Fizeau armand hippolyte (19 risultati)

Editore: Contentum Ltd., Larnaca, Cyprus
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Loose Leaf. Condizione: New. Reproduction. Original title: [Paris Rooftops] German: [Pariser Dachdecker] French: [Sur le toit de Paris] Spanish: [Techo de París] High-quality fine-art reproduction based on an original work from the Met. Creation period: 19th century (1841). Professionally printed on premium fine-art paper (Photo… Matt Fibre) in size A5. The motif is printed with a white border (museum-style presentation). No.

Editore: Contentum Ltd., Larnaca, Cyprus
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Loose Leaf. Condizione: New. Reproduction. Original title: St. Sulpice, Paris German: St. Sulpice, Paris French: Saint-Sulpice, Paris Spanish: St. Sulpice, Paris High-quality fine-art reproduction based on an original work from the Met. Creation period: 19th century (ca. 1841). Professionally printed on premium fine-art paper (P…hoto Matt Fibre) in size A5. The motif is printed with a white border (museum-style presentation). No.

Editore: Contentum Ltd., Larnaca, Cyprus
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Da: Contentum, Nicosia, CiproContentum
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Loose Leaf. Condizione: New. Reproduction. Original title: [Man and Boy] German: [Mann und Junge] French: [Homme et garçon] Spanish: [Hombre y niño] High-quality fine-art reproduction based on an original work from the Met. Creation period: 19th century (ca. 1841). Professionally printed on premium fine-art paper (Photo Matt Fib…re) in size A5. The motif is printed with a white border (museum-style presentation). No.
Editore: Bachelier, Imprimeur-Libraire, 1846
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Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. Fizeau, Armand Hippolyte Louis. "L'Action des rayons rouges sur les plaques daguerriennes", in Comptes Rendus, 1846, the article occupying pp 679-682 in the weekly issue, and removed from a larger bound volume. There is some water staining to this volume, and so is in GOOD condition, only.
Editore: Bachelier, Imprimeur-Libraire, 1859
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Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. Fizeau, Armand Hippolyte Louis. "Sur une methode prepare a rechercher si l'azimut de polarization di rayon refracte est influence par le mouvement du corps refringent", in Comptes Rendus, 1859, volume 49, occupying pp 717-723 in the weekly issue. Offered in the original wrappers, removed from a… larger bound volume. Very Good.
Editore: Bachelier, Imprimeur-Libraire, 1845
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Da: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.JF Ptak Science Books
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Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. Fizeau, Armand Hippolyte Louis. "Sur le phenomene des interferences entre deux rayons de lumiere dans le case de randes differences de marche", in Comptes Rendus, 1845, volume 21, offered in the weekly issue, the article occupying pp 1155-1158. The issue is removed from a larger bound volume, a…nd offered without the wrappers. Very Good. __+__ "From 1844 Fizeau and Foucault undertook a series of precise and mechanically ingenious optical experiments that would ultimately have a profound effect on the course of physics. By the middle of the nineteenth century, most scientists had come to accept the wave theory of light, formulated near the beginning of the century by Thomas Young and Augustin Fresnel. There remained, however, several gaps in the investigation of the experimental consequences of the theory. For example, in the study of interference fringes produced by two rays of light issuing from the same source, only several dozen fringes on each side of the central band had been observed."--Dictionary of Scientific Biography.
Editore: Bachelier, Imprimeur-Libraire, 1843
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Da: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.JF Ptak Science Books
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Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. Fizeau, Armand Hippolyte Louis. "Sur les effets resultant de certaines procedes employes pour abreger le temps necessaire a la formation des images photographiques", in Comptes Rendus, 1843, volume 16, pp 759-761. This is offered in the weekly issue, removed from a larger bound volume, and with…out wrappers. Very Good. __+__ "On 19 August 1839 Arago made public a description of a new process of "light painting" or heliography that had been invented by L.-J.-M. Daguerre. The daguerrotype, as the result of this process soon came to be called, was a crude forerunner of the modern photograph. Fizeau's earliest work in science was an attempt to improve Daguerre's process and to make the heliograph an instrument of science. He showed that by covering the surface of the developed plate with a salt of gold, oxidation of the surface chemicals could be prevented and the contrasts between light and dark could be considerably heightened. He is often credited with the first use of bromine vapors to hasten the development of the photographic image, but this seems uncertain. Fizeau also introduced a widely used but unpatented method for turning a photograph into a photoetching."--Dictionary of Scientific Biography.
