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XV. Aberration
Problems.— A Discussion concerning the Motion of the Ether near
the Earth, and concerning the Connexion
Ether and Gross M atter; with
some new
Experiments.
B y Oliver J. L odge, F.R.S.
Received and Read March 31, 1892.—Revised July 17, 1893.
[P lates 31, 32.]
Table of Contents.
Page.
Section 1. Statement of p ro b lem ............................................................................................ 729
2. Meaning of free and modified e t h e r .................................................................... 729
3. Meaning of travel of modified e t h e r .................................................................... 730
4. Fresnels h y p o th e sis............................................................................................ 731
5. Expression in terms of electromagnetic c o n s ta n ts ............................................ 732
6. J. J. Thomsons h y p o th e sis................................................................................... 732
7. Verification of one part of F resnels l a w ........................................................... 733
8. Attempted verification of the other part . ................................................. 734
9. Summary of phenomena resulting from m o tio n .................................. ....
735
10. Projectile analogies................................................................................................. 735
11. Effect of motion on waves, magnetic lines of force, &c........................................ 736
12. Frequent convenience of attributing motion to m e d iu m .................................. 738
13. Fixed source in moving m e d iu m ......................................................................... 738
14. Moving source in fixed m e d i u m ......................................................................... 740
15. Medium moving past fixed source and r e c e iv e r .......................................' . . 741
16. Modes of observing interference effects due to m otion....................................... 742
17. Influence of dense bodies inserted in p a t h .......................................................... 742
18. Modes of observing effect of motion on intensity................................................ 743
19. Criticism of the suggested ex p erim en t............................................................... 744
20. Receiver only moving, effect on fo cu ssin g .......................................................... 745
21. Summary of conclusions so far re a c h e d .............................................................. 747
22. No method of detecting first-order effects of ethereal motion exists . . . .
747
23. Treatment by principle of least tim e ................................................................... 748
24. Irrotational motion of homogeneous medium causes no first-order effects . . 748
25. First discussion of Mr. Michelsons experiments. Extraordinary result . . 749
26. Contradictory result supposed to be obtained by F izeaus polarization experi­
ment ................................................................................................................... 750
27. Summary of statements concerning rays and wave-normals in an irrotationally
moving medium. Line of vision depends only on motion of observer . . 750
28. In a non-homogeneous medium, motion such that /flv cos 0 is constant or is the
derivative of a potential function, will cause no first-order effects . . . .
751
25.10.93
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728
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
Section 29. 30.
31.
32.
Moving matter, on F resnels hypothesis, does not disturb the ether of space . No first-order experimental result yet obtained can discriminate between com­
plete connection and complete independence of e t h e r ..................................... Question whether purely irrotational motion is possible in a medium through
which planets m ove................................................................................................... Viscous motion must curve rays and cause a real or negative aberration . .
Page. 752
752
753 754
Experimental Portion.
33-46. 47.
Details of apparatus made to examine into the velocity of light near moving matter; and experiments tending to the conclusion that the ether is not connected to matter by anything resembling viscosity ..................................... 754-76
Future experiments. The effect of moving air is too small for observation so f a r ......................................................................... .............................................. 778
More detailed consideration of Aberrational Effects in Moving Medium.
48. Change of entire medium changes aberration constant ..................................... 779
49. Motion of entire medium has a second-order effect on aberration . . . . . 779
50. Change of a part of the medium does not appreciably modify aberration
e f f e c t s ............................... ................................................................................... ..... 780
51. Connection of this with F resnels law . . .
781
52. Motion of a part of the medium does cause aberrational effects. . . . . .
782
More detailed consideration of Doppler Effects.
53. Differences between moving source and moving r e c e iv e r ..........................
782
54. Steady motion of medium causes no Doppler effect ............................................... 784
55. But is able to modify one otherwise caused ....................................................
785
56. The apparent change of wave-length observed by a moving grating is really
an aberrational effect, due to motion of observer partly across the line of
s ig h t.........................................
786
57. „The same is true for observation made with a moving prism. In both cases
dispersion depends really on wave-length, apparently on frequency . . . 788
58. Dispersive power due to m o t i o n ....................................................................
789
More detailed consideration of
MichelsonExperiment or Interference Effects in Moving M
59. Geometrical treatment of the reversal of a ray on itself in any azimuth with
respect to the motion of s o u r c e ........................
789
60. Another treatment, with medium m o v in g ..................................... ......................... 791
61. Effect of the glass lenses and slabs used by Michelson................................... 791
62. Effect of a completely different medium..............................................................
792
The Daws of Deflexion and Refraction in a Moving Medium.
63. General c o n sid e r a tio n s............................................................................................. 793
64. Summary of results .
794 j
65. Warning against possible e r r o r s ...............................
795
66. Reflexion in a moving medium .
795
67. Effect of drift on
waves,and on width of b e a m ................... 797
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DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
729
Section 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76.
Effect of drift on
s.rayError of reflexion. Possibility of detecting it .
Error of refraction..................................................................................................
Verification by Stokes method, pushed to second orderof minutiae . . . .
Possibility of detecting an effect due to error of r e f r a c tio n .............................
Effect of reflexion on wave-length'.................................................................... 801
Effect of reflexion on p h a s e ...................................................................................
Effect of reflexion on e n e r g y ..............................................................................
Possible effect of pressure of light.........................................................................
Direction of motion of a place on the e a r t h .....................................................
Page. . 797
798 800 800
801 802 802 803
Electrical Methods.
77. Electrical methods, like optical methods, can only detect second order of aberra­ tion magnitudes as caused by general ethereal drift, i.e., by motion of apparatus and observer through s p a c e .......................................................... 804
1. The nature of the connexion between ether and gross m atter is one of the most striking physical problems which now appear ripe for solution, and as a preliminary to the undertaking of fresh experim ents I propose to review the subject in order to realize our present position in connexion w ith it.
The subject may be attacked either optically or electrically. It first prominently presented itself historically in connexion w ith the e a rth s motion through space and the finite velocity of lig h t; and it will be convenient to consider the m atter first on this side, and to realize precisely w hat ought to be expected to happen on any simple hypothesis concerning the ether; working it out, however, in most cases with accuracy,* and by no means ignoring as negligible small quantities of the second order (hun­ dred-millionths), which Michelson has practically shown to be nowadays within the limits of highly-refined observation.
Necessary Hypotheses or Postulates.
2. There are one or two hypotheses regarding the ether so elementally obvious that they may be regarded as almost axiomatic, such as the following:—•
(i.) In interstellar space the ether is free; that is, its properties in no w*ay depend on the existence or motion of gross matter. I t may, therefore, be called at rest. Whether it is in absolute rest or not appears to be a question which can hardly be put into an intelligible shape. If it be moving relatively to itself, we have in those regions no obvious means of ascertaining the fact. But ju st as it is natural to assume that its properties in free space are uniform, so it is natural to assume that its motion there, whatever it is, is perfectly uniform, and it may be defined as absolute rest. When I speak of the ether anywhere as “ stationary,” I mean stationary with respect
* Whenever equations are approximate only, the symbol is used instead of the symbol = .
MDCCCXCIII. — A.
5 a
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730
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
to interstellar or free ether. W hen I speak of the ether anywhere as “ free,” I mean that its properties are identical with the interstellar ether enormously distant from all gross matter. And this is the condition of ordinary space, except for the presence of meteoric particles, whose influence, if any, we at present legitimately ignore.
The only hypothesis which at first sight appears to assume infinitely distant ether to be affected by the motion of, say, the earth, is that of Sir George Stokes, in 1845, where an irrotational motion, zero with respect to the earth, was postulated for it. But he must have seen some way in which so impossible an assumption could be avoided ; and the question how far any kind of irrotational motion can be conceived of as allowing rest at infinity, and yet no slip at the earths surface, will be discussed later, § 31.
(ii.) Inside material bodies the ether is modified.—We learn this by direct experi­ ment and observation.
For transparent bodies we learn it by optical experiments, which proves that light travels more slowly through their modified ether than it does in free eth er; while at the same time there is no doubt but that the ether inter-penetrates them, because material substance itself is wholly incompetent to transmit anything possessing the properties and the speed of radiation.
In metallic bodies we find great opacity combined with anomalous dispersion and other complex effects. In them evidently the ether is intensely modified, if it exists at all.
I shall call the ether inside gross matter of any kind “ modified ether,” but as to the particular way it is modified I make no assumption. [Electrostatic experiments suggest that inside transparent bodies, something- which may be called its “ virtual elasticity ” is diminished. Magnetic experiments suggest that inside several opaque substances it is loaded, so as to increase what may be called its “ virtual density;” and there is a temptation to identify 47t/K with the one, and 47 with the other, of these two ethereal constants. Further, electrokinetic experiments suggest that inside metallic conductors the ether has a virtual viscosity, whereby its motion through matter is resisted precisely as the first power of the velocity. But none of these doubtful hypotheses shall here be obtruded.]
Rate o f Travel
of“Modif
3. Defined in this way it is quite obvious that “ modified ether ” travels at the same steady pace as its material encasement. For lift a lump of glass or of copper from one side of a table to the other, the modified ether which was in one place is now in another, and has necessarily accompanied the material body. I f the modification of ether by matter requires time, there would be some lag during epochs of acceleration; but during steady velocity there would even so be no difference in speed between modified ether and matter, only a slight lag in space.
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DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
731
Ignoring this possible finite speed of affection of ether by matter, unless circum­ stances make us revert to it, the question faces us, what is meant by the travelling of the modified ether ?
It is not a question easy to state without some looseness of language, but we may ask :
(a) Does it mean that the identical stuff' inside the matter travels from one place to the other ? If so, the free ether which it has displaced must stream back round the body in the same way as a material fluid would have to do.
(b) Or does it mean that no ether travels at all, th at the mere, presence of the matter causes the modification wherever it is, so th at it is only the modifi­ cation or affection which travels ? If so, the ether abandoned by the matter becomes free in situ, while the ether encroached on by the matter becomes modified in situ, and there is no question as to its motion.
On hypothesis (b) the whole ether is fixed and imperturbable by the motion of matter. The portion enshrouded by matter at any instant has properties differing from those of free ether, but the modification is only connected with the matter causing it in the same sort of way as a shadow is connected with the object casting it.
Of the two hypotheses, there can be no question but that the second is the simpler and considered as a hypothesis is preferable, but we must enquire whether it is competent to sustain the weight of all known facts.
F resnels
.
4. I t is notorious th a t th e hypothesis a t present holding the field is not exactly either of these, but is some form of th e bold and picturesque idea of F resn el; viz., that in addition to the free and undisturbed ether of space existing equally everywhere and flowing through th e pores of gross m atter, there is an extra quantity of bound ether fixed to th e m atter and travelling w ith i t ; this additional quantity being
(1 — l/n 2)th of th e whole.
This idea of F resnels seems, at first sight, essentially to involve the condensation of ether by matter, so that its density inside bodies is n3; for the fixed ether is superposed upon the normal ether of space. (Certainly the converse is true ; viz., that extra ethereal density involves F resnels law, as will be shortly shown.)
Now the facts of gravitation, and many electrostatic experiments, suggest that the ether is practically incompressible ; hence the notion of any actual increase of densityJnside gross matter is repugnant,
Fresnel, however, himself pointed out, in a subsequently written postscript to his original letter h> Arago* promulgating his famous hypothesis, that the extra density need not be taken too literally. (As this postscript seems rather to have been overlooked it may be worth while to quote it).
Note
a d d i t i o n n e l l e a la
lettrede M. F resnel d M. A rago,
dans
Ln calculant la refraction de la lumiere dans un prisme entrame par le mouvement terrestre, j ai suppose, pour simplifier les raisonnements, que la difference entre les vitesses de la lumiere dans le prisme
* Ann de Chirn. et de Phys. (2), vol. 9, p. 56. 5 A 2
732
DE. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
et dans Tether environnant provenait uniquement du.ne difference de densite, lelasticite etant la meme
de part et dautre ; mais il est tres possible que les deux milieux different en elasticity comme en
densite. On con9oit meme que lelasticite dun corps solide peut varier avec le sens suivant lequel on
le considere ; et cest tres probablement ce qui occasionne la double refraction, comme Ta observe le Dr.
Y oung. Mais quelle que soit lhypothese que Ton fasse sur Jes causes du ralentissement de la marche de
lumiere dans les corps transparents, on peut toujours, pour resoudre le probleme qui metait propose,
substituer par la pensee, au milieu reel du prisme, un fluide elastique en equilibre de tension avec Tether
environnant, et dune densite telle que la vitesse de la lumiere soit precisement la meme dans ce fluide et
dans le prisme supposes en repos ; cette egalite devra subsister encore dans les deux milieux entraines par
le mouvement terrestre: or, telles sont les bases sur lesquelles repose mon calcul.”—(Ann. de Chim. et
de Phys., 1818, t.
9?p. 128 or 286.)
And Mr. Glazebrook ( Phil. Mag., December, 1888) shows that in the interaction of ether
and matter, a term depending on relative acceleration is sufficient to sustain the results achieved by
F resnels hypothesis. In other words, that a virtual density, or loading of the ether by matter, is quite
enough without true condensation.
It is, however, still appropriate to speak of the extra ethereal density inside matter; meaning
the coefficient of this acceleration term.
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5. A plausible mode of exhibiting the naturalness of Fresnels law is as follows:— The constant which determines the speed of electromagnetic waves through any medium is p,K ; by the differential equation to wave motion. In a dense body the value of this constant is p/K'. Shift a lump of this body from one place to another. Its constant p'K' has been shifted in position too, but the ordinary space-value p,K remains behind; so the resultant shift of the property determining the velocity of light (the effective medium) is a fraction (p'K' —pK)/p'K', of the shift of the body. So, if the lump moves with velocity u, the property of it concerned with the velocity of light shifts with velocity (p'K' — pK)/(p'K,).w ; that is with speed (1 — l/n z)u. And, as in all probability the velocity of wave motion relative to its medium is unaltered, this may be taken as the extra speed of the light caused by the motion of the matter. 6. It is here assumed that the medium simply carries the wave motion with it as air carries sound. It is not customary to doubt that wave motion must be affected by any motion of its medium in that simple manner. But a singular investigation by Professor J. J. Thomson ( Phil. Mag., April, 1880) seems to show that on electro­ magnetic principles the speed of ether waves is affected with only h a lf the velocity of the medium conveying them. This extraordinary result is not at present positively contradicted by the F izeau experiment, even as repeated by Michelson, because the value of l — 1/n2 for water is not sufficiently different from ^ to afford a certain criterion ; and water is the only substance for which a positive result has as yet been obtained. Certainly the negative result obtained for air by both F izeau and Michelson is in accord with F resnels theory and not in accord with J. J. Thomsons. But a definition of what
DR, OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
733
is meant by “ moving medium ” seems necessary before we can adequately test the question w hether electromagnetic waves in it move with it or lag behind.
I suppose th at it must be desirable to examine substances other than water, especially those with a much higher refractive index. I hope to do this, though it may be noted th a t th e value of n which would make F resnels and Thomsons theories exactly agree, is 1*4142, and th a t the available range of refractive indices of liquids and solids affords bu t a narrow m argin for discrim ination between the two hypotheses.
The balance of evidence is a t present strongly in favour of F resnels hypothesis, and I propose ordinarily to assume its tru th . I cannot, indeed, understand the possibility of Thomsons theory, though I detect no flaw in his work, for it seems to require a distinction between the case of source or receiver moving through a medium, and the case of medium flowing past source or receiver ; th a t is, it seems to demand a knowledge of absolute velocity.
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F resnels Law.
7. The statement of F resnels law can be thrown almost into the form of
hypothesis
(b),§ 3, and at the same time its apparent licence of language about
“ free ” and “ bound ” ether can be lessened, by supposing th a t the “ modification ”
induced by the encroachment of matter on the ether is really a condensation, in the
ratio 1 :n2; no motion in the ether other than what is necessarily involved in that act
being postulated. On this method of statement the ether outside a moving body is
absolutely stationary, but, as the body advances, ether is continually condensing in
front, and, as it were, evaporating behind, while inside it is streaming through the
body in its condensed condition at a pace such that what is equivalent to the normal
quantity of ether in space may remain absolutely stationary. To this end its speed
relatively to the body must be
v/n,3and accordingly its speed
v(1 - 1
/n2).
Thus, instead of saying that a portion of the ether is moving with the full velocity
of the body while the rest is stationary, it is probably preferable to say that the whole
internal ether is moving with a fraction of the velocity of the body.
One or other form of statement is absolutely involved in the Fresnellian idea
of increased ethereal density, as may be rigorously shown
Lord F a y l e ig ii,
Nature, March, 1892 ; vide also E isenlohr), thus :—
Consider a slab moving forward flatways with velocity let its internal ethereal
density be
n2, and let the external ether, of density 1, be stationary. Let the speed
of the internal ether through space be xv, and consider that the amount of etlier
enclosed between two planes moving with the slab, one outside and one inside, must be
constant; it follows at once that
v =
734 whence
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
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Now whatever may be the inner meaning of this statement concerning the velocity of the internal ether, it certainly agrees with, and is at once suggested by, the fact, thoroughly established by both negative and positive experiments, that light travels down a running stream of matter at a pace
V+ v l
h
The negative experiments supporting this are such as the achromatic prism experi­ ment suggested and tried by Arago, repeated more elaborately by Maxwell and by Mascart ; the water-telescope observations suggested by Boscovich, tried by Airy and by H oek ; interference experiments of Babinet and of H oek ; and several other experiments by M ascart. The positive experiment establishing it is the very beautiful and well-known one of F izeau, now repeated and confirmed beyond the reach of any but quantitative cavil by Michelson.*
Whether any ether is moved by moving matter may still be an open question, but that the speed of light is affected in a fairly ascertained way by the motion of transparent matter through which it is passing, is certain.
8. But the specific motion of the internal ether is not the whole of F resnels hypo­
thesis ; there is the fixity of the external ether to be verified too. And that has not
yet been done. In fact, one important experiment, to be discussed later on, throws
grave doubt upon it, at least for large moving bodies like the earth.
But unless the fixity of external ether be granted, our argument from density
concerning the value of the internal velocity breaks down. Consider again two
planes moving with a slab of matter, one inside and one outside the mass, and let
the space motion of the outside ether at the "position of outside plane be affected by
the motion of the slab to the extent
yv,then all we c
v — yv= n2(v— xv), or,
wherefore it is possible for x and y to be unity together.
W e may take it, however, th a t th e quantitative accuracy of the F izeau experi­
m ent renders anything of this sort very unlikely, and th at we are bound to suppose
the ether immediately outside moving m atter to be stationary, i.e., to be com­
pletely unaffected by its motion, unless we are directly forced by facts to admit the
contrary.
* Amer. J. Sci., vol. 31, p. 377.
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
735
The two parts of F resnels law, the motion of internal ether, and the fixity of external ether, can and ought to be verified separately. The F izeau experiment has verified the one. I propose to attem pt the other. To this end I am passing a beam of light, split into two equal halves, very near a rapidly rotating disk (in fact between a pair of rotating disks clamped together), so that one half the light travels with the mechanical motion and the other half travels against it. The two half beams, after several journeys round and round, are united, with interference effects, and the observation consists in watching the system of bands for any shift caused by the motion. For description of this experiment see §§ 33-47 below.
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Phenomena Resulting from Motion o f Source, Receiver, or Medium.
9. The phenomena which can be appealed to as evidence of a state of motion, and which necessarily result from that motion if of a suitable kind, are four, viz.:—
(1) Changes or apparent changes in direction of ray, as observed by telescope with cross-wires ; the change commonly called “ aberration ” proper.
(2) Changes or apparent changes in frequency of vibration, as observed by the pitch or colour appreciated by an observer, or by the shifted position of lines in a spectroscope; a change which may be referred to as the Doppler effect.
(3) Changes or apparent changes in the time taken over a fixed journey, as observed by the relative lag in phase between two portions of a split beam and the consequent shift of interference fringes when they are re-united.
(4) Changes or apparent changes in the intensity of radiation in different directions, as observed by the amount of energy received by a given area exposed normal to the rays at a given distance from a source, but having different aspects with respect to the line of motion.
Or, briefly summarizing them, the> possible phenomena caused by motion are changes in direction, in period, in phase, and in amplitude.
Apparent Direction as Affected hy Motion in General.
10. Consider the subject first from a corpuscular or projectile point of view, first ignoring the medium. A gun travelling broadside on must be aimed behind the object, and its shot will travel in a skew direction (keeping always straight in front of the muzzle, but not travelling along the axis of the gun) with a velocity compounded of the speed of projection and the speed of the gun. The apparent position of the source, as recognized through a hole in the target, will therefore be its true position at time of firing, but not its position at time of hit.
Whether we choose to call this an aberration or not is a m atter of nomenclature merely.
Tf the gun is fixed, with the target moving across the line of fire, the gun m ust
736
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
be aimed in front of the object. The shot will go straight along the barrel produced,
but the hole in the target will indicate a gun in front of its true position; this
error being aberration proper.
Fig. 1.
-----z
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Diagram of shot fired from a moving cannon; piercing a target, at Y if stationary, at Z if moving at same pace as gnn. ABCD is the locus of successive shots, hut is not the line of fire.
I f both gun and target are travelling at the same speed everything occurs as if
they were at rest, unless a stagnant medium has to be taken into account. Relative
motion of the medium causes windage, as is well known.
Since motion of the medium causes a shift of the line of fire, it may be expected
to produce a miss, but this is not a true aberration, it only appears to be such
because of the fire being limited to one line ; suppose instead of a single gun a broad­
side of guns or a number of guns firing from a turret, then the effect of a cross-wind
is, indeed, to displace all the shots, but not to prevent the target being hit by one
which would otherwise have missed it, and the hole in the target will indicate the
position of the gun really firing the shot.# Hence, even on a corpuscular theory, a
wind across the line joining source and receiver, will not cause any effective aberra­
tion. Neither can a steady tail wind deliver a stream of bullets from a machine-gun
more frequently than they are emitted.
If guns are fired from a revolving turret, the paths of the shot will not be radial,
but will be skewed by an amount depending upon the peripheral velocity.
W atching the beams of a revolving lighthouse, tracking their way to a distance
and brandished rapidly round, it is not at once quite evident whether the shape of
those beams is not a spiral of enormous pitch (see below). We see, h o w e v e r , that
on the corpuscular view the paths will be straight, though not radiating from the
precise centre ; for instance, the rays from the Sun, whose peripheral velocity is
nearly 5000 miles an hour, would if regarded as projectiles, be inclined to their radius
at an angle of
radian, or about seconds of arc ; and the Suns centre
would be, apparently displaced through a fraction of this angle, equal to Suns
radius/Suns distance ; i.e., through about the y^gth part of a second.
11. But now, proceeding to look at the matter from the point of view of waves,
there are many differences ; principally depending on the fact that there is no ques­
tion of initial velocity of projection about a w a v e: it crawls through the medium,
* As these projectile examples are only used for illustration, I simplify matters artificially by omitting all curvatures of path. The subject of aberration in general is illustrated more fully in a Royal Institution Lecture, Proc. R. I., April 1, 1892; also reported in Nature, vol. 40, p. 497,
DE. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
737
self-propelled, at its own definite velocity. No aberrational effect can be produced by any cause which does not act on a wave-front for a finite time.
Fig. 2.
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Diagram of disturbances or waves emitted without momentum from a moving source; leaving target or telescope, at Y if stationary, at Z if moving. The line ABCD is the locus of successive disturb­ ances, but is not the ray or real path. The diagram may also be taken to represent the effect of a cross stream of medium, with source stationary.
Hence waves emitted by a revolving source advance just as they would if it were stationary ; any peculiarity on the surface, say a Sun spot, is depicted in a precisely radial direction, and there will be no displacement of the Suns centre. So also with light from a flying star : the star will be seen in its position at time of emission, ju st as it is seen in the physical state corresponding to that instant, not to the instant of vision.
Fig. 3. B
Diagram of parallel beams emitted from a revolving lighthouse. ABCD is the apparent beam, but AS, BS, &c., are the lines of vision or true rays.
As to a beam from a revolving lighthouse, it is not the path of a labelled distur­
bance, or true ray, which displays itself by illuminating dust particles, but it is the locus
of successive disturbances sent out from a given moving p o in t; so if the source has
revolved through an angle 0 while the light travels a distance
= (co/V) r,
and their shape is a spiral of Archimedes as suspected above ; though the direction
of vision is not tangential to them, but is truly radial as already stated.
The analogy between rays of light and lines of force is fairly close, and just as it is convenient to say that a rotating source revolves its rays, so it is convenient to say that a rotating magnet revolves its lines of force. The induction phenomena obtained from a magnet spinning on its own axis are a sufficient justification of this statement.*
In an old note-book of date 1876, I find a suggestion for measuring the speed of magnetic propaga­ tion, by rotating a long bar magnet on its axis and observing its action on a distant magnetic needle;
* See also Mr. T olvkr P reston, Phil. Mag./ February and March, 1885.
mdcccxciii.— A.
5 B
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J)R. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
'the idea being that with a finite speed of propagation the lines of force would lag, and thereby acquire a
curvature out of the magnets meridian; so that a distant needle instead of pointing straight at the magnet would be tangential to these lines, and would therefore be slightly deflected during the spin.
We now see, however, that no such aberrational effect is to be expected, except on a corpuscular view
of magnetic propagation.
Concerning the effect of motion of other kinds, certain things are experimentally
known;
e.g,. motion of the receiver is known to cause aberration, however the
be precisely accounted for; and motion of the medium alone is known not to cause
aberration of any perceptible magnitude, else would terrestrial surveying operations
be inaccurate. But no experimental data as yet obtained are evidence concerning
small quantities of the second order, and it will be well to examine critically and
geometrically the whole subject of wave motion from a moving point to a moving
telescope through a uniformly moving medium, all the velocities being possibly
different in magnitude and direction. So far as steady and uniform motion is
concerned this may be considered the most general case.
Convenience o f attributing Relative Motion to Medium.
12. Before considering separately the phenomena mentioned in §9, it may be con­ venient to consider what it is which must be in motion in order to produce one or other of them. And, first, which of them a motion of the medium alone causes.
Nothing can be more certain than that relative motion is all we are concerned with, so that whether a source travels through a medium, or the medium drifts past the source, comes to precisely the same thing. Sometimes one mode of expression is con­ venient, sometimes the other. It may be most natural to contemplate the medium as stationary, and to throw all motion on source and receiver, but I find that it is often very simple and helpful to invert this order, and to think of the ether of space as drifting past the earth, or other body, supposed stationary.
W e shall not invariably use this device, but whenever a number of things—source, mirrors, telescope, and observer— have to be thought of as moving all precisely alike through the ether, it is simpler to think of the ether as streaming past them.
Case o f Fixed Source in Moving Medium.
13. Consider now a fixed point-source in a uniformly moving medium. Spherical wave-fronts are thrown off and immediately begin to drift, so that their centres get displaced a distance, vt, while their radii enlarge by an amount, ; and the distance through space which a disturbance has by that time travelled in the direction 6 will be compounded of these two distances, and will be inclined to the radius, or direction of travel if all were stationary, by an angle e, which may be
d r . OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
7o'J
calied the aberration angle. The velocity with which light journeys over the radius
vector, r,is
r ...
V cos e +
vocs 6, = V 1 say :
the time of the journey being simply as before.
The angle e is defined by the equally obvious geometrical relation
,
•/
Y sin e — v sin = 0.
Fig. 1.
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Successive waves emitted by a fixed source S into a drifting medium. The row of dots SG represent the
respective wave-centres. The figure also represents waves in a stationary medium, emitted by a
source moving from C to
8.
Here is a picture of the source and successively-emitted and abandoned drifting wave-fronts. SM is the path of a labelled disturbance, and is to be considered as a my ; it is inclined at angle e to the corresponding wave-normals.
SP is what would have been the light journey in the same time if the medium had been stationary ; PM or SC represents the drift.
The result of the state of things exhibited in the diagram may or may not be appreciated by a spectator—that depends on what his own motion is,—but if he is moving simply with the medium, he perceives the following:—
(l) An aberration, e, in any direction inclined at angle 6 to the motion, such that
sin e = ^V sin = a sin 0,
It being convenient to denote the ratio of velocities,
by a single symbol a, and to
call it the aberration constant. A telescope moving with the medium and placed with
its object glass tangential to the advancing wave-fronts, will focus the image on its
5b 2
740
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
cross wires, and will be pointing not to the object, but to the centre of the wave it is receiving; its collimation axis coincides with a radius or wave-normal, not with a ray.
(2) A Doppler alteration of wave-length in every direction; as is obvious in the figure, from the distribution of drifted wave-fronts. It is positive on one side, and negative on the other side, of a certain direction, 00, such that the radius vector is equal to the radius, or
cos eo= | y —i a ;
the aberration angle for this particular case of no Doppler effect being twice the com­ plement of 0o.
A spectator moving with the medium will perceive this change of wave-length as a change of pitch (or colour) of value
= log (cos e + a cos
a cos d.
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An observer travelling with the medium will not observe any modification in interference or diffraction effects, nor will he experience any change of intensity due to m otion; for the waves will be brought him at the customary time periods, and be subject to the ordinary flux of energy, as if everything were stationary.
Caseo f moving Source in fixed Medium.
14. The same figure (fig. 4) serves to illu strate th e common case of medium and observer stationary, and source alone moving.
But we must be careful to note that e is only the aberration angle, and that whether it is to be called “ aberration ” or not depends on the meaning attached to that term. The source emits spherical waves in its successive positions, and leaves them to expand at their normal rate. The fixed telescope, pointing to centre of advancing wave, is therefore pointing to the source at the instant when it emitted that lig h t; and, since it is thus seen in its true place at instant of emission, it is most natural to say that the aberration caused by moving source alone is n il; for that it may have moved by the time of vision, is obvious.
There is not much more to be said on this head, for the source after throwing off a wave may do what it likes, th e light will convey information as to where and how it was a t the tim e of emission. Phenom ena depending on a succession of waves, e.g.} changes of pitch, are of course produced, see fig. 4.
The question arises whether the waves thrown off from a moving source are really spherical shells : whether the motion of the source does not affect its vibration ? I f is not easy to answer this thoroughly and accurately, but practically there can be no doubt that the emission of light cannot be affected by any feasible terrestrial motion;
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
741
for, in the time of one vibration, the earth, which is the quickest available vehicle, has only moved a distance of xoooo °f a wave-length; which is equivalent to a middle C fork sounding and creeping along at the rate of 15 inches an hour. No practical question as to imperfection in spherical form of wave from moving source is therefore likely to arise. See however § 19, for discussion of a question not of shape but of
intensity. There happen to be one or two interesting things connected with the reflexion of
light from a moving source when there is some connexion established between the reflected ray and the subsequent position of the source, ., as when a ray is reflected back upon itself, with the object of causing interference ; these are specially dealt with in §§ 59, 60.
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Case
o fSource and Receiver moving together through Stationary Medium ;
correlative case o f Medium drifting past fixed Source amd Receiver.
15. Consider a telescope fixed relatively to source, and medium drifting freely past both. The object-glass must be set skew to the wave front, but normal to the advancing ray or radius vector.
In fig. 4, SM is the axis of the telescope, and it points straight at the source. There is no resultant aberration, the object is seen in its true position.
It is also seen of its right colour, for the waves are carried to the receiver at their accustomed frequency : there is no Doppler effect. A steady wind alone is powerless to influence either direction or pitch.
But what about interference phenomena, depending on the time of a given journey ? Manifestly a motion of the medium will be able to affect this, and may accordingly bring about the displacement of fringes representing hurry or lag of phase.
Consider a telescope fixed relatively to the source and placed so as to receive light along the radius vector r.
If the medium is stationary, the light journey is accomplished in the time
T= -
V*
but if moving, the time of the journey is
T =
V COS 6 +
and so there is a hurrying up of phase
Vocs 0 5
Trjy = cos e + cos 0 ,
T —Tv s* aT cos e.
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742
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
The wind therefore causes a positive or negative change of phase in every direction except that whose cosine is ^ v/V, the same direction as that already (§ 13) indicated as possessing a zero Doppler effect.
But the observation of the lag of phase thus caused by motion of the entire ethereal medium is not so easy as might appear, and, in fact, it has not yet been detected ; for the simple reason th at it is liable to affect both the interfering rays equally : as we now show.
Devices fo r Observing the Lag o f Phase.
16. The possible ways in which change of phase, produced by a moving medium, may be looked for, are :—to split a beam of light into two halves, and then—
(1) Make the medium flow with one half beam and against the other.
This is successful, and is the Fizeau experim ent; but it entails control over the medium, and artificial motion of i t ; the terrestrial orbital motion cannot be utilized in this way.
(2) Send the two beams, not parallel, but round contours in two different planes; or, say one across the line of ether motion, and the other along.
This is Michelsons experim ent; but it only attempts an effect whose magnitude is the second order of aberration magnitudes; because, before the beams can be brought together again to interfere, a reversal or complete circuit is necessary.
(3) Make the medium flow at different rates along the two beams : as for instance, b}^ interposing a dense substance in one of them.
But, on Fresnels hypothesis, this ought to fail; because the free ether, which is the only ether in motion, is unaffected by the dense substance. The only way to move either more or less than the normal quantity of ether in any given space, is to move bodily a dense substance occupying that space. So long as that is stationary, with respect to source and receiver, motion of the whole produces no effect.
To prove that on Fresnels law, no dense substance can cause different interference effects when moving than it causes when stationary, we can proceed to calculate the virtual thickness of a slab immersed in an ether stream, or the time retardation it causes in a beam.
Interference Effects as modified by Ether Motion through Dense Stationary Bodies.
17. The calculation of the lag in phase caused by Fresnels ethereal motion is a very simple matter. A dense slab of thickness wThich would naturally be traversed with the velocity V//a, is traversed with the velocity (Vj/i) cos e + (v/fd) cos 6 ; where v is the relative velocity of the ether in its neighbourhood ; whence the time of journey through it is
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DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
743
fXZ
V COS 6 + COS
instead o f fJLZ
V
or the equivalent air thickness, instead of being
1) 2, is
fXZ
ct ~
cos e— cos P
U
l l COS 6 — a cos 0
l- “
or, to the first order of minutiae, (p, — l)z — cos ; 9 being the angle between ray
and ether drift inside the medium.
So the extra equivalent air layer
due
tothe motion
a quantity independent of
ft.
Hence, no plan for detecting this first-order effect of motion is in any wav assisted
by the use of dense stationary substances; their extra ether, being stationary, does
not affect the lag caused by motion, except indeed in the second order of small quan­
tities, as shown above.
Direct experiments made by H oek,* and by M ascart, on the effect of introducing
tubes of water into the path of half beams of light, are in entire accord with this
negative conclusion.
Thus, then, we find that no general motion of the entire medium can be detected
by changes in direction, or in frequency, or in phase ; for on none of them has it any
appreciable
(i.e,first-order) effect even when assisted by dense matter.
The remaining possible effect that may be looked for is a change of energy,
Effect o f Motion on Intensity o f Radiation Different Directions.
18. At first sight it looks as if there ought to be an unequal distribution of energy round a source past which the medium is streaming. For when the waves are drifting along, their energy moves too, and it can thus be distributed unsymmetrically round the source.
The energy emitted per second, or the 'power of the radiation, is
P = 4tTp*Vq,
where q is the energy per unit volume at distance p from the wave centre; supposing
that radiating power is unaffected by the motion. So at a place 9, reckoning from
source as origin, and line of drift as initial line (as in fig. 4), since
(cos e-f- cos 9),
* Archives Neerlandaises (1869), vol. 4, p. 443, or Nature, vol. 26, p. 500.
744
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
P (cos 6 + a COS 0 )2
% ~
4ttV^
«« 50 (1 + 2a cos
6+ a 2cos 20 —
<70 being the energy at the same place when there was no drift. So the energy received per second by a given small area A at that place, facing the
source, i.e., normal to the rays, is
q \ A cos e =
P (cos € + a cos 0)2.
The radiation at distance r from the source is, in fact, the same as what the
radiation would be at distance
pni a stationary m
inclination e.
So a pair of similar thermopiles, fore and aft, at equal distances from a source,
will, on this hypothesis, receive unequal radiation ; the difference being equal to
4a (PA/47rr2), or proportional to 4a.
F izeaij suggested this method, but I am not aware of its having been tried yet.#
Fig. 5.
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Thermopile experiment suggested by F izeau ; in two alternative forms.
19. But it is a serious question whether the reasoning establishing the effect is quite sound. It is not unlikely that motion may affect the radiating power of a source. In fact, the theory of exchanges almost necessitates something of the kind, else the two faces of an enclosure would become unequal in temperature by reason of mere motion through the ethereal medium.!
Hence, if, as in fig. 5, we consider a pair of thermopiles with a hot body half-way
* The suggestion is quoted in a comprehensive, but to me not very intelligible, treatise on the whole subject of aberration: *Astronomische Undulationstheorie, by Professor Dr. K etteler, of Bonn.
f B alfour S tewart ( Brit. Assoc. Report, 1871, Sects, p. 45), argued that this inequality of tempera­ ture actually occurred; and, since motion thus afforded an available heat engine, he deduced an ethereal friction, dissipating energy. But, as Lord R ayleigh points out (in his Article on “ Aberration,” Nature, March 1892), it is far more likely that motion should alter radiating and absorbing powers than that it should disturb equality of temperature.
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
745
between them, or a pair of equally hot bodies with a thermopile half-way between them, all subject to an ethereal drift in the direction of the arrow, we may assert that although the radiation from A is carried down stream in undue proportion towards C, the amount actually emitted in this direction is diminished in a compensa­ tory manner, so th at the resultant flux of energy remains unaffected by the motion.
It is not necessary to suppose th at motion disturbs the equality which otherwise exists between radiating and absorbing powers. I t is true that if a surface like A radiates less than when the medium is stationary, a surface like C facing the stream must radiate m ore; but then it may absorb more also. So that in all respects the balance may be undisturbed by the motion of the medium.
It is probable, therefore, th at even by this intensity method, nothing more than the second order of aberration magnitude is effective for displaying a general drift of the medium as a whole.
At the same time it seems desirable that an experiment with thermopiles, like that suggested by F izeau, should be tried, in order to verify the above deductions from the theory of exchanges, combined with the supposed persistent uniformity of tempera­ ture of an enclosure whether at rest or in motion ; for thereby the absence of friction or dissipation of energy by motion of solids through ether would be verified.
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Case o f only Receiver Moving.
20. If the receiver be not fixed relatively to the medium, nor relatively to the
source, but be moving on its own account, the effects due to this motion must be
added to the preceding effects. First suppose both source and medium stationary.
The source S emits waves in spherical shells, whose radii are also rays. Any
motion of the receiving telescope can be resolved tangentially and radially. Radial
motion gives Doppler effect only; tangential motion gives aberration only—both of the
commonplace type.
If the telescope were stationary, its object-glass m ust be tangential to the wave
front, but directly it moves it m ust encounter the wave front obliquely, with the same
obliquity e as if it were stationary and th e medium drifting (fig. 4), and the eye­
piece will then be brought to the light a t the rig h t instant. Revolution of a radial
telescope about the source would effect this in the simplest way, w ithout introducing
any Doppler effect or change in focal length.
Consider a telescope O0E 0pointing straight at a source S (fig. 6), and at the instant
a given luminous disturbance starts from S, let the telescope begin moving in a
direction <£ with a velocity u. Let it thus reach the position OE by the time the
light has got as far as O, i.e., to the spherical wave front indicated in the diagram.
Then it follows that by the time the telescope has reached the position OjEj the light
will have reached Ex, too, and will accordingly have passed along the collimating axis
by reason of the combined motions.
mdcccxctii.— a.
5 c
746
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
Fig. 6.
O,
E
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A telescope receiving light from S and moving from OE to OjEj while light traverses OEls
A stationary telescope receiving the same ray at the same instant would have had
to occupy the position OEl5 and would have looked straight at the object (with a
slightly greater focal length). Hence the angle 0 1E10 or OSO0 is the angle of aberra­
tion, the amount by which the object appears to be displaced in the direction of
motion. A telescope which had been revolving round the source, instead of being
translated, would have gone from AB to OE! in the time, and have rotated through
this same angle. Call it
e;it is such that
sin e EE, u n
sta* “ OE, = V = say-
m
the medium, remember, being stationary.
The focal length of the moving telescope differs from that necessary for a fixed one;
being OE instead of OE1? or
f —/(cos
e— fi cos ;
but this is best regarded as part of the Doppler effect, since its principal term repre­
sents radial motion. W ith a noil-achromatic lens the change of refrangibility due to
motion tends to compensate* this effect. But whereas the change of refrangibility
is produced equally by motion of source or motion of receiver, this change of focal
length seems to be caused only by motion of receiver. It is a shortening of focus as
a telescope recedes from the light. I suppose it is too small to observe, else it would
seem able to discriminate motion of earth from motion of star, and give absolute
motion of telescope through the ether.
A terrestrial source (
e.g,. a sodium flame) might be used, and a p
le n s; but surely no focussing could be delicate enough to discriminate such sort of
difference as exists between the two sodium emissions ?
The way in which motion of receiver to or from source causes an apparent change
of frequency, i.e., a real change in the frequency with which waves are received, is too
well known and simple to be more than mentioned. Its amount in any direction is
e +
/5ocs
cos ,
where ft = u /V, sin with the ray.
e =
* This was originally written “ exaggerate.”
/3isn <f>, and u is the
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DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
747
Summary.
21. Collecting these statem ents together, we may summarize them thus :—
Source alone moving produces—
A real and apparent change of colour ;
A real but not apparent error in direction ;
No lag of phase, except th at appropriate to altered wave-length;
A change of intensity corresponding to different wave-length.
Medium alone moving, or Source and receiver moving together
gives—
No change of colour ;
No change of direction ;
A real lag of phase, but undetectable without control over the medium ;
A change of intensity corresponding to different virtual distance, but
probably compensated by change of radiating power.
Receiver alone moving gives—
An apparent change of colour ;
An apparent change of direction;
No change of phase, except th at appropriate to extra virtual speed of
light;
A change of intensity corresponding to different virtual velocity of light.
Thus the interference effect and the Doppler effect do not occur together. Motion of the medium produces one; motion of source or of receiver produces the other.
Aberration of direction and of pitch occur simultaneously, but are complementary to each other, since one depends on motion across the line of sight, the other on motion along it. One varies as the sine, the other as the cosine, of the inclination. Further discussion of the Doppler effect is deferred to §§ 53-58.
22. It is noteworthy that not one of the methods is able to establish the existence or non-existence of a general ethereal drift near the earth ; for, as shown above, uniform motion o f the entire medium produces no observable first-order effect oj any kind. It plainly becomes the more necessary to attend minutely to possible secondorder effects.
In a paper in the Archives Neerlan daises/ vol. 21, Professor H. A. Lokentz discusses, with much power, the whole subject of ether movement; the idea of the following method of treatment is derived from that paper.
5c 2
748
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
Definition o f Ray.
23. In § 13 we defined a ray as the path of a labelled disturbance,* for it is that which enables an eye to fix direction, it is that which determines the line of collimation of a telescope. Now in order that a disturbance from A may reach B, it is necessary that adjacent elements of a wave front at A shall arrive at B in the same phase; hence the path by which a disturbance travels must satisfy this condition from point to point, viz., that disturbances arriving at any point from a preceding point of a ray agree in phase. This condition will be satisfied if the time of journey down a ray and down all infinitesimally differing paths is the same.
The equation to a ray is therefore contained in the statement that the time taken by light to traverse it is a minimum ; or
-f
= minimum.
V
If the medium, instead of being stationary, is drifting with the velocity at angle
to the ray, we must substitute for V the modified velocity V cos + cos and so
the function th at has to be a minimum in order to give the path of a ray in a moving
medium is
IfBrrr---------------
Ja V (cos e +
dsfBV cos e — cos—= 7— .--.----- -
uocs 0) J a V2(1 — a2)
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Path o f Ray, and Time o f Journey, through an Irrotationally Moving Medium.
24. W riting a velocity-potential <f>in the above equation to a ray, that is putting
V cos 0
,
and ignoring possible variations in the minute correction factor 1 — a 3, between the points A and B, it becomes
nTvime of/»j•ourney = fB—cos- • - - v7 (1 _
= minimum.
eds
Now the second term depends only on end points, and therefore has no effect on path. The first term contains only the second power of aberration magnitude; and hence it has much the same value as if everything were stationary. A ray that was
* [It has been objected that a bit of "wave-front cannot be labelled, because of diffraction effects. This seems to me only a practical difficulty, and a more practical definition based upon preserved phase-con­ nexion follows a few lines later in the te x t; but the meaning conveyed by the convenient phrase “ labelled disturbance ” can equally well and I think unobjectionably be expressed by calling a ray the path of a definite, or identical, portion of energy—the direction of energy-flux.—July, 1893.]
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
749
straight, will remain straight in spite of m otion; whatever shape it had, that it will retain. Only cos e, and variations in a3, can produce any effect on path, and effects so produced must be very small, since the value of cos e is ^ ( l — a3 sin3 6). A. second -order effect on direction may therefore be produced by irrotational motion, but not a first-order effect. A similar statem ent applies to the time of journey round any closed periphery.
Michelsons Experiment.
25. We conclude, therefore, that general ethereal drift .does not affect either the path of a ray or the time of its journey round a complete contour, to any important extent. But that taking second-order quantities into account, the time of going to and fro in any direction inclined at angle to a constant drift is, from the above expression, § 24,
2 T cos e _
1 - a2 “
1 - a3
X 2 i
s/(1 —a3sin2 6) _
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where 2T is the ordinary time of the double journey.
Hence, by this means, interference effects due to drift would seem to be possible,
since the time depends subordinately on the inclination of ray to drift ( §§ 59-62)
The above expression applies to Michelsons* remarkable experiment of sending a
split beam to and fro, half along and half across the line of earth motion ; and is, in
fact, the theory of it. There ought to be an effect due to the difference between
0 = 0 and
6= 90°, but he does not observe any. Hence, either something else
happens, or the ether near the earth is dragged with it, so as not to stream through
our instruments. W hen a is constant I see no way out of this conclusion, except
hypothetical disturbance at reflexion of some minute kind, one of the mirrors being
normal and the other tangential to the d r ift; but I perceive no adequate reason for
this suggestion (see § 60). It is true that if the earth is carrying the ether with it,
a will not be constant, at different distances from its surface; but, then, the plane of
Michelsons experiment was horizontal.
If the ether is dragged along near moving matter it behaves like a viscous fluid,
and a velocity-potential must (save by some exceptional theory, § 31) be abandoned ;
but, as this would involve the curvature of rays striking the earth and much compli •
cation, it seems a pity to abandon it until compelled by direct experimental evidence
to recognize ethereal viscosity.
The experiment of Michelsons raises a strong presumption in favour of such
viscosity, nevertheless his negative result is conceivably explicable in other ways:
one of which has been ingeniously suggested by Professor .Fitzgerald, viz., that the
cohesion force between molecules, and, therefore, the size of bodies, may be a
* Phil. Mag., Dec., 1887.
750
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
function of their direction of motion through the eth er; and accordingly that the length and breadth of Michelsons stone supporting block were differently affected, in what happened to be, either accidentally or for some unknown reason, a compen­ satory manner.
26. There is already one experiment, which I have never seen criticised either way, tending in a sense precisely contrary to Michelsons. F izeau* observed the polari­ zation produced by a pile of plates, and considered th a t he had proved that the azimuth of the plane of polarization varied with the direction of orbital motion of the Earth, and hence th at the ether was streaming past them. If so, polarization by reflexion is the only phenomenon known which is capable of showing a first-order effect of the general ethereal drift. The experiment seems to me extremely difficult, but to be well worthy of repetition by other observers. [I believe th at Lord Rayleigh's objection to the experiment as performed by F izeau is th at the effect was unseen until an illegitimate or unsafe magnifying device was employed.]
Meanwhile I shall hope to examine the question of ether motion near moving matter in a simpler fashion (§ 33).
Assuming for the present th a t the ether is not disturbed in a viscous manner by the motion of gross matter through it, we can make the following assertions :—
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General Statements Concerning Aberration.
27. A ray is straight whatever the motion of the medium, unless there are eddies
and accordingly no irrotational currents of ether can divert a ray. But, if the
observer is moving, the apparent ray will not be the true ray, and accordingly the
line of vision will not be the true direction of object.
Ill a stationary ether, wave-normal and ray coincide, but the line of vision of a
moving observer slants across both (§ 20).
In a moving ether, wave-normal and ray enclose an angle, and line of vision
depends upon motion of observer. I f the observer is stationary his line of vision is
the r a y ; if he moves at the same rate as the ether his line of vision is the wave-
normal (| 13).
The line o f
v i s i o n ,in fact, always depends on the motion of the o
on the motion o f the ether so long as it has a velocity-potential. Hence nothing can
be simpler than the theory of aberration if this condition is satisfied.
A similar but more general condition (to be obtained in the next section) suffices
to secure the straightness of a ray whatever happens, or more generally th at whatever
the path of a ray may be by reason of reflexion or refraction in a stationary ether,
the same it shall be in a moving one; and readily accounts for the absence of all
effect on direction due to the general relative drift of the medium, whether in the
* Ann. de Chim. et de Phys., 1859, vol. 57, p. 129.
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
751
presence of dense matter (water-filled telescopes) or otherwise {cf. *Nature, vol. 46, p. 498).
However matter affects or loads the ether inside it, it cannot on this theory be said to hold it still, or carry it with it. The general ether stream must remain unaffected, not only near, but inside matter, if rays are to retain precisely the same course as if it were relatively stationary.
But it must be understood that the ethereal motion here contemplated is the general drift o f the entire medium, or its correlative the uniform motion of all the matter con­ cerned. There is nothing to be said against aberration effect being producible or modi­ fiable by motion of parts of the medium, as, for instance, by sliding one portion of the ether past another portion, as by the artificial motion of slabs and other partitioned-off regions. These matters are to some extent mixed up with the law of refraction, which we consider later, but the general ideas concerning them have been already given. Artificial motion of matter may readily alter both the tim e of journey and the path of a ray {cf §§ 7. and 52).
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Effect o f placing Ordinary Matter in the path o f a ray in a D rifting Medium. F resnels Law a special case o f a universal Potentialfunction.
28. Inside a transparent body light travels at a speed V /p ; and the ether, which outside drifts at velocity v making an angle 6 with the ray, inside may be drifting with velocity v and angle O'.
Hence the equation to a ray inside such matter is
r1p, = JfI (>TVT. .------d-■ps---- ———= mxf )c.mos.,e +wvh. ecroes -sri—nxe, = ex— = a .,
0sin
This may be written
T' =
(* cos e' ds J V//* (1 - a*)
v' cos 0' ds V*V (! “ * 2)
the second term alone involves the first power of the motion, and assuming that P-V cos 0' = d(f>'/ds, and treating a'2 as a quantity too small for its possible variations to need attention, the expression becomes
m/ __ m COS6
j$ A
1 — p ± 1 - a'3 “ V3 (1 - a'3)
T being the time of travel through the same space when empty. Now, if the time of journey and course of ray, however they be affected by the dense body, are not to be more affected by reason of ethereal drift through it than if it were so much empty
752
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
space, it is necessary* that the difference of potential between two points A and B should be the same whether the space between is filled with dense matter or not (or, say, whether the ray-path is taken through or outside a portion of dense medium); in
other words (calling
</>the outside and <f>' the inside potential-func
secure that T shall not differ from /u,T by anything depending on the first power of
motion, it is necessary th at <£'B— <j>\ shall equal <j>B — </>A, i.e., th at the potential
inside and outside m atter shall be the same up to a constant, or that
/x,V cos O' — v cos 0 ; which for the case of drift along a ray is precisely F resnels
hypothesis. Another way of putting the m atter is to say th at to the first power of drift
velocity
T' =
fxT— J(/aV cos 6 — v cos 0) ds/V'2,
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and th at the second or disturbing term must vanish.
29. Hence F resnels hypothesis as to the behaviour of ether inside matter is
equivalent to the assumption that a potential-function, J c o s 0 ds, exists throughout
all transparent space, so far as motion of ether alone is concerned.
Given that condition, no first-order interference effect due to drift can be obtained
from stationary m atter by sending rays round any kind of closed contour, nor can
the path of a ray be altered by ethereal drift through any stationary matter.
As soon as matter is locally moved, however, its motion may readily produce an
effect, for it has no potential conditions to satisfy; it may easily be moved in a closed
contour. Suppose it moves with velocity , always with the light, the relative drift
of ether thereby caused in it must, as above, be 2, and so it may be said to virtually
carry the ether inside it forward with velocity u — ; for th at is the amount by
which it affects the time of journey of a ray. This does not mean that it carries
with it any ether of space; in fact, it definitely means that it does not appreciably
disturb the ether of space (<
of.§3, b).
The equation to a ray in moving matter, subject to an independent ether drift, is
r_______________ * ___ ___________ = const
j V/ f x cos e + v/fx* cos
0 +
30. I t is noteworthy that almost all the observations which have been made with negative results as to the effect of the E arths orbital motion on the ether are equally consistent with complete connexion and complete independence between ether and
* [The argument has here been slightly expanded since the MS. was sent in to meet a suggestion of inadequacy made by Dr. S chuster, to whom I am also indebted for an objection to the term “ velocitypotential ” at first applied to this function 0'. As Professor F itzgerald has observed, it is more general than a velocity-potential, though it reduces to that when the medium is homogeneous, or when /t = 1« The text has been altered accordingly.—July, 1893.]
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DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
753
matter. If there is complete connexion, the ether near the earth is relatively
stagnant, and negative results are natural. If there is complete independence, the
ether is either absolutely stationary or has a velocity-potential, and the negative
results are thereby explained.
Ordinary astronomical aberration, and all other phenomena concerned with vision
through strata high above the earth, so far as they have been accurately observed,
are consistent with complete independence, but not with a viscous drag.
On the other hand, the negative result of Mr. Michelsons attempt to detect a
second-order effect appears only to be consistent with relative stagnation.
A doubtful positive result, supposed to be obtained by Fizeau (§ 26), on a change in
the azimuth of the plane of polarization effected by transmission through oblique
plates, would, if established, support relative motion between earth and ether.
31. Is it possible for a sphere to move through a fluid without disturbing it
rotationally and propagating rotary motion into space ?
It is not possible for an ordinary solid moving through an ordinary fluid. Diffusion
of motion, or viscosity, is bound to occur.
It is possible for a vortex ring or assemblage of vortex rings, because at their
surface there is no slip. I t is possible also if the sphere be a solidified portion of the
fluid, which condenses in front and evaporates behind (as already mentioned).
Professor Stokes seems to say, that though not possible to retain a velocity-
potential with any
viscoty,yet with some kind of rigidity it may be possible,
because deviations from irrotational motion go off into space with the speed of light.
If so, the earth might possibly carry some ether with it, and yet a ray be straight.
I do not see any way in which it can abstain from rotationally disturbing the fluid
if at the same time it has to carry some with it. Neither, I think, do Mr. Hicks or
Mr. L armor, to whom I wrote.
Lord K elv in , however (Papers/ vol. iii., p. 436), has invented an “ ether,” or
kinematically rigid incompressible ideal substance, which satisfies electromagnetic
equations and magnetic boundary conditions, whose equations of motion are like
those of an elastic solid, and which yet permits locomotion of smooth solids filling
vesicular hollows in it, and which in general “ takes precisely the same motion for
any given motion of the boundary as does a frictionless incompressible liquid in the
same space showing the same boundary.”
The experiment now to be described proves, I think, that by the motion of ordinary
masses of matter the ether is appreciably u n d istu rb ed , and raises a presumption in
favour of' the earths motion being equally impotent.
I lie one thing in the way of the simple doctrine of an ether undisturbed by motion
is Michelsons experiment, viz., the absence of a second-order effect due to terrestrial
movement through free ether. This experiment may have to be explained away;
Perhaps as suggested above (end of § 25).
MDCCCXCIir.— A.
5 p
754
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
Consequences o f Rotational Motion.
32. If the condition of a velocity potential is not satisfied, it follows from equations in §§ 23, 24, th at a ray through an ether possessing rotational motion will not be straight.
An ether in the slightest degree carried along in the neighbourhood of moving matter must by all analogy be called viscous. Now a ray approaching a moving body in a viscous ether will in general be entering s tra ta moving with increasing speed, and will accordingly be curved in the direction of the motion (§ 52). A negative or lagging real aberration would therefore occur, in addition to the simple positive apparent aberration caused by motion of the observer; and the direction actually perceived would be the resultant of the two. The motion of an observer is practically constant all over the earth, but the drift of ether strata would be different at different aspects to the earths orbital motion. Hence the observed value of stellar aberration ought to vary with the time of day, and with the latitude of the observer.*
I t becomes important to ascertain definitely whether the ether is viscous or not— whether moving matter can, in the smallest degree, drag or shear the ether in its neighbourhood. If it does, either the theory or the observations of astronomical aber­ ration must be overhauled. But experiment is necessary to answer the question.
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ails o f Experiment to determine how
,mui f , effect on the V
is exerted by the Motion o f Gross Matter near the Ray.
33. After considering the motion of belts, of fly-wheels, and of double plates rotating oppositely, as in the Holtz machine, I decided to try a pair of plates clamped together with a disk-shaped space between them, and to reflect a split beam of light several times round in this space, half the light in one direction, and half in the other, while the pair of plates were revolving at a high speed. Michelsons device for obtaining two equal beams of light travelling in opposite directions round a contour, by means of a semi-transparent mirror, is plainly the most suitable for any ease where the effect of motion is to be observed, and where great length of path is desirable.
Accordingly I sent to Mr. A dam H edger a strongly braced stout wooden frame, or hollow square, 38 inches in the side, internal measurement, and asked him to fit it— (1) with three plane mirrors, each 6 X 2 inches, supported in a specified fashion, and silvered on the front; (2) with a fourth mirror, 4 X 2 inches, supported rather differently, bevelled to 45° at two of its edges, and likewise fully silvered on the
[* It has been pointed out also by Professor F itzgerald that, if such stratified motion existed, the top of a tower or mountain should exhibit aberrational effects when viewed from below. This might be tested with greater accuracy than is possible in celestial observations.— July, 1893.]
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
755
front; (3) with telescope and collimator holders at 45° to the frame; and (4) with a holder for a thinly silvered piece of optically plane glass, 4 X 2 inches, at intersection of axes of telescope and collimator.
The drawings in Plate 31 sufficiently illustrate this part of the apparatus. The telescope and collimator were a pair ( 1^-inch aperture 1 foot focal length) given to the Univ. Coll., Liverpool, by Mr. I. R oberts, F.R .S. They happened to have quartz lenses, which was unnecessary, but otherwise were well adapted for the purpose ; the slit or aperture of the collimator having especially convenient motions. To the eye end of the telescope, in addition to its own cross-wire eyepiece of low power (which was useful for setting), I adapted an excellent micrometer by Cooke, belonging to a 4|-inch telescope, presented to the College by Mr. George R ogerson. It has a pair of independent micrometer heads, each divided into 100 parts, moving respectively a vertical spider line and an X* I t also has eyepieces of various powers : the one commonly used for the measurements here recorded being marked “ 200.”
Fig. 7.
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/ s/
/ X
\ \
Diagram showing images in simplest case, with three mirrors, and beam going only once round optical square. The points to be imaged are the splitting points on semi-transparent mirror 0. Two such points are shown, one imaged by a dot, the other by a ring. A represents the pair of images in first mirror for the transmitted ray; B the image of these in second mirror; C the image in mirror 3. Dashed letters mark the corresponding images for the reflected ray ; and the final function of the semi-transparent mirror is to make coincide with C so as to give interference.
Examining the path of a beam of light from collimator to telescope round the frame, as shown most simply in fig. 7, it appears that, by reason of there being an odd
5 D2
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756
DR, OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
number of reflexions, the interfering rays do not travel identical paths in opposite
directions, but only parallel paths.* They enter the square at one point of the semi­
transparent mirror, and they leave it at another, point, having meanwhile travelled
side by side. I therefore designed a compensator, consisting of a plane piece of
optical glass, with its faces not parallel but inclined at a very small angle ; this was
mounted in a round cell, and made capable of measured rotation in its own plane. By
introducing this normally into the beam, and rotating it into the right position, it was
supposed that accidental inequalities of path could be compensated ; and also that the
bands could be shifted by a measured amount. Hitherto, however, no use of the
compensator has become necessary, and I have some doubts as to whether it would
act in the way supposed, or whether it would not merely double the number of
bands in some positions.
The object of the fourth or front mirror, shown in fig. 8, is tor enable the light to go
more than once round the frame. This mirror has to stand a little forward, in
advance of the square defined by the planes of the other three, and the amount by
which it stands forward regulates, at the same time, the width of the beam and the
number of journeys it makes round the frame. Everything else can be permanently
set.
I f each beam is of breadth
b,and travels n times rou
of this fourth mirror is
l, and the amount by which it stan
square is d ; then it is easy to see, by fig. 8, that
/ =
(n — 1) y /2 .
also that the centre of the effective part of the semi-transparent mirror, i.e. the inter­ section of axes of telescope and collimator, is a fixed distance, viz. J , behind the square.
Hence the only thing that requires re-adjustment in order to vary the number of times light goes round, is d, the setting forward of the front mirror.
The 45° bevel at the ends of this mirror is to enable the whole of its (silvered) face to be utilised, and to allow a beam which ju st misses it to graze past it unimpeded into the telescope. (See Plate 31).
W ith the front mirror 4 inches long, and the centre of semi-transparent mirror 2 inches back from the 38-inch square formed by the other three mirrors, the most frequent adjustment has been to set the front mirror l inch forward. A parallel beam incident on the centre of semi-transparent mirror, at 45°, must now go three times round the frame, rebounding three times from each of the three mirrors, and twice from the
* This fact makes the bands more susceptible to some kinds of disturbance, ., irregularities of temperature or density; more stable fringes can be obtained by using an even number of reflexions, a triangle instead of a square (c/! Nature, vol. 46, p. 500), but then the light will not go more than once round.
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
757
front mirror; and the width of the beam may be as much as 1'4 inch. The pair of plates between which the light has to go are, however, only 1 inch apart, so this limits the effective aperture in a direction perpendicular to the plane of reflexion. A narrower beam may be sent more times round, by setting back the fourth mirror the proper amount.
Fig. 8.
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\\\\>
S c a le 1f o o t .
Diagram, showing arrangement of mirrors for the usual ease of beam going three times round. Inter­ fering rays travel parallel but not identical paths, and re-unite at a point different from that at which they split. The greatest possible size of beam, with a 4-inch fourth mirror, is represented. The centre of the semi-transparent glass, i.e., the intersection of telescope and collimator axes, has to be 2 inches behind square formed by the three mirror faces. The fourth or extra mirror has to be 1 inch in front of the same square.
Whirling Machine.
34. For the pair of plates I use a couple of steel circular-saw disks, one yard in diameter, of best hammered steel, and bevelled down somewhat from centre to edges, braced up at centre with wrought-iron cheeks and bolts. The plates were specially made by Seebohm and D ieckstahl, of Sheffield, and are stated to be able to stand •lxty-seven tons to the square inch.
At this strength they would fly to pieces at 8800 revolutions per minute, supposing
758
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
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them simply cylindrical and unbraced at the centre hole.* The bevelling and the clamping ought to afford margin enough to run them up to 6 0 0 0 (though the makers recommend no speed over 4 0 0 0 ) ; but hitherto I have not spun them at more tharj 3000 revolutions to the minute, and even at this speed, I now have a screen or sentry-box of double boiler plate (consisting of a small iron boiler cut in halves longitudinally and one half fitted inside the other) for the observer, whose eye is in the plane of the disks, to look through.
The use of steel disks is sufficiently justified by the high speed they will stand, but it may be also held that iron is the most probable great constituent of the earth; and further, th at as there are so many other ways of experimenting on transparent matter opaque matter is appropriate in this experiment.
Since steadiness of rotation was very essential, I arranged to rotate the disks horizontally on a vertical shaft balanced on a steel point in an oil vessel, and with t slightly flexible or elastic bearing near the top, so as to get the whole to sleep like £ tee-totum ; and in order to avoid any lateral strain, as of driving belt, to drive electri
cally by a dynamo armature on the axle itself (fig. 9). Messrs. Mather and P latt were good enough to undertake this part of the work,
using their smallest size Manchester dynamo as motor, with its axle set up on end the armature being wound with less wire than usual, and being extra strengthened against centrifugal force by steel wire. The ordinary bearings of the dynamo remain, with oiling wicks inserted, and hence there is a little nicety required to get all three bearings in a precise line. I t is also needful for the shaft to be vertical, to avoid anj attempt at gyroscopic precession.
Fearing lest some damage to the disks might occur from sudden application of toe great moment to the armature, especially by reason of some accidental jamb or other sudden stoppage, I imitated a device employed in some milk-whirling machines, and introduced a wooden cup or friction coupling between the top of the dynamo shaft and the bottom of the disk spindle. The cup being made of hard wood grips the rounded end of the disk spindle, and thus applies to it sufficient rotating moment but permits slip in preference to violent acceleration. This plan is, I think, on the whole advisable, and is certainly a safeguard. I t may seem to spoil the tee-totuir idea, but the dynamo axle, which is supported at each end, and constrained to rotate about rather a long axis, is to be regarded as a driving machine only; the “ top begins from the wood cup upwards. The brass collar of the upper bearing is let into an india-rubber cylindrical socket, so as to afford some very slight play ; and just above the wooden cup is a safety collar or loose guide not touching the shaft.
My assistant, Mr. B. Davies, had some trouble in getting and keeping the two shafts accurately aligned, especially since any wear of the wooden cup tends to throw
* The connexion between tenacity and maximum peripheral speed for a ring is T = pv*; while, for a
uniform disk with a small hole in it, E wing adapts Grossmann to show that it is T = £ (3 + Pv^
where
psi density of material, and p. is P oissons ratio. See Nature, vol. 43, pp. 462, 514, 534. . |
DR. OLIVER LODGE 0 N ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
759
them out again. Also the bearings of the armature are, at present, hardly tight enough. Difficulties such as these have hitherto prevented the whirling machine from being quite satisfactory. A t about 800 revolutions a minute a tremor begins.
Fig. 9.
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Whirling machine for ether experiment, with pair of steel disks, 1 yard in diameter. -From a photograph taken during preliminary tests, before it was bolted down to stone pier. Full voltage is always supplied to the field magnets, variable resistance is in armature circuit only. The brass tube conducts away surplus oil. Drawings of the machine are given in Plate 32.
At high speeds it steadies itself, but at specific speeds the tremor re-occurs, and at some of the highest speeds is rather alarming. A t others, however, the tee-totum potion steadies the spin, and at these only could observations be made,
760
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
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A perforated steel disk, pierced with circles of 3, 5, 9, 15, and 25 holes, and fixed on the spindle, gives the speed quite accurately by the musical note from an air jet through it, or even a card held against it. But the particular octave was occasionally checked by a wheel speed-counter; and recently one of the mercury speed-indicatorE of Messrs. Napier Bros, has been fitted on, and works very well for approximate readings.
The current is supplied usually from about twenty small storage cells, which 1 happened to have. The regulation is effected by one of R ousseaus very convenieni carbon rheostats introduced into the armature circuit, the whole voltage of the battery being always supplied to the field magnet.
When the whirling machine arrived it was mounted on a stone pier in the middle of my laboratory, a pier built up from the sandstone rock beneath, and it was bolted down to timbers embracing the pier. The disks were then put on, a pulley gearing from the ceiling being convenient for raising and lowering th em ; and after some preliminary work the battery was applied. The field magnet took only 4 or 5 amperes from the 2 0 cells with gas-engine going ; 1 0 amperes began to drive the machine slowly, and 30 amperes gave a speed of 800 revolutions up to 1400 revolu­ tions a minute, though the last figure was not reached before the disks were encased. The volts actually on the terminals were from 2 0 to 30. The bearings, however, were not at this time quite easy, and less power now suffices* Thus the numerous spins at 1250 revolutions per minute taken during March, 1892, required, to maintain ful speed, 385 watts, viz., 27*5 volts and 14 amperes.
35. The optical parts were the first to arrive (about June, 1891), and were the sub­ ject of much preliminary experiment. After a few alterations, such as planing dowr. the base of the telescope-holders to a better angle, there was no particular difficulty in getting the light of an oxyhydrogen lantern to go three times round the frame and then enter the telescope. A dark room and strong light were useful for making this adjustment, for the course of the ray could then be tracked without difficulty; but after the adjustments were made, a paraffin lamp could be substituted for the lanterr without too much enfeebling the image. On now inserting in its place the semi­ transparent mirror, a second image made its appearance. Removing the lens of the collimator, the two images of the “ slit,” or square aperture usually employed, were seen very small and separate. By adjusting the semi-transparent mirror, which only moved the reflected image, the two were made to coincide. The collimating lens was then re-inserted, and the telescope focussed for infinity. Bands at once appeared. They were usually slant, but when best defined became horizontal. In these early trials vertical bands were only got with difficulty; they seemed to prefer being horizontal. Shaking the whole table on which the frame rested did not hurt them, but pressing gently on the wooden frame distorted them. I t was easier to get them with light which had gone only once or twice round the frame, but there was no real difficulty7 with three times round. Introducing the wedge compensator and turning it
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
761
round caused them to shift. Introduction of ordinary sheet glass into the beam distorted them till they were like the water-mark on cloth.
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View of the optical frame, supporting the mirrors, telescope, and collim ator: detached from its position round the steel disks, where it is shown in fig. 11.
Later experience makes it absurdly easy to get the bands and to arrange th at they
shall be vertical, well defined, of any convenient width, and with the centre white
band symmetrical among the coloured ones. Tilting the mirrors, pressing on the
frame, or touching the semi-transparent plate, makes the coloured fringes move with a
concertina-like motion towards or from the middle band, but the middle band is not
easily shifted by anything. Altering the angle between the mirrors widens or narrows
the bands, and when they get very wide a double system of hyperbolae usually makes its appearance.
I conjecture th a t the horizontal bands first seen were the right or left branches of
and th at the widening or narrowing of the vertical bands may be expressed as
an up or down motion of the figure.
Sometimes by pushing in the eye-piece of the telescope another set of bands could
seen horizontal, in exchange for the vertical bands which had, as it were, gone out
o focus. These horizontal bands were more tremulous than the others and tilted
readily. They occurred in the proper focal plane for infinity (assuming the mirrors to
o©accurately plane), and are probably what I saw first. The vertical bands do not
^ ome visible till the eye-piece is pulled several inches out. The probable meaning
this double set is th at the mirrors have a very slight cylindrical curvature, the
generating line of the cylinder being vertical. A pair of opposite mirrors, though
nearly parallel, will intersect in a line, and the bands will be parallel to this
Md c c c x c iii,— a .
5 u
762
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
line. I f this line is horizontal the bands will be horizontal, and for this direction the mirrors seem accurately plane. But for the vertical line of intersection the length of the mirrors is effective, and this seems to be slightly curved, so as to throw the focal plane of the vertical bands further out.
This does not account for the hyperbolae. But with sodium light, systems of hyper­ bolae, and also ellipses, can be seen in Brewster or Jamin plates, with different angles of setting (see Lummer, Wiedemanns Annalen, vol. 24, p. 417), and I expect the theory is somewhat similar.
Fig. 10.
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One frequent appearance of tlie bands.* (But light and dark should be interchanged in the figure.)
36. The following observations were made recently as to the effect of various movements on each set of fringes :—*
* Cassini ovals are just as easy to get as these. The bands are always curves of the fourth degree and are, of course, sections of surfaces of constant retardation. The virtual sources may be taken aa in fig. 7, viz., the nearly coincident images, G and G \
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
763
Operation.
Effect on vertical bands.
Effect on horizontal bands.
Pressing lightly an<^ intermit­ tently downwards on corner of
large wooden frame.
Concertina action ; no shift of middle band.
Either rotation of whole set about a point, or shift up and down of whole set, or mere blurring.
Turning slightly one of the sup­ Concertina action and tilting of Shifting of entire set, and dis­
porting screws of front or all bands, except the middle turbance of bands.
“ fourth ” mirror.
one ; no shift of middle one
Vertical screw supporting semi­ transparent plate turned so as to tilt its plane about a hori­ zontal axis, the axle being two inches to one side of the plate.
No concertina action, but a rapid blurring of the bands.
Concertina action, and tilting of all bands but the middle one ; no shift of middle one.
Horizontal screws supporting semi-transparent plate turned so as to tilt it about a vertical axis, the axle being near one end of the plate.
Concertina action; no shift of middle band.
No concertina action, but a rapid blurring of the bands.
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The effects of vertical and horizontal screws were thus complementary on the two sets, as was natural.
37. In order that the dark bands shall be really dark, a nice adjustment of the thick­ ness of silver film on the semi-transparent plate is necessary. It can only be hit on by a sort of chance, for when once taken out of the silvering bath it is useless to put it back again if not sufficiently done.
The equality of transmission and reflexion at 4 5 ° is readily tested by two gas flames a yard or two apart, with the plate at the corner of a right-angled isosceles triangle at whose acute angles are the flames. On looking into the plate, one flame and the image of the other are seen side by side, and ought to be of equal brightness.
The film, however, by gradual tarnishing gradually becomes more transparent, so it is best to slightly overdo the plate, and let it age till right. Or an overdone film may be thinned down with potassic cyanide if wanted quickly. The unpermanence of these plates is a little troublesome; I should prefer to deposit a thin platinum film by
electrical evaporation,” after the manner of Mr. Cjrookes. Certainly the bands can be seen when the images are very unequal, but they are on a background of spurious or non-interfering illumination, and for meccsuvenient it is fleshable to get the bands exceedingly sharp. ^The unsilvered side of the semi-transparent plate, of course, reflects some light, and gives another image. W ith a short course for the beam this useless image comes into the field, but it need not be superposed on the other unless the plate happens to be of very uniform thickness; and, if superposed, it can be got rid of by using a Nicol. ith a very long course for the beam a Nicol is useless, for all the light seems polarized after so many reflexions ; but fortunately, although the plate should be of
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764
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
good quality and uniformly thick, it is extremely unlikely for anything like super­ position to occur after so long a journey, and often the useless image is not even in the field—never with a high power.
I must say that the satisfactory behaviour of the optical arrangements is due to the skill of Mr. Adam H ilger in working glass to true planes. I t is a difficult matter, for he says they are apt to change after being taken off the tool. He has several times tried to improve on the first set of four mirrors he sent me, but without success.
Those now sent usually have radii of curvature from three to eight hundred metres, and are not at all satisfactory, though their curvature is too small to detect with a spherometer.# Judging by their behaviour the original set must be very good. I expect they are of superior, or older glass. They are, of course, mounted so as not to strain them in the least.
38. To support the optical frame over the whirling machine, with the plane of the light between its two disks, a substantial wooden structure was erected, from brick piers coming up through the floor, entirely independent of any support from the whirling table or its stone pier. To this the frame was fixed, and it was supplied with a lid and floor, to box in the disks and make them easier to drive. The lid had a domed cavity for the top of the spindle ; the floor had a hole edged with thin indiarubber sheeting to permit the spindle bearing to pass through air-tight without transmitting vibrations.
In order that the semi-transparent plate might not be affected by the blast from the whirling plates, a couple of optical glass windows wTere inserted to screen it com­ pletely. I feared lest the blast would have some effect upon the mirrors themselves, but they were substantially backed by thick brass plates bearing steadily against three accurate screws in a strong frame (see Plate 31), and I hoped it might not.
39. On the 2 1 st of July, 1891, a first complete spin was taken. The bands being vertical, the cross wires were set on one of the dark ones, and the speed increased until a shift of three bands might have occurred. The shift actually observed was 1J band, and they recovered their old position very fairly when the motion ceased. Strongly suspecting this shift to be spurious, I had the brushes of the dynamo reversed, and later in the same day was able to take a reversed spin. The shift was approximately the same in amount and in the same direction. The centrifugal force of the blast evidently did affect the mirrors. Pressing their supporting plates by hand, a similar shift could be g o t: the screws did not hold them with absolute firmness, and it seemed as if the end held by only one screw yielded more than the end held by two, so as to produce a minute tilt.
To see if the pressure of the blast distorted the frame as a whole, or only tilted the mirrors, the box was made air-tight, like an organ chest, and air was pumped into it*
* I measure it by focussing a telescope on the image they give of an object at a considerable known distance.
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
765
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by foot bellows : but this made very little difference to the bands, though the pressure was 6 centims. of water. A water gauge was also used to measure the centrifugal force of the blast : it was about 3 centims. of water, but was not easy to measure satisfactorily. Evidently the blast acted mainly on the mirrors. I contemplated a vacuous chamber, but shrank from some obvious difficulties, besides realizing th at the residual air must give trouble anyhow. I decided to risk interposing transparent matter in the beam.
So some plate-glass protectors were cut and framed, one in front of each of the three mirrors, the fourth a t present being left still exposed, partly because it seemed less likely to be affected by the wind, and partly because of the very narrow space available between it and the disks.
Seeing that each half-beam of light, in going three times round, has to go through each piece of plate-glass twice at every reflexion, or eighteen transmissions altogether, the intensity of the emergent light was feeble, and the bands were distorted by imper­ fections in the glass. Still they could be got clear, though curled, and the cross wires could be set on them. On 24th and 25th of July, spins at 1380 revolutions a minute were taken, and no shift so great as xoth of a band could be detected ; whereas, with the light only going twice round, there might have been a shift of 2 ^ bands if the ether had been carried full tilt. Hence it would appear th at the ether was not carried round with the disks by so much as -^g-th of their speed.
The alignment of the shafts and other mechanical details were now attended to, so as to make possible higher speeds of rotation. Fresh arrangements for holding and adjusting the semi-transparent plate (the setting of which is a delicate matter) were made, and the micrometer was more firmly fitted by a much longer tube into the telescope. All sorts of steadyings were attended to. A pair of wires were laid across to the W alker Engineering Laboratory, where Professor H ele Shaw had a large Crompton dynamo; and so in December, 1891, my assistant, Mr. Davies, got the speed up to 2800 revolutions per minute.
43 amperes and 7 5 volts on the terminals (4*3 H .P.) gave 2500 revolutions a minute with lid of box off. W ith lid on, it went up to 2800 revolutions, but now the air in the box got quite hot, and a new difficulty arose from oil. I t crawled up in an imperceptible film, notwithstanding the traps arranged for it, and, flying from the under surface of the lower disk, bespattered the mirrors and spoilt them.
More elaborate oil-catchers, to spray the oil off before it got to the disks, were there­ fore arranged, and the disks were kept whirling many days to get rid of all traces of the oil that had already soaked between the steel and the wrought-iron cheeks. Having cured the oil difficulty, fresh and improved cover glasses for the mirrois were §0t from Mr. H uger, one extra large and extra thin one for the front mirror included, ®ml these were carefully framed and placed in position. The light was then with difficulty, and considerable skill on the part of Davies, got three times round through all the glasses, and, during Christmas, 1891, spins were taken, but the highest speeds
766
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
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shook too much to give good observations. A t 1800 revolutions, a shift of half a band occurred. Reversing the rotation, the shift was appreciably the same. It was probably due to pressure of the blast on the frame itself.
Hence, ordered a light wooden circular drum to be put inside the frame to catcl the air pressure, and also to keep hot air from, the mirrors if possible.
Davies took out the old wooden socket from the axle, and made a new boxwooc one to connect the two shafts. W e also now got the large boiler-plate protector foi the eye end of the observing telescope to protrude through. I t ju st shows at the back of fig. 1 1 .
Resilvered the mirrors, and got the optical arrangements more perfect. Alsc ordered a much heavier mass of metal to whirl in subsequent experiments. For the present, however, we go on with the steel disks.
40. During February, 1892, the various preparations were made. The drum was a very satisfactory mahogany structure, octagonal outside and circular inside, with long slit windows glazed with optical glass to catch the blast. The drum was fitted inside the frame, with -g-th-inch clear space all round between the two. I t was secured to the floor of the frame and joined with the lid so as to be fairly air-tight.
Still observed a shift, often of about fth s band. A t speeds above 2 0 0 0 the bands usually disappeared, from shaking. Removed the lid of the frame for the air to escape, and the shift wns smaller. I t was specially noticeable th at it lagged. I t took a little time to reach its maximum, and when the disks stopped the bands continued to recover for some time afterwards. I t was ju st as if a solid had experienced a strain and sub-permanent set. All the effects were irreversible. Gradually made the drum more air-tight and supported it by wooden bars from above. A shift of £th band was still got at a speed of 1 0 0 0 , with the light three times round. Strains in the drum still seemed to be transmitted somehow to the frame.
Made a saw-cut all round the floor of the frame, so as to leave the floor on the drum instead of on the fram e; also supplied a lid to the drum, and supported it by this lid from long wooden girders, as shown in fig. 1 1 , keeping it and its supports everywhere out of contact with the frame or its supports, except the upright posts from the tables.* Studied the bands more particularly and observed the double hyperbolae system. Found also the great advantage of the middle white
* Quite recently (March, 1892) I have taken a series of spins without the drum, and with no cover glasses on except one over the front mirror, something being there necessary to protect from wind the semi-transparent plate, which is of course extremely sensitive.
By this time, as described above, the bottom of the square frame had been removed, being attached to the drum instead, and we now found that this floor must have been the cause of most of the trouble. Eor without it the blast produced no effect on any of the bands, and neither shift or concertina action occurred, up to a speed of 800. No motion of the middle band could be detected, the light going twice round.
It follows that the blast did not take effect on the mirrors, nor directly on the frame, but that by exhausting the air near the middle of the box it must have sucked and bent the floor sufficiently to strain
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
767
band; all others being readily movedby trivial strains. Always now set the vertical spider line in the centre of the middle white band and watched for its shift.
To see if the irreversible and lagging (very slight) shift still observed could be due to the action of hot air on the glass windows, I arranged to throw into the drum air heated by passing through a metal pipe in a gas flame. The hot air-stream flickered the side bands about, but did not alter the middle one.
Fig. n.
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General view of the whirling machine, and independent support of optical apparatus, in action. The speed indicator is seen on top of front post, ammeter and voltmeter on framework. The long upper girders support the glazed drum which encloses the disks and secures the mirrors from the blast. Telescope, &c., are at back, not seen ; boiler-plate screen for observer just visible. Every­ thing independent of floor, and no contact between anything on central altar with anything on gallows framework.
Quantitative Experiments.
41. I now began a series of actual readings, the plan adopted being to set the vertical line of the micrometer in the middle of the white band, and the X °f the micrometer on some definite colour of the first bright band on the le f t: the yellow
fbe frame and tilt the mirrors about a horizontal a x is; this kind of tilt being well calculated to shift the vertical bands.
I tried also the horizontal set of bands without any floor to the frame (both with and without the drum), and perceived no shift in the middle one of these either, due to the motion of the disks.
768
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
being usually selected. Then read their positions, and started a spin. When spinning at a given speed, I reset the wires and read them afresh. Then stopped the motion reset them, and read once more.
Lastly, shifted the vertical wire till it coincided with the X, and thus obtained the interval between them, or the width of one band corresponding to yellow light.
Fig. 12.
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Appearance of the bands with the two micrometer wires set in position.
This process was quite satisfactory, but it is not worth while to quote all the readings ; for it was noteworthy th at up to 800 revolutions no perceptible shift of the middle band had occurred, but a t th a t speed the first tremor set in, and although there was supposed to be no contact anywhere between machine and frame, yet it was transmitted somehow, through the earth a t any rate, and sometimes produced an effect obviously spurious. Often the first spin of a set had the effect of shaking things into place, and subsequent spins were better. This was the case, for instance, on March 16, when the following readings were taken.
March 16. Bands very clear and sharp. The first spin was spoiled by a tremor which set in at 800 revolutions and fogged the bands while it lasted ; when they re-appeared they had been shaken aside and broadened. No shift had occurred up to 800. I t was afterwards found th a t the semi-transparent plate was not held quite tightly enough, and th a t it was affected by tremor with ju st the above effect. I give only the results of this first spin ; not the details.
First Spin. when originally at rest .
The width of a band was •< when in motion a t 1250 revs. . when at rest again .
91 divisions. 170 144
The middle band
shifted 37 divisions, to the right. returned. 22
This was very bad, but went on with another attempt.
Second Spin.—Direction of motion as before, viz., such as to assist the reflected half-beam.
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
769
This time the tremors which still occurred at about 800,1000, and 1150 revolutions did not seem to produce much effect.
The following were the readings; each wire read on its own micrometer head.
X-wire, set on
Vertical wire, set
yellow of first band in middle of middle
to left.
band.
At rest . . * . . . . . . . . .
7
60
At 800, no shift of middle band
At 1000, barely any
At 1260 revs., set again and read . . . .
11-5
68
Stopped. Set again and r e a d ......................
11*5
64
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To carry the vertical wire from its position 64 into coincidence with the X> required a motion of 154 divisions (viz., about one revolution and a half of its micrometer screw).
The experiment was satisfactory. Its result was
Displacement of middle b an d .
at first . . . . . when moving . . at last . .
146 divisions. 158 154
99
shift to right .
8
D
return on stopping . 4 99
The highest estimate of this shift is, therefore, y-fg-ths, or say y^th of a band. The lowest estimate is y fy th s, or say -3\ t h of a band. Then reversed the brushes and immediately took another satisfactory observation.
Third Spin.—direction reversed, that is, so as to help the transmitted beam.
Vertical wire set on
X-wire set on yellow centre of middle
of 1st band to left.
white band.
At rest.
9
69
No shift at 800 or 900. Tremor at 1000
Set at 1250 and r e a d ......................
15-5
78
Stopped and set again . . .
14
73
To carry the vertical wire from 73 up to the X at 14 needed 165 divisions. The
result of this was
MDCCCXCIII.— A.
5 F
77 0
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
at first . . . . W idth of band of yellow light < when moving .
at last . . . .
156 divisions. 165
Displacement of middle band . -jf shift to right .
9
Lreturn on stopping 5
The highest estimate of this shift is yf^nds or say yg-th of a band. The lowest estimate of this shift is yfgfchs or say yyrd of a band. And these figures are within the limit of error certainly, the same as those given by the previous experiment with the spin reversed. Taking this experiment alone, therefore, one may say that reversing the rotation of the disks, from 2 1 revolutions a second one way, to 2 1 the other way, does not affect the virtual path of the light between them by so much as the
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~ As = 2 0 0 th of a wave length,
or even by so much as the
yg- —
-£q= yjjoth of a wave length.
Tested to see how many times the light was on this occasion going round the frame. Found th at it was going only twice. Hence the length of path .of each half beam was 2 X 4 X 2 feet, since its path was approximately the periphery of a square two feet in the side. The whole path of the two beams is therefore 32 feet. A shift of 300 th of a wave length in this length of path means a fraction
h x 6 x 10~5
32 x 30
= 3 X lO -10.
The perpendicular distance of the average light path from the axis of rotation was 1 foot, hence the effective speed of the disks either way was 2ir X 21 feet per second, or say 260 feet a second altogether.
Compared with the speed of light this gives a fraction
260 x 30 3 x 1010 = 2 . 6 X 1 0 “ 7.
Comparing these two fractions we may conclude that the meaning of the above experiment is that the ether is not carried forward by the spinning disks with so much as y^oth of their velocity.
DR. OLIVER LODGE OIST ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
771
Modes o f Testing Number o f Light Journeys.
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42. There are many ways of making sure how many times round''the frame the light
is going. One ^°°k
felescoPe with a low-power eye-piece, or none at all,
before the semi-transparent plate is inserted and to give a wide opening to the
collimator, often also removing its lens. Three or more images can then be seen in
different parts of the large field, and it is easy to see which is the one near the centre.
On now tipping the front mirror to and fro, the image which has been only once
round (if visible) remains unaffected; the one which has been twice round moves;
the three-times-round one moves twice as much ; and so on.
By altering adjustments and passing the successive images in review, it is not
difficult thus to work up to the high numbers. But on the specification of these it is
well to have some check.. The best check can be got, with everything in position and
bands visible, by passing an opaque strip slowly in front of one of the mirrors and
observing the eclipses at the telescope. If the semi-transparent plate is inserted in
its holder, these eclipses occur in pairs, with shadows moving oppositely ; if not, they
occur singly. (A very narrow strip passed not quite close to the mirror may show
each single shadow double. Too broad a strip will, of course, merge a pair of shadows
into one.)
Three times round naturally gives two pair of eclipses on the front mirror, and
three pair on each of the others.
Without the cover-glasses the light can be got many times round, but, when they
are on, the faintness of the light which gets through all the surfaces makes it unwise
to aim at more excursions, because the definition and visibility of the bands suffers in
undue proportion. In fact, the superior sharpness of the twice-round bands perhaps
more than compensates for the advantage of the half-as-long-again path belonging to
the three-times-round set.
The cover-glasses are, of course, not set absolutely vertical, else the enormous
number of reflexions from their surfaces would confuse everything.
Another way of testing the order of the image in use is to tilt the front mirror so
as to broaden the bands by a measured amount, and then to imitate or compensate
this by tilting one of the other mirrors. The angle of tilt necessary with one of these
will be n/{f- 1 ) of the tilt of the front one.
The three screws against which they each press all have fifty turns to the inch, and
hence it is possible to apply this test whenever the eclipse method happens to be
inconvenient. For instance, ygth of a revolution of the single screw of the front
mirror broadened the bands till one occupied nearly the whole field (with the high-
power eye-piece that happened to be on). This meant 5 ooth of an inch advance of
0rie en(i °1 a plane of 1 0 inches base, or an angular tilt of y 0Vo radian, or 40 seconds °f arc. Tilting the back mirror about 20" gave the same effect, showing that there
were twice as many reflexions on it as on the front one, and that the light was
therefore going twice round.
5F 2
772
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
General Arithmetic o f a Shift.
43. I t may be convenient for easy future reference to write down the meaning of
any observed reversible shift under given circumstances.
An odd number of reflexions must be used if* the light is to be sent many times
round, hence triangles and pentagons are excluded. An even number of reflexions
has the advantage that it makes the paths of the two half-beams identical and not
merely parallel (
cffig. 8 ): but it does not seem readily feasible to get the
more than once with an even number of reflexions. The square or hexagon are there­
fore the natural figures for the path of light. Take a square, whose side is , as the
mean path of the light. Then its perpendicular distance from the centre of rotation
is \ a ; and it is the perpendicular distance which is important, for, since the velocity
of light at any point P has to be resolved perpendicular to the radius vector, we get
precisely the same tangential component everywhere as exists at the point M.
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Let the disks revolve with angular velocity a>, and let the shift of the middle band
be x band-widths of a particular wave-length A. Then, if the light goes times round
each way, with velocity v,
x\
t>
8
n
where h is the fraction of the velocity of m atter which is imparted to the ethei
between the disks, the quantity to be determined by observation of x.
Thus
k __ Xv __4 x 105
x 4
na>?cno a ?
The limit of speed of a given material (see § 34) is given by something like
T = pv2 — p
-Y = i pco2a2,
hence the limiting value of
4 x 106
P_
n a y j 2T
k/x,observable by this method, is
DE. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
773
Taking 30-ton steel as the material, this gives as the smallest observable value
of k/x,
4 x 1 0 5 / 7 _ 11 centims. na A' 9 x 109
It is fairly easy to make sure that x is not greater than xJoth. In my apparatus a is 2 feet or 60 centims., and the light may go three times round with the coverglasses o n ; hence the limiting determination of ether-drag that can be made with it thus arranged is y-8Voth> unless the setting of the micrometer wires can be relied on more closely than to the yJoth of a band, or unless the steel will safely stand more than 30 tons to the square inch.
(Evidently the larger the square the better, and a large enough square might show even the earths rotation effect, only it is difficult to see how to imitate the effect of stopping and reversing the rotation, at least with the unwieldy size of frame necessary.)
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Testing fo r Cause o f Slight Irreversible
.
44. The following experiments tend to show (and do distinctly show in my opinion) that such shift as is observed is independent of the width of the bands, and therefore is an absolute shift caused by shake or strain ; very likely by a strain caused by a shake, for its effect often dies out slowly.
Spins on 18th March. Light going three times round. First spin, in direction to help transmitted beam. Micrometer wires set and moved as before (fig. 1 2 ), but only the results of the readings quoted.
^at r e s t .............................................. 114 divisions. Width of yellow band < while revolving 1 2 0 0 times a minute 159 99
wat rest a g a i n .................................... 184 99
Shift of middle band shift to the right . ■ { return on stopping .
6
99
5
99
Found that the front mirror was too near the drum, probably touching it, hence the continuous widening of the band. Moved it back a bit and tightened up the nuts of the semi-transparent plate.
Started again with much narrower bands, and continued spinning and stopping alternately without intermission, all in the same direction.
It may be worth while to quote the actual readings of this set. The wires were set a-t each stoppage, and likewise during each spin while the speed was kept at 1260 revolutions per minute.
774
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
Second spin.
X-wire.
Vertical wire.
R e s t ......................................
38|
28
Spinning (at 1260)
32
321
Rest a g a i n ...........................
37
26
Spinning a g a i n ......................
30
32£
Rest ......................................
38
25
S p in n in g ................................
32^
32
R e s t ......................................
44
27
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To move the vertical wire into coincidence with the X (or v^ce versd), needed 54 divisions of either micrometer head.
The result of this set may be thus tabulated
W idth of a yellow band.
Shift of the middle hand.
S t a t io n a r y ................................
65|
1260 revolutions . . . . . .
63^
S t a t i o n a r y ................................
62
1260 r e v o lu t io n s ......................
611
S t a t io n a r y .................................
62
1260 r e v o lu t io n s ......................
631
S t a t io n a r y .................................
70
4 f to right. return. to right.
7f return. 7 to right. 5 return.
Average 64
Average 6 1
Practically, therefore, the absolute shift of the middle band was ju st the same as in the previous experiment, though the width of the bands was now only about one-third what it then was. -
Now reversed the brushes and went on.
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
775
Third spin. Reversed. Direction to help reflected beam. Results :—
Width of yellow band.
Shift of middle band.
S ta tio n a r y ................................
65
1250 r e v o lu t io n s ......................
63|
S ta tio n a r y ................................
63!
1250 r e v o lu tio n s ......................
63
S t a tio n a r y ................................
64!
1250 r e v o lu t io n s .....................
61f
S ta tio n a r y ................................
63
8 to right 7 return
&2 >5 7£
Average 63*4
Average 7'7
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The shift was a trifle greater than before, but so was the tremor. Another shift taken same day gave a shift of 9 and a return of 1 2 . The effect of the tremor seemed increasing.
45. Since such shift as is observed is apparently independent of the width of the bands, it is manifestly well to reduce its apparent significance by having the bands very broad. I t might be doubtful how far accuracy of setting could be accomplished with the spider line in the midst of a very broad band. To test this the following observations were made.
Accuracy o f Setting of Micrometer Wire.
The bands were broadened, by tilting the back mirror a little, until it took two revolutions of a micrometer head to carry a wire from one to the next. The light was going three times round, and the cover glasses were on. The vertical wire was then carefully set in the centre of the middle band (it is always easy to tell the middle band, even without the colour of the others, by their concertina-like motion to and from it when the corner of the frame is pressed) and the X was se^ as near as possible on the yellow of the first band to the left. The position of this colom was hot so well defined as when the light only went twice round, especially when the disks wore spinning; neither was the middle band quite so clear then as when they weie stationary. It is the setting of the vertical wire in the middle band that is leally important. Readings of both micrometers being taken, the wires were displaced at miidom and then re-set and re-read. This was done several times. The following are ^le results of successive re-settings on the same bands.
776
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
Disks stationary
X-wire. (Set and reset in yellow
of first band.)
1ri
88o1f|
8Q41
(71
83
90
85
Vertical wire. (Set and reset in centre
of middle band.)
20 20
2211
22 20* * *
Average 85
Average 20^
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The width of this average band was 208
\divisi
Hence when stationary the error of setting of the vertical wire
time did not
attain too^ 1 of a band ; and the probable error of the average of a series of settings
is very small.
Same operation continued, with disks spinning.
Disks revolving 1260 times a minute. (Bands now not so clear. There was^ too much tremor)
X-wire.
85 90 95 89 89 90 85
Vertical wire.
26 30 32 34 26 26 27
Average
89
29
The width of this average band was 2 2 1 divisions. Here the error of individual settings of the important wire amounts to yoth of a band in one case, and the probable error is, say, y^th. The error in the average of a series, however, would be less than yyoth, even under the above disadvantageous circumstances.
(The average shift caused by this spin was 8*5 divisions, or, say, £y| = yjth of a band.)
The effect of the tremor of the whirling machine on the optical part was becoming too conspicuous, and accordingly all the saw cuts and separations between drum and frame had to be examined. A slight contact was discovered.
46. On the 19th March a rather hasty pair of spins were taken, with the following r e s u l t s :—
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
777
First, with direction helping the reflected beam.
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X-wire,
Vertical wire.
At r e s t ...........................
13
78
(X = 169)
1220 revolutions .
5
80
(X = 163)
At rest . . . . . .
5
81
(X = 164)
Reversed the brushes, and took a spin in the opposite direction,
Second, direction helping the transm itted beam.
X-wire.
Vertical wire.
At r e s t ...................... . I
13
81
1220 revolutions . .
7
85
At rest . . . . '.'i
_
1
i
(X = 172) (X = 170)
Something happened th at prevented the last readings from being taken. Notice that the yellow band seemed to have slowly returned to its old position in the interval between the two spins. These slow recoveries are frequent. Here the wave-length, or width of band, corresponded to 169 divisions at first, and the first shift was only two divisions; but the shift was spurious, for instead of returning, it went on, or at least stood still. The small shift ( 4 divisions) in the same direction observed on reversal was also no doubt spurious. I feel sure that I have never observed a genuine reversible shift of the middle band due to rotation.
Now the light was going three times round the frame, and if the ether had been carried round full speed with the disk there would have been a shift of 3^ bands, or 550 divisions at each rotation, or over 1 0 0 0 divisions in all, whereas not more than two divisions at the outside were seen, and they might readily be spurious.
In saying they were spurious, I mean not that a shift so small as this could not be observed, but that there was amply sufficient tremor to account for it
The entire absence of perceptible shift at about 800 revolutions, before any important tremor has occurred, is to me really the most conclusive fa c t; and I feel confident that either the ether between the disks is quite unaffected by their motion,
if affected at all, that it is by something less than the thousandth part. At the same time, so far as rigorous proof is concerned, I should prefer to assert that the Velocity of light between two steel plates moving together in their own PLANE an INCH APART IS NOT INCREASED OR DIMINISHED BY SO MUCH AS 2150th PART OF THEIR VELOCITY.
MDCCCXCIII.— A.
5 G
778
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
A ir Effect.
47. Of course, there must be an effect due to the air which is whirled with the disks.
The index of refraction for air is 1*00029 for yellow light, and so 1 — l/fj? = *00058.
The effect dependent on air amounts, therefore, to
*h °f the speed of the disks,
and is smaller than any shift which at present I have been able to observe.
I should like to push the method far enough to detect the air effect.*
A great number of other experiments suggest themselves. I t may be objected that
the disks were too far apart, or th a t insufficient time was given for the viscosity of
the ether to assert itself, or th at the disks had inadequate mass. This last objection
is, perhaps, important, and I am proceeding to cope with it, and incidentally with the
others, in some new experiments. A positive result could no doubt be obtained by
rotating frame and observer instead of the disks.
The apparatus used in the above research was constructed by means of generous
aid volunteered by a private friend, to whom I hereby express my grateful thanks.
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* [The effect of centrifugal force on the density of the air between the disks, and the influence of varying density, will he discussed with other matters in a future communication.—July, 1893.]
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
779
More d e t a il e d D isc u ssio n of A l l ie d P roblem s.
Effect o f a different Entire Medium upon A berration.
48. If, instead of air or vacuum, the whole medium contemplated in fig. 4 is changed, the velocity of light is reduced from Y to Y /p,; wherefore the aberration will change too, unless the telescopic velocity be suitably reduced, or unless the medium is constrained to move in some compensatory manner. If the new medium is just as stationary as the old, and only the receiving telescope, or line of vision, moves, then the aberration angle will become p times as great as before.
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Minute Influence o f Motion o f En tire Medium on Aberration.
49. But if the medium, instead of being stationary, is drifting in some direction , with velocity v, then, perhaps, its motion may have some effect on the aberration. For, though a drifting medium cannot by itself cause aberration, yet it may modify it when otherwise produced. And this we shall find true in the second order of minutiae. For, in the drifting medium, the rays differ from the wave-normals by the angle e, such that
sin e = sin 6 — a sin 6,
and the velocity of light is
Yj = V cos e -f-
vocs
Hence an aberration caused by motion of telescope at speed u and angle <f), which
would naturally be
sin
'll/
e= —sin = sin cj>
becomes
si.n Cj = —u si.n </.>= .sin e/c(o-s-- -——a co-s--0-\-J
= /3 sin (f>— a/3 sin <f>cos 0 + higher powers.
The conditions most favourable for observing the second term are when the tele­ scope moves across, and the ether moves along, the ray.
Unless the ethereal velocity near the earth were very great, much greater than the earths orbital velocity, it would be hopeless to look for this term, as it would requiie the fixing of a stars position to the five-hundredth of a second, which must be con­ sidered quite impossible. The effect is connected with the slight alteration of focal length of the telescope (the difference between sin e and tan e), and may be regarded »s a secondary sort of Doppler effect (§ 2 0 ).
5 G2
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780
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
In practice, when th e telescope is being carried along by th e earth a t angle <f>to
the light, it is customary to assume the medium stationary, in which case a = 0 and
the first term alone e x is ts; or we may assume th a t th e ether is more or less carried
along by the earth, in which case
0 =
value, Ja/3, when th e angle is 45°. B u t even if a is as g rea t as /3, th e most favourable
case, unless the ether has a proper motion of its own, this only means a discrepancy
in a sta rs absolute position of *001"; so it is hopeless to look for a motion of the
medium this way.
50. The experim ent of filling a telescope tube with w ater as suggested by
B oscovich, and tried by A ir y , and more exactly by H oek, %aims a t a motion quite
different from th at above contemplated. I t aims a t moving a portion only of the
eth er in a partitioned-off region of space. I t is easy to show th a t on F resnels
theory no different aberrational effect can be th u s observed th an is observed with an
air telescope ; in fact, F resnel himself, in his original le tte r to A rago (§ 4) contem­
plated this experiment, and predicted its negative result, b u t it may be instructive to
enter on its consideration in a geometrical fashion.
Effect o f Motion combined with Change o f a Portion o f the Medium.
So long as th e whole medium is changed or moved, we have seen w hat effect there is on aberration. M otion has no effect on it, it drifts th e wave-norm als b u t cannot affect th e rays ; increased fx w ithout m otion increases it. B u t if th e ray has to pass through a bounding surface, and if the change or motion occurs only on one side of that surface, then circumstances are different.
Pig. 13.
If, for instance, th e source S sends a ray SA, which would have gone to B, a change of medium may carry it to C, while a drift of th e medium, carrying A to A! and B to E, will slant the ray along A E (fig. 13).
I t is, therefore, ju s t possible for a d rift to neutralize a refraction, and to let a ray en ter a dense medium w ithout bending. To this end th e d rift m ust equal CB or A A, and th e ray will th en be straight.
* Archives N4erlandaises (1868),vol. 3 p. 180.
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Now,
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
CB = -s-in-i—Oi —-— = tan i cos r — sin r =
r.)
.
AC
cos?-
V/fj,
781
v,
where
vYis the necessary velocity of d r ift; so
v-, =
V . ./cos? 1\
- s i i u ---- . ----- .
/A
\cos % /A/
The bending will be usual or unusual according as vx is less or greater than this. Ordinarily, of course it is far less.
51. But now suppose the obliquity i has been caused by the aberration necessary to bring a ray to a telescope (moving with velocity u) which except for motion would be looking straight at source ; for instance, the telescope whose position was O0E0 when the light started from S and has moved to AM when light has reached A ; in other words, let i be an aberration angle; then
MB -u = sin
AB
But, when a dense medium is inserted in the telescope, or say between the two planes, the time required for the shorter light journey, AC, is longer, and the telescope may get carried as far as OE, where
M E __ u AC “ Y Jia '
To bring the ray to the eye-piece at the right moment, C must drift to E, and the Huyghenian centre A to A", in the same time. So if v0 is the ethereal velocity able to indo the effect of the dense medium, and to leave the aberration what it was,
Hence
Therefore
or
C E ___ ^
AC “
MC u — Vn .
sin i r
~AT7C~i Y—fr~iTF,— = sm r =(a - = fA\ .
[A~ ( i t — V0) = U
H this condition is satisfied, the observed aberration caused by any motion of a
782
DK. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
telescope will be independent of the medium inside it, although the course of a ray through it is really altered [viz., from AB to AE. The aberration angle in vacuo is M AB; in the medium is A"EO. The diminished velocity of light is exactly com­ pensated by a virtually diminished speed of telescope with respect to the ether inside i t ; and so a steadily moving telescope sighted on a star can remain parallel to itself, with whatever medium it may be filled.—July, 1893.]
52 But, by moving a portion of medium relatively to the observer, say by spinning
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l
TT
\f
a glass disk, and looking through it axially near its circumference, where its velocity is u, we are looking through a moving stratum of thickness and a parallel shift may in th at case be experienced.
The angle is y-r = ---- y ---- , or for glass about — ;
and the shift is z times this angle, viz.,
To give a shift of 1 micron = a thousandth of a millimetre = 10-4 centims., with a thickness
z — 10 centims., would require a velocity u =
2Vs =
second = 4 kiloms. per second. My machine, at 3000 revolutions a minute, 50 a second, gives a
peripheral speed of 50 x 3 = 150 metres per second, so the thickness of glass needed to give a shift of
1 micron is
z = 2Vs//iu
—(4 X 1010 x 10-4)/15000 = 4000/15 = 3 metr
be used to diminish the required thickness.
More detailed discussion o f Doppler Effects.
53. There is rather a nice point to be considered in connexion with change (2 ), §9, viz., what the pitch, as perceived, really depends on. The coarse statement of examina­ tion candidates that it depends on wave-length, or on the frequency of vibration of the source, is of course not tr u e ; it depends on the frequency of disturbance reaching the receiver. This fact is suggested by listening, or looking through a different medium, wherein the wave-length is quite different; though, indeed, it must be admitted that the medium in ear or eye cannot be changed. I t is proved (for the case of sound at
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DE. OLIVER LODGE ON" ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
783
least) by travelling towards the source, when the observed rise of pitch
be caused
by increased frequency of arrival, the w'ave-length remaining unaltered.
But when we consider the effect observed in a spectroscope, there might possibly be
a difference according as its essential part was a grating or a prism.
For it may be argued that a grating, consisting as it does of a set of apertures of
fixed width, must deviate and disperse in proportion to wave-length; and hence that
if a grating be supplied with crowded waves, either by holding it to an approaching
source, or by immersing it in a denser medium, or in a medium flowing from it
towards source, it must act as if coarser relatively to the waves, and so deviate and
disperse them less.
But although this is a simple and plausible statem ent it is only half the truth.
We had better examine the problem particularly (§ 56), for it is a curious mixture of
Doppler effect and aberration, but at present it will suffice to say :
If 0 is the deviation caused by a given grating for a given fixed source of frequency
1/T, so that
N^rsin 6 = YT,
then if the source be approaching at the rate v, the time-interval between successive like phases is diminished in the proportion (V — ; and accordingly
sisn 0 ' == V (T —
t) = ( V - v ) T .
If it be the grating th at is advancing towards a fixed source, the time interval
between the arrival of like phases is likewise diminished, but in the ratio V/(V + v) ; so that
5 sin r = xTV—3 T.
It is noteworthy th at between 0' and 6" there is a minute difference of the second order of aberration magnitude ;
V2
6"- ~ tan 6.
If the grating be plunged into a different medium, the velocity of advance is changed, and
s sin &" = - T.
Lastly, if both source and grating are stationary, but the medium flowing from one to the other, or (what is the same thing) if source and grating are moving at the same pace, chasing each other through a stationary medium, the velocity and the wave­ length are affected together, and
ssin 6"" = (V +
v)T' = (Y + v) T = a sin 0.
784
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
No Doppler effect, therefore, is produced by a stream of medium flowing past source and receiver if relatively fixed, i.e., if they be moving together through a stationary medium.
We may in short summarise thus :—
Source approaching shortens waves, Receiver approaching alters virtual velocity, Medium flowing alters wave-length and velocity together, in an exactly
compensatory manner.
Steady Motion o f Medium cannot cause any Doppler Effect.
5 4 . Before abandoning the present consideration of the Doppler effect, let us dis­ tinctly assure ourselves of the important fact that no steady motion of the medium can change the pitch even infinitesimally, unless source and receiver are moving relatively to each other. Let source recede with velocity v, then the wave-lengths approaching us at their ordinary velocity Y are longer than usual,
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L et receiver approach with same velocity, then it sweeps up per second a number
of waves
, V
+vV
n = — = x = ,!-
So, without relative motion of source and receiver, there is no Doppler effect,
however small.
But the easiest way of assuring ourselves of the impotency of a steady wind on
pitch, is to remember that such a wind cannot bring waves at a greater frequency
than they are emitted from the source. Gusts will cause wailing, but a steady wind
has no effect on pitch.
This is true also on a corpuscular theory, though for a slightly different reason.
For, consider a machine-gun receding and firing at regular time intervals, it will be
seen that, while the distance between the bullets is the same as if it were stationary,
the speed with which they travel is Y — ; and, if a target is chasing the gun at
the same pace
v,the number caught in a second will be
__ (V —
v) + _
DR, OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
785
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Effect o f Moving Medium on Doppler Effect.
55. But finally examine if wind has any effect on pitch when source and receiver
are not moving at the same pace, i.e., when a Doppler effect certainly exists. Let
source recede with speed u, receiver advance with speed and let the medium flow
from source towards receiver at speed w (or in any direction at speed sec 6 ; the
arCgTument
is
the
sam e):— /
Then speed of wave is
Y +
Length of each is
x, _ V 4
A — ----- t?-V------ A —
■w + u x______ V
The number caught per second is
, V+
w +
V
V 4- 4- u
or
dn
u —v
n V 4- H 4-
The medium velocity does, therefore, enter into the expression for the ordinary Doppler effect, though in a very subordinate maimer, by affecting the velocity of light. It cannot cause the effect, but it can modify it when otherwise produced.
The simplest plan of detecting this effect of a moving medium, would be by some direct observation of the velocity of light itself; either simultaneously from stars in two opposite directions, or in a given direction at six monthsinterval. No terrestrial object must be used as source, because it would be moving at practically the same rate as receiver. Hence, for a six-months experiment, the Jupiters satellites method of determining the velocity of light would seem the best plan ; and, if observations could be exact enough, one couid thus get
V — (w + v) V + (w + v)
and so determine w the unknown speed of the ether past the solar system.
A simultaneous aberrational method, such as comparing the aberration of two
;stars 180° apart, will not work well; for if they be at 90° to the apex of earths
motion there will be no discrepancy, while if one be to^ward that apex and the other
?away from it there will be no aberration.
M ncccxcm .— a ,
5 H
786
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
Effect
o fMotion on Diffraction Grating.
56. To avoid any confusion about motion relatively to source, and the alteration of wave-length thus caused, it will be best to abandon our usual convenient plan of letting the ether move, and attend explicitly to the motion of the grating with its telescope and observer; all else being stationary.
Fig. 14.
*
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Details of Doppler effect with moving grating, AB, and telescope OP.
Consider a plane wave, A0B0, advancing through a stationary medium with
ordinary velocity, V, towards a stationary grating. Let A0A = AC = \ 0 be an ordi­
nary wave-length, while AB =
ssi the width of one complete
then BC is a wave-front, and AC is the ray, inclined to the normal to grating at
angle CBA = 0O.
Now let the grating advance with velocity v to meet the wave a distance
BB' = AA' = CC' in one period; the disturbance B0 will only have to go as far as
B', and the disturbance A only as far as Cr ; so drawing a tangent B'D to the sphere
of radius AC', we get the wave-front appropriate to moving grating ; AD is the ray,
inclined to the normal to grating at angle DB A' = <f>.
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
787
Now
90and <j) are very nearly eq u al; showing th at diffraction really does depend
on wave-length simply, in spite of motion of grating, so far as minutiae of the first
order are concerned.
But then this direction, <£, will not be the direction appreciated by the observer;
for the motion of his telescope will cause ordinary aberration, since his motion is
partially across the diffracted rays.
Not to confuse the figure, I indicate the telescope OP further along the ray. While
the light is travelling along it its eyepiece will have time to move to Q, such that
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p Q _ v _ AA' _ OQ “ V “ AF —
. Hence, A'F is parallel to the axis of the telescope which receives the ray, and may
be called the apparent or perceived ray. The angle at which it is inclined to the
grating-normal may be called
9.
Now* 6 is less than 0Q, and is very nearly the same as if wave-length had been
really shortened to AD, instead of AC.
Draw BE a tangent to the AD circle, and we get the wave-front appropriate to this
shortened wave and a stationary g ratin g ; while AE is the ray belonging thereto, the
inclination of which to the grating-normal we may call [sin 01= (1 — a) sin 0O.]
Now, plainly, AE and A'F are very nearly parallel, but not quite; there is a
second-order difference between 9 and 9l} which may be readily calculated.
Perhaps the simplest way of displaying the result is to introduce the aberration
angle POQ = e (such th at sin e = a sin 9) and to write
whereas
sin 9j = sin sin 9 = sin
<f>—acos <£.sin 90; (f>cos e — a cos (f>sin 9.
(Or one might write cot 9 = cot
<j>f-- a cosec (/>.)
The difference between the apparent ray and the shortened wave-length ray is
approximately
(9l — 9) cos 9 = sin or
<j(>1 — cos e) — a3 cos
9 —
91 = a2tan 9 (cos <j>— 4 sin 9 sin ),
and is probably quite too small to be detected. The point of the whole thing is that a grating has same real effect whether
Moving or stationary, but that the motion of the observing telescope causes an aberration which necessitates very nearly the same alteration of its direction as if the Waves were really shortened in simple proportion to the motion. The Doppler effect caused by motion of observer is, therefore, essentially a case of common aberration.
5 H 2
788
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
Now, as there is no hypothesis or difficulty whatever about the aberrational effect of a moving telescope, all that has been said of a grating applies, at least broadly, to a prism.
Effect o f Motion on the Dispersion o f a Prism.
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57. The deviating power of a prism depends on its relative refractive index with
respect to the surrounding medium; hence, in this sense, its deviation is certainly
affected by the length of the waves with which it is supplied.
Its dispersive power, however, is not a superficial, but a deep-seated, phenomenon,
depending on its internal stru ctu re; and, since no variation of outside medium can
affect internal wave-length, the dispersive power of a prism may be assumed constant
for given waves. I t follows th at the dispersion caused by a given prism, immersed
in different media, is simply proportional to the mean deviation in each case for given
kind of light.
But what about the effect of motion ?
If only we can assume th at the prism interferes with the ether as little as the
grating has been supposed to do, then all that has been said of the grating remains
true of the prism. I f we supposed the prism to modify the free ether inside it,
we should have to modify this statement. On the hypothesis of F resnel, however,
the free ether is not supposed to be affected; and experiments directed to test
the matter, by ascertaining the effect of prism chasing a source at the same speed,
have resulted in finding this effect zero, in accordance with the above statement.
Hence it must be allowed that a Doppler effect observed by a prism depends really
on wave-length, but apparently on frequency, ju st as is the case with a grating.
I t must be noticed th at the observation of a Doppler effect by a prism depends
entirely on dispersion;
i.e.,on waves of different length bein
But prisms can be constructed whose dispersion is corrected and neutralized. Such
achromatic prisms, if perfectly achromatic, will treat waves of all sizes alike; and,
accordingly, the shortening of the waves from a moving source will not produce any
effect. Achromatic prisms will behave to terrestrial and to extra-terrestrial sources,
i.e., to relatively stationary and relatively moving sources, in the same way.
A r a g o used an achromatic prism on a star when he showed that refractive index
was unaffected by motion of the earth.# In criticising A ragos experiment adversely,
Mascart forgets this, and thinks he ought to have perceived a Doppler effect.
M ascart used a terrestrial source and an ordinary dispersive prism, when he expe­
rienced the same negative result. Maxwell sent light both ways through his prism,
* B abinet, Comptes Rendns, vol. 9, p. 774 (1839). A rago, Ann. de Chim. et de Phys. (3), vol. 37, p. 180 (1853). Maxwell, Phil. Trans. (1868), vol. 158, p. 532; also Ency. Brit. article Ether.” H oek, Archives Neerlandaises (1869), vol. 4, p. 443. M ascart, Annales de lEcole Normale, vols. 1 and 3 (1872 and 1874) ; Professor Mascart here describes a large number of negative experiments which he has made as to the effect of motion on most of the phenomena of optics.
DR. OLIVER LODGE OR ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
789
and therefore neutralized all refraction, except what was entirely caused by motion, when he proved that this latter was nil.
Babinet, H oek, and Mascart, all tried a modified form of the same experiment in an interferential manner, and likewise got a negative result.
58. If we wish to follow out the ether m otion through a prism into greater detail we can sav
Let the prism advance w ith velocity v to m eet th e waves, and let the ether in it be carried forward with velocity Jcv, then the virtual velocity of the lig h t towards the prism is V + v, and inside the prism is
H v
- to;
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hence, on ordinary notions of refraction the new index w ill be
or
where or
(V + »)/» . r (V + ®) — V
—■ I
a = v /(Y -j- r) = ciX/X, dfi — Tc/uPx,
which, on F resnels hypothesis, equals (fi2 — 1) «. This seems to give a sort of theory of dispersion for the case :—
dfi _d \ fi2 — l X
or
/i + 1 = AX*,
or _c2 + X2
^ c2 — X2
Interference Effects with Rays at Different Angles to Ether Drift. Effects of Normal Reflexion. Further Discussion of the Theory o f Mr. Michelsons Experiment.
59. The experiment of Michelson, already referred to in § 25, has to do with the effect of a plane mirror sending a ray straight back upon itself. Consider the aspect of the mirror necessary to do this ; first, for the case of a moving source in a stationary tedium (fig. 15).
Let Sj be initial position of the source, throwing off a wave-front to M, and itself loving to S, so that
SiS = t f l \ ; and SXM = = VTj.
Let SM now be reflected at M so as to travel to S2, and reach it the same time as source, then
SS2 = vT2; and MS2 = r 2 = VT2.
7 90 Hence
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
S j S __T , __ 7*1
ss3- t3 ~ r3
wherefore SM, bisects the angle SjMSg, or the angles of incidence and reflexion are
precisely equal, and the required mirror is normal to SM, but is not tangential to the
wave-front.
Fig. 15.
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Details of normal reflexion w ith moving source or moving medium.
Let Qj, Q, Q2 be the images in this mirror of Sx, S, S2, and with centre Qxconstruct a circle of radius QM cutting the wave-front in N ; MN is the mirror able to throw a light ray back on the moving source.
A stationary observing telescope will observe the source along Q2M ; one moving with the source will observe it along QM, th at is, in its true direction at moment of vision. The colour will change by the amount log as already said ; and, as for any possible interference effect, the fringes will shift by an amount depending on
Tj + T3 __ 2T ” 2
rx+ r3____ cos e ______ \/Q
r"" 1 - a2 ”
1 - a2
which gives very approximately
T 1+ T2 - 2 T a3T (1 + cos3 0).
There is, therefore, always a lag of phase caused by the motion, which cannot be made negative, or even zero, but which is a minimum when the motion is across the line of light, and a maximum when along i t ; being, indeed, twice as great for motion along as it is for motion across. Supplementary angles give the same effect.
One may express the fact by saying that the virtual distance the light has to go is SxQ2, or S2Ql5 instead of SQ.
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
791
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Case when the Mirror Moves too.
60. It is observed that in this investigation the mirror has been supposed stationary
with respect to the medium, it is therefore possible, if the mirror is moving at the
same rate as the source, e.#., if they were both fixed and the medium streaming
past both, that the circumstances may be a little different; because since the whole of
the wave-front does not strike quite simultaneously, there may be time for some effect
to occur during its period of contact, short though of course it is. N ot even for normal
incidence is the time of impact of a finite portion of a wave infinitesim al; for even
when the source is infinitely distant (or when a collimating lens is used) it has to be
remembered that the waves are not normal to the rays in a moving medium, and that,
accordingly, when the incidence of the ray is normal and the medium movement not
normal, the wave is inclined to the surface, a minute, but possibly important, angle.
But in Michelsons arrangement the ray is not exactly normal on the tangentially
moving mirror, but is inclined so that the mirror is precisely parallel to the wave­
front ; and so the time of contact is nothing on either mirror.
The statement of theory, therefore, proceeds as follows, without apparent error.
Let S be and remain the position of the source, and let a mirror MN (fig. 15) be
arranged normal to SM, so as to send a ray back upon itself, when everything is
stationary, in time 2T.
It is required to find if any tilt must be given to the mirror to send the ray back
upon itself when the medium is moving, and whether a different time will be taken
in the journey.
While light travels from S to M the wave-front's centre has drifted to S x, and,
accordingly, it strikes the mirror obliquely and is reflected as if coming from Qj ;
hence it would travel towards S2 but for the drift. The drift will carry it precisely
back to S if SS2 = vT2, T2 being the time of the return jou rn ey; just as SS2= vTj,
when Tj is the time of the outward journey.
I Hence, no tilt whatever is required by the mirror, but it reflects the light back
upon itself just as when the medium was stati onary, and the distance really travelled
is exactly the same as it was, viz., 2
r .The velocity of the light is,
on the out and in journeys, for
Y x = V cos e — v cos 0,
V 2 = V COS € -|“ cos 0,
rp _1 rp _
WL
11 - 2 - v, + v 3 -
18 before (§ 59).
r, r _ 2 T COS € ____ 0rp (I s*n - 21
61. In the actual experiment, as performed for instance by Michelson, it is natural
to use a collimator and plane waves, and since his null result is very surprising and
remarkable3it may be as well to examine whether the introduction of the lens pro-
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792
DR, OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
duces any disturbance. A t first I thought the lens and glass slabs used by him might possibly be the cause of his failure to get any result, because the ray across the motion travels through the glass obliquely, while along the motion it travels normally. But a little consideration shows that both along and across the motion the effect of the glass would be to increase the lag in a simply proportional manner to the previous lag. And calculation gives as the time of the journey, when a total thickness %of glass is interposed, using F resnels theory that the speed of the ether inside the glass is 1/ft3 of what it is outside,
T =
.... . ..... ...g_______
e +
vocs
f—l cos e + ~s cos 0
6V
and Ts — corresponding expression with v negative. So
^
where
^
2
(r—
z)cos e B 2 fizocs e 2T cos e 2
Ll +
= V (1 - a 2) " + r y / 1 _ “ 1 - a2" + 1 - a 2 ( 1 _ ^ “ 1 - a3 )
\ M7
\ V?
|
T1 —- y + (my— 1 ) s .
wherefore the effect of introducing glass is to increase the lag, but not quite so much as by the equivalent of the extra distance thus virtually added, the second term in the above expression being negative; but the diminution is independent of direction, except when fourth powers of aberration magnitude are attended to. Neglecting these, the effect of the glass is merely to cause, in addition to the lag naturally to be expected, an extra term, independent of direction, of this value :
Michelsons Interference Experiment in a Different Medium.
62. Indeed, the simplest plan would be to consider the effect of immersing the whole arrangement in a different medium. It is merely to change the light velocity V to V//a, and its mechanical velocity v to v/fj? the ethereal velocity inside it. Con­ sequently a becomes a/ft.
The aberration angle c changes to e. such that
si•n e' = -« si•n 0, P
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
793
and the lag
2 cros e
V (1-^2)
becomes
2fircos e'
V (1 - « V )
approximately fi times as great as before. But although this is the case, extra lag caused by motion is not so great inside the medium as it was in vacuo, for
2fir cos e'
2r cos e _ 2r cos e / fi COS e' (1 — a2)
V (1 - T 8) “ V (1 - a2)
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or, approximately,
2( f i — l ) r cos e 2fir /
V (1 - «») “ V
1\ ?
[The conclusion here is that whatever may be the effect of a dense medium it is independent of 0, and therefore can have nothing to say to M ic h e l so n s experiment, which entirely depends on a difference between what can be observed with 0 = 0 and $ = 90°.— July, 1893.]
The Laws o f Reflexion and Refraction as modified by Motion.
63. It is necessary now to enter on the somewhat thorny question as to the effect of
motion upon the laws of reflexion and refraction. F r e sn e l by considering some
special cases satisfied himself th at no discrepancy need be expected on his version
of the undulatory th e o ry ; and Sir G eorge S to k es, examining the question in a more
general manner in 1846, proved that, at least as far as the first order of minutiae, the
laws were obeyed in spite of any relative motion between mirror and medium
(motion of source has obviously nothing to do with it, unless it affects the shape of
the incident wave). And the long continued use of artificial horizons by astronomers
shows that there has been no practical doubt on the subject, at least as far as reflexion
is concerned.
But these statements do not by any means exhaust the subject; the law of
reflexion is not precisely obeyed in a moving medium, and recently Michelson has
proposed to utilize the theoretical error (which has never yet been practically
realized) as a fresh method of attacking the problem of the relative motion of the
ether and the earth.
I propose, therefore, to enter upon it, and I must confess that though the results
are easily stated, they have given me much trouble to be sure of, and I have found a
good many mares nests by the way.
The reasoning for reflexion and refraction is much the same, and I attend more
pronouncedly to reflexion because without assuming F resnels theory as to the motion
of ether inside dense matter we have no guide to what shall happen in refraction ;
mdcccxciii,—a,
5 x
794
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
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and although the theory has been to a certain extent, and with fairly high accuracy, verified, yet it can hardly be yet said to have a secure rational basis.
In a drifting medium we must draw a clear distinction between waves and rays; the laws obeyed by one need not be obeyed by the other, for they are inclined to each other, and may become differently inclined after reflexion or refraction.
Now it is pretty plain that if motion is to have any effect upon these aberration angles, the rays must be differently inclined to -the direction of drift; and on the other * hand, if motion is to affect the reflexion of waves, that it must act during the period of contact of a wave with the reflecting surface; so that if a wave comes down plumb it will rebound as it comes, because its time of contact is then infinitesimal and no finite motion could cause any disturbance. But even in this case of normal incidence the law of reflexion need not be obeyed for rays, for they are not normal to the waves, and will be differently inclined to the direction of drift, unless indeed the latter be either normal or tangential.
64. The following are statements which I will afterwards justify (1) The planes of incidence and reflexion are always the same. (2) The angles of incidence and reflexion, as measured between rays and normal to surface, in general differ. (3) If the mirror is stationary and medium moving, they differ by a quantity depending principally on the square of aberration magnitude, i.e., by one part in a hundred million, and a stationary telescope would be able to observe the effect, if it were delicate enough. (4) If the medium is stationary and mirror moving, the angles differ by a quantity depending principally on the first power of aberration magnitude, i.e., by one part in ten thousand, but a telescope moving with the mirror will not be able to observe this large effect; for the apparent (or commonplace) aberration caused by the motion of the receiver will obliterate the odd powers and leave only the even powers of the aberration, so that the observed effect should be the same as in case 3. (5) As regards the angles which the reflected and incident waves make with the surface, i.e., as to the obedience to the law of reflexion shown by waves instead of by rays, in case 3 the angles differ by an amount depending on the first order of aberration, but in case 4 they only differ by the square of this quantity. (6) A t grazing incidence the ordinary laws are accurately obeyed by the rays as observed, and at normal incidence the error is a maximum. (7) The ordinary laws are obeyed whenever the direction of motion is tangential or normal to the mirror. ( 8) In general the shape of the incident waves is not precisely preserved after reflexion, so that, when spherical waves impinge on a mirror in a moving medium, the reflected waves from a plane mirror diverge from a sort of caustic instead of from a point, and the position of the image varies (but almost infinitesimally) with the position of the observer. In other words, such a mirror acts to a parallel beam as if
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
795
slightly tilted, to a divergent beam as if slightly curved. But either effect, as observ­ able in the result, is almost hopelessly small.
(9) Similar statements are true for refraction.
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65. In considering a plane mirror in a drifting medium it is very tempting to image the direction of drift of successive wave centres (fig. 4); in which case everything will be symmetrical, and the law of reflexion will be obeyed altogether, by both waves and rays, in the simplest possible manner. But a little thought shows that this is illegitimate, for it would make the reflected waves assisted in their progress by the reflected drift just as much as the incident waves are assisted ; whereas they are really travelling in the teeth of the wind, their progress being impeded and their wave-length shortened just as much as the incident waves are helped and lengthened (or of course vice versd). Plainly the drift is not reflected, but must be supposed to act on the waves emitted by the image exactly as it acts on the waves emitted by the source.
Another tempting thing to do is to start a system of waves from source and its ordinary image simultaneously, both subject to precisely the same drift velocity, one being the incident, the other the reflected system. B ut applying this, and taking a pair of waves intersecting at any one point of the mirror, it will be found they have not travelled the same distance to get there, nor have they taken the same time, and the drift of their centres has been different. Moreover, they do not intersect at a second point of the same wave, and, in fact, the system behind the mirror is not in any sense the image of the front set.
The really essential thing is th at the phase of the reflected wave shall be identical with that of its incident exciter at the point of contact with the mirror, and accordingly that the time of virtual journey from any point to be considered as an image is to be equal to the time of journey from the corresponding point of the source. Nothing less direct or more geometrical than this seems satisfactory, so it had better be applied in its usual Huyghenian baldness. A t the same time a little caution is necessary in using H uyghens construction in a moving medium, for the centre of the elementary waves does not remain at the point of incidence, but drifts away, as in fig. 4, and the construction has to remember this, or it will go wrong.
Lawso f Reflexion and Refraction in a Drifting Medium.
66. Since the direction of drift need not be in the plane of incidence, it will be con­ venient to resolve it into two components, respectively in and perpendicular to that plane, and consider them separately.
Component o f D rift Perpendicular to Plane of Incidence.
The perpendicular component is very easily disposed of, as was shown by Sir G eorge S to k es.* For looking down the normal to the mirror we shall see the
* Math, and Phys. Papers, vol. 1, p- 144.
5 I 2
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796
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
incident and reflected rays AO and OB, incident at the point O, affected by the drift in such a way that their direction is A'O and OB' respectively ; but they are
still both in a plane normal to the surface, and they still make equal angles with the
surface.
Fig. 16.
A'
A *
J C ■>
c
And as regards refraction, an equal length of the refracted ray will be foreshortened
into OC = OB
jfi; and the drift inside the medium being, according to F r
theory, BB
'fax2,will in the longer time available carry C to C', such that O
remains a straight lin e; accordingly, the plane of the refracted ray is still the plane
of incidence. Hence the perpendicular component of the drift is wholly ineffective,
and we have only to consider the component in the plane of incidence; call it v.
Component o f D rift in Plane o f Incidence.
Consider a plane wave A0B0 travelling, with an aberration angle e between its
normal and its direction of advance caused by a drift in direction AA', towards a plane
mirror, at a pace compounded of the speed of light and of the drift, viz.,
V cos € +
vocs 0.
Let incident and reflected rays make angles i and i respectively with the mirror-
normal, and 6 and 6' with the line of drift, so that if <f> is the inclination of the
drift direction to the mirror-normal,
6 =
Fig. 17.
The incident and reflected waves will be inclined to the surface by the angles + e, i — e', respectively.
When the wave AB strikes the mirror, A becomes a source of radiation, and B travels on to C, with a velocity compounded of BB' and B'C. By the time B arrives at C the radiation from A will have spread a distance equal to B'C through the medium, and the centre of a wave with this radius will have had time to drift with the moving medium to A', a distance equal to B B '; hence, drawing the semicircle A'B'EC, and choosing on it a point E, such that A'E = B'C, we have the direction of the reflected ray, viz., AE, and of the reflected wave CE.
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
797
67. It is easy to see th at the triangle PA'O is isosceles, and accordingly that the
angle A'CA is equal to half the difference of the inclinations of incident and reflected
waves to the mirror surface ;
i.e.,calling this angle 77,
277 =
(i+ e) — — c'),
or e + e' ,
■q = — + — .
hence the wav?, is reflected precisely as if the mirror were rotated through the angle 77 and there were no d r ift; the angle of virtual rotation being very approximately the mean of the aberration angles.
Fig. 18.
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The first approximation to its value is
77 = a sin %cos ;
it practically vanishes, therefore, for normal incidence and for tangential drilt.
Further, as regards the change of width of the beam or distance between the rays,
it is apparent that measured along the wave-surface it is the same, because
EC = A'B' = AB ; so measured perpendicularly it changes in the ratio of cos e : cos e
before and after reflexion. 68. I t is not to be supposed th at the ray is reflected after this manner ; and, in fact,
we shall find that the error of ray-reflexion, or difference between angle of incidence
and reflexion,
i— 1 , is exceedingly small.
To determine this difference, and the whole circumstances of the problem, we write
down the following equations, obvious from figure 17 :
sin e BB' v
_ AA ' sin
sin # == BT3 “ V = a A'E sin &
6 — i — <f>, 0' — tt —(1 + )•
Also, for the time of journey of the wave from position AB to EC,
BB' B'C
BC
AE
A'E AA'
V cos e +
vocs 6 V cos + cos 0 ~V
v
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798
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
Lastly
BC __ sin (i + e ) .
AC
cos e *
AE _ sin - e')
AC
cos e'
These solve the problem, and they may be conveniently worked on the following
lines—
sin e = a sin (
i —
<f>) ;sin = a sin {i +
sin i' — cos i' tan e' A E V cos e' +
sin i + cos i tan e
BC
V cos e +
vocs vocs 0
th e last equality being added for convenience, and being true because
Therefore, exactly,
COS2e — a 2 COS2 6 - - 1 — a 2.
cos + cos
sin icos e —\ a 2 cos
isin 2 (i — <£) sec e = sin i cos e — J a2 cos i sin 2{if + (f>) sec
whence, expanding cos e and neglecting a4,
sin i — sin i = a2cos3 sin 2<f>, or
i — if = a2cos2 sin 2(f).
The discrepancy between the angles of incidence and reflexion (which I call for brevity the error of reflexion) is therefore exactly expressible in even powers of aberration magnitude, and no part of it reverses with the reversal of the ray. It vanishes for grazing incidence, and is a maximum for normal incidence (at which I am somewhat surprised). I t vanishes both for tangential and for normal drift, being a maximum when the medium drifts at 45° to the mirror.
The maximum possible value of the error of reflexion is a 2, or 10“8 of a radian, or 0/,*00205, or ^ o t h of a second of a r c ; an amount which, although equivalent to an error of only 15 inches in the circumference of the earth, it is perhaps possible to d e te c t; especially if, as Mr. Michelson suggests, it be increased by multiple reflexion. Indