at rest in space, as it would be if the whole were moving with the velocity of the centre of gravity of any portion of it, that is, with a velocity (1 - μ-2) v, v being the velocity of the earth.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1880

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