Editore: Gauthier, Parisq, 1843
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Da: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.JF Ptak Science Books
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Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. Fizeau, Armand Hippolyte Louis. "Sur les effets resultant de certaines procedes employes pour abreger le temps necessaire a la formation des images photographiques", in "Comptes Rendus", Paris, Gauthier, 1843, volume 16, pp 759-761. This is offered in the full weekly issue, removed from a large…r bound volume, and without wrappers. Very Good, crisp. [++] "On 19 August 1839 Arago made public a description of a new process of light painting or heliography that had been invented by L.-J.-M. Daguerre. The daguerrotype, as the result of this process soon came to be called, was a crude forerunner of the modern photograph. Fizeau's earliest work in science was an attempt to improve Daguerre's process and to make the heliograph an instrument of science. He showed that by covering the surface of the developed plate with a salt of gold, oxidation of the surface chemicals could be prevented and the contrasts between light and dark could be considerably heightened. He is often credited with the first use of bromine vapors to hasten the development of the photographic image, but this seems uncertain. Fizeau also introduced a widely used but unpatented method for turning a photograph into a photoetching." --Dictionary of Scientific Biography.
Editore: Bachelier, Paris, 1844
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Da: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.JF Ptak Science Books
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Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. FIZEAU, Armand-Hippolyte-Louis (1819-1896). "Note sur un procede de gravure photographique", in Comptes Rendus de l'Academie des Sciences, vol 19, no. 2, 8 July 1844, with the Fizeau paper on pp 119-121 in the issue of pp (51)-140. With Augustin Cauchy, "Sur la methode logarithmique applique au… developpement des fonctions en series", pp 51-67; AND WITH Cauchy, "Note sur les integrales euleriennes", pp 67-81. [++] "Unlike William Henry Fox Talbot's paper negative process, which allowed for multiple positives to be made from the same negative, the daguerreotype process produced only a single example with each use. In response to this limitation, several processes were developed to reproduce daguerreotypes in ink. Hippolyte Fizeau, a scientist and daguerreotypist, devised a method for etching directly into the copper daguerreotype plate, which created a printing plate but destroyed the daguerreotype in the process. The plate could then be used to make multiple prints on paper in permanent ink. "Metropolitan Museum of Art/Photography/Fizeau/online [++] "Hippolyte Fizeau was French physicist who became fascinated with the potential reproducibility of daguerreotype photography soon after it was announced in 1839. . Fizeau's experiments with photomechanical printing are often overshadowed by his work on the velocity of light and wavelengths."Fizeau" is one of the 72 names inscribed at the base of Eiffel Tower, and of the 72 scientists and engineers listed on the tower, Fizeau is the only one who was still alive when the tower was opened to the public for the 1889 World's Fair."--Wikipedia.
Editore: Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances de l Académie des sciences,, 1851
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Da: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.JF Ptak Science Books
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Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. Armand Hippolyte Fizeau. Sur les Hypothèses relatives a l'èther lumineux. Et sur une expérience qui parait démontrer que le mouvement des corps change la vitesse avec laquelle la lumiere se propage dans leur interieur; (Extrait par l'auteur). In: Comptes Rendus de l'Academie de Science, vol 33,… no. 15, 29 September 1851, with the Fizeau paper occupying pp 349-355 in the weekly issue of pp (329)-360. This issue is cleanly removed from a larger bound volume and intact. Very crisp copy. In Very Good condition. $250 This is the first appearance of the results of what would become the renowned Fizeau Experiments on the speed of light in a moving media, a shorter version of the full paper that wouldn't appear until eight years later (in December 1859).
Editore: Bachelier, Imprimeur-Libraire, 1851
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Da: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.JF Ptak Science Books
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Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. Fizeau, Armand Hippolyte Louis. "Sur les hypotheses relatives a l'ether lumineux, et sur une experience qui parait demontrer que le mouvement des corps change la vitesse avec laquelle la lumiere se propage dans elur interieur", in Comptes Rendus.,1851, volume 33, pp 349-355. The weekly issue re…moved from a larger bound volume, without the original printed wrappers. This is the first publication of the later, full report that appeared in 1859 in Annales de Chimie et de Physique, 3me Series - Tome LVII.__+__ "During most of pre-Galileo and Newton and for subsequent eras as well, it was supposed that in the interstitial spaces between objects of matter that there existed a "carrying medium" or aether for the transmission of light from source to reflecting object and thence to the human eye for perception. Two French physicists, Jean Bernard Léon Foucault ( 1819 -1868 ) and Armand Hippolyte Louis Fizeau ( 1819 - 1896 ), attempted the determination for the finite speed of light; Fizeau did so singly in 1849 and again in 1850 together with Foucault but thereafter independently sought the speed of light in his famous 1851 Fizeau Water Experiment whenever light was transmitted thru a high velocity flowing medium such as water. In essence, therefore, Fizeau attempted to confirm Augustin - Jean Fresnel ( 1788 - 1827 )'s "velocity drag coefficient" for light transmitted thru high - velocity ( at least / approx. 30 m/sec ) flowing water. It should be thus noted that Augustin - Jean Fresnel, French mathematical theorist and experimenter in optical wave physics, is the original mathematical discoverer in 1818 of the velocity drag coefficient."--Dictionary of Scientific Biography.
Editore: Johann Barth, 1853
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Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. Fizeau, Armand Hippolyte Louis. "Ueber die Hypothesen vom Lichtaether under ueber einen Versuch.", pp 457-465, in "Annalen der Physik und Chemie", Erganzungsband III, 1853, pp (322)-480, with one folding plate (IV). Removed from a bound volume, though complete in itself. Very Good, crisp copy.…This is the German edition of Fizeau's "Sur les Hypothèthes relatives à l'éther lumineux, et sur une experience qui paraît démontrer que le mouvment des corps change la vitesse avec laquelle la lumière se propage dans leur intérieur", which was published September 29, 1851 in the "Comptes Rendus", and then published very soon after as "The Hypotheses Relating to the Luminous Aether, and an Experiment which Appears to Demonstrate that the Motion of Bodies Alters the Velocity with which Light Propagates itself in their Interior", in the Philosophical Magazine, vol 2, pp 568 573 (1851). "The Fizeau experiment was carried out by Hippolyte Fizeau in 1851 to measure the relative speeds of light in moving water. Fizeau used a special interferometer arrangement to measure the effect of movement of a medium upon the speed of light.".
Editore: Bachelier, Imprimeur-Libraire, 1843
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Da: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.JF Ptak Science Books
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Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. Fizeau, Armand Hippolyte Louis. "Ueber die zur Erzeugung der Moser'schen Bilder-beitragenden Ursachen", which is the first German edition of "Sur les causes qui concouraent a la production des images de Moser" from the Comptes Rendus 1842, volume 15.__+__ In "Annalen der Physik", volume 58, 184…3, No. 4, part VII, pp 592-593 in the issue of pp (521)-668 (with one folding plate). This issue is removed from a larger bound volume, with no outer wrappers. Very Good.__+__ Other works include those of C.F. Naumann, G.B. Airy, Faraday, Arago, and a longer piece by Daguerre. ("Ueber ein neues Versahren, die zu photographischen Bildern bestimmten Platten zu poliren, welches, so lange di eSufsern Umstande gleich bleiben, einerlei Resultate gicht", pp 586-592, translated from the Comptes Rendus volume 16, p. 588.).
Altre immaginiEditore: Paris, Bachelier, 1849
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Da: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.JF Ptak Science Books
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Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. FIZEAU, (ARMAND HIPPOLYTE). "Sur une expérience relative à la vitesse de propagation de la lumière" in "Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances de l'Académie des sciences", Paris, Bachelier, 1849, vol. 29, with Fizeau's paper on pp. 90-92.[++] Bound in a modern standard blue library cloth; old…German university rubber stamp on rear title page. Very crisp and bright. [++] "Fizeau was not satisfied merely with determining the relative velocities of light. He wanted to measure with some precision the absolute velocity. In 1849 he had conceived an ingenious mechanism that would enable him to achieve his goal: a large toothed wheel was spun rapidly about its axis, and a beam of light sent through the spaces between the teeth was reflected back to its source by a fixed mirror. When the wheel was rotated rapidly enough, the intermittent light rays returning from the mirror intersected the path of the teeth and thus became invisible to the observer stationed behind the wheel. As the mechanism was turned faster and faster, the light reappeared and disappeared alternately. The time required for the light to travel through the carefully measured distance was a simple function of the angular displacement of the wheel. In 1849 Fizeau made a trial of his new method between his father s house at Suresnes and Montmartre. The figure he obtained for the speed of light (about 315,000 kilometers per second) was not quite as accurate as the results of astronomical calculations, but the practicability of the method was established and became the basis of the more precise determinations made by Alfred Cornu in the 1870 s."--Complete DSB online ALSO IN THIS VOLUME: BLANQUART-ÈVRARD, (Louis-Desire)."Recherches photographiques." vol 29, pp. 215-217. [++] DUCHENNE DE BOULOGNE, Guillaume. "Recherches faites à l'aide du galvanisme sur l'etat de la contractilité et de la sensibilité électro-musculaires dans les paralysies des membres" vol. 29, Duchenne's appears on paper on pp. 667-70. (Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy) FNCH 005.
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Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. FIZEAU, Armand Hippolyte Louis. "Ueber die Hypothesen vom Lichtaether under ueber einen Versuch.", pp 457-465, in Annalen der Physik und Chemie, Erganzungsband III, 1853, pp (322)-480, the Fizeau on pp 457-466, with one folding plate (IV). Removed from a bound volume, though complete in itself.… Very Good, crisp copy. __+__ This is the German edition of Fizeau's "Sur les Hypothèthes relatives à l'éther lumineux, et sur une experience qui paraît démontrer que le mouvement des corps change la vitesse avec laquelle la lumière se propage dans leur intérieur", which was published September 29, 1851 in the Comptes Rendus, and then published very soon after as "The Hypotheses Relating to the Luminous Aether, and an Experiment which Appears to Demonstrate that the Motion of Bodies Alters the Velocity with which Light Propagates itself in their Interior", in the Philosophical Magazine, vol 2, pp 568 573 (1851). "The Fizeau experiment was carried out by Hippolyte Fizeau in 1851 to measure the relative speeds of light in moving water. Fizeau used a special interferometer arrangement to measure the effect of movement of a medium upon the speed of light.".
Sur les phénomène des interférences entre deux rayons de lumiere dans le cas de grandes differences de marche. (+) Sur les phénomène des interférences entre deux rayons de lumiere dans le cas de grandes differences de marche, et sur la polarisation ch.
"FIZEAU, ARMAND HIPPOLYTE & JEAN BERNARD LÉON FOUCAULT. - CONFIRMING THE WAVE THEORY OF LIGHT.
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Da: Herman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, DanimarcaHerman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF
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Paris, Victor Masson, Imprimerie de Bachelier, 1849-50. No wrappers. In "Annales de Chimie et de Physique", 3me Series - Tome XXVI a. XXX., Juin 1849 a. Octobre 1850. (The entire issues offered). Titlepages to vol. 26 a. 30. Pp. 129-256 a. pp. 129-256. Fizeau & Foucault's paper: pp. 138-148 a. pp. 146-159, 2 folded engraved plat…es. Some scattred brownspots. First appearance of thispaper in which the authors demonstrated importent similarities between sound - and lightwaves, and that interference takes place between rays of light of different wavelenghts thus giving considerably evidence for the wave theory of light."By analyzing the white light source into simpler constituents by means of a spectroscope, Fizeau and Foucault were able to observe fringes produced by interfering light rays with a difference of travel equal to more than 7,000 wavelenghts, thus showing hat light waves, like sound waves, remain geometrically constant over a large number of periods. But light waves, because of their transverse vibrations, are more complex than sound waves. Light can assume different forms of planes of vibration as well as different intensities. Using the same spectroscopic apparatus as in the preceeding experiment, Fizeau and Foucault observed the interaction of two rays produced by passing a single polarized ray through a birefringent crystal. In this case, instead of obtaining alternating bands of light and dark, they obtained bands of light periodcally polarized in different planes of vibration."(DSB V, p. 19).
Sur les Hypothèses relatives a Lèther lumineux. Et sur une expérience qui parait démontrer que le mouvement des corps change la vitesse avec laquelle la lumiere se propage dans leur interieur" Presenté à l'Academie des Sciences dans sa séance du 29 se.
FIZEAU, ARMAND HIPPOLYTE - THE FIZEAU EXPERIMENT ON THE VELOCITY OF LIGHT IN MEDIA.
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Da: Herman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, DanimarcaHerman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF
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Paris, Victor Masson, Imprimerie de Bachelier, 1859. 8vo. Contemp. hcalf, raised bands, gilt spine. Light wear along edges. Small stamps on verso of titlepage and on verso of plates. In "Annales de Chimie et de Physique", 3me Series - Tome LVII. 512 pp. and 4 plates. (The entire volume offered). Fizeau's paper: pp. 385-404. Some… scattered brownspots. First printing of a highly importent paper in the history of physics, "It is less famous, for some reason, than the failure of Michelson and Morley to detect the aether drag, but NO LESS SIGNIFICANT. For it showed that the velocity of light increases in a medium according to the formula, v (1 - 1/n2), where v is the velocity of the medium, and n is the refractive index"(Gillespie in "The Edge of Objecticity" p. 427). Fizeau shows that the velocity of light is higher in water flowing in the direction of the beam than that of light propagating in the direction opposite the direction of flow. The paper offered is the full text of the research, there appeared an extract of it in Comptes Rendus in 1851. Albert Einstein later pointed out the IMPORTENCE OF THE EXPERIMENT FOR SPECIAL RELATIVITY.Fizeau's result was replicated by Albert Michelson and Edward Morley in 1886 repeated the experiment on a larger scale and confirmed Fizeau's results., and in 1914 it was confirmed by Pieter Zeeman. It was Arago in 1838, who suggested this "crucial experiment" to decide between the corpuscular and undulatory theories of light by comparingthe speed of light in water and in air. It vindicated the undulatory position.It was shown by Hendrik Lorentz (1892, 1895) that the experiment can be explained by the reaction of the moving water upon the interfering waves without the need of any aether entrainment. On this occasion, Lorentz introduced a different time coordinate for moving bodies within the aether, the so called Local time (an early form of the Lorentz transformation for small velocities compared to the speed of light). In 1895, Lorentz went a step further and explained the coefficient by local time alone and without mentioning any interaction of light and matter.
Sur les Hypothèses relatives a Lèther lumineux. Et sur une expérience qui parait démontrer que le mouvement des corps change la vitesse avec laquelle la lumiere se propage dans leur interieur" (Extrait par l'auteur). (The Hypotheses Relating to the Lu.
FIZEAU, ARMAND HIPPOLYTE - ANNOUNCING FIZEAU EXPERIMENT ON THE VELOCITY OF LIGHT IN MEDIA.
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Da: Herman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, DanimarcaHerman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF
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Paris, Bachelier, 1851. 4to. No wrappers. In: "Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences", Tome 33, No 13. With htitle and titlepage to tome 33. Pp. (329-) 360 (entire issue offered). Fizeau's paper: pp. 349-355. A stamp on upper right corner of title-page and a perforated stamp in lower margin of title…-page. Clean and fine. First appearance of this paper, the first announcment of Fizeau's results of his experiments with the velocity of light."It (the paper) is less famous, for some reason, than the failure of Michelson and Morley to detect the aether drag, but NO LESS SIGNIFICANT. For it showed that the velocity of light increases in a medium according to the formula, v (1 - 1/n2), where v is the velocity of the medium, and n is the refractive index"(Gillespie in "The Edge of Objecticity" p. 427). Fizeau shows that the velocity of light is higher in water flowing in the direction of the beam than that of light propagating in the direction opposite the direction of flow. The paper offered is the shorter announcement of the research, the paper in full was published later in 1859 in "Annales de Chimie et de Physique". Albert Einstein later pointed out the IMPORTENCE OF THE EXPERIMENT FOR SPECIAL RELATIVITY.Fizeau's result was replicated by Albert Michelson and Edward Morley in 1886 repeated the experiment on a larger scale and confirmed Fizeau's results., and in 1914 it was confirmed by Pieter Zeeman. It was Arago in 1838, who suggested this "crucial experiment" to decide between the corpuscular and undulatory theories of light by comparing the speed of light in water and in air. It vindicated the undulatory position.It was shown by Hendrik Lorentz (1892, 1895) that the experiment can be explained by the reaction of the moving water upon the interfering waves without the need of any aether entrainment. On this occasion, Lorentz introduced a different time coordinate for moving bodies within the aether, the so called Local time (an early form of the Lorentz transformation for small velocities compared to the speed of light). In 1895, Lorentz went a step further and explained the coefficient by local time alone and without mentioning any interaction of light and matter.
Sur les Hypothèses relatives a Lèther lumineux. Et sur une expérience qui parait démontrer que le mouvement des corps change la vitesse avec laquelle la lumiere se propage dans leur interieur" (Extrait par l'auteur). (The Hypotheses Relating to the Lu.
FIZEAU, ARMAND HIPPOLYTE - ANNOUNCING FIZEAU EXPERIMENT ON THE VELOCITY OF LIGHT IN MEDIA.
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Da: Herman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, DanimarcaHerman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF
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Paris, Bachelier, 1851. 4to. No wrappers. In: "Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences", Tome 33, No 13. With htitle and titlepage to tome 33. Pp. 329-360 (entire issue offered). Fizeau's paper: pp. 349-355. A stamp on erso of titlepage. Titlepage with faint brownspots. First appearance of this paper,… the first announcment of Fizeau's results of his experiments with the velocity of light."It (the paper) is less famous, for some reason, than the failure of Michelson and Morley to detect the aether drag, but NO LESS SIGNIFICANT. For it showed that the velocity of light increases in a medium according to the formula, v (1 - 1/n2), where v is the velocity of the medium, and n is the refractive index"(Gillespie in "The Edge of Objecticity" p. 427). Fizeau shows that the velocity of light is higher in water flowing in the direction of the beam than that of light propagating in the direction opposite the direction of flow. The paper offered is the shorter announcement of the research, the paper in full was published later in 1859 in "Annales de Chimie et de Physique". Albert Einstein later pointed out the IMPORTENCE OF THE EXPERIMENT FOR SPECIAL RELATIVITY.Fizeau's result was replicated by Albert Michelson and Edward Morley in 1886 repeated the experiment on a larger scale and confirmed Fizeau's results., and in 1914 it was confirmed by Pieter Zeeman. It was Arago in 1838, who suggested this "crucial experiment" to decide between the corpuscular and undulatory theories of light by comparing the speed of light in water and in air. It vindicated the undulatory position.It was shown by Hendrik Lorentz (1892, 1895) that the experiment can be explained by the reaction of the moving water upon the interfering waves without the need of any aether entrainment. On this occasion, Lorentz introduced a different time coordinate for moving bodies within the aether, the so called Local time (an early form of the Lorentz transformation for small velocities compared to the speed of light). In 1895, Lorentz went a step further and explained the coefficient by local time alone and without mentioning any interaction of light and matter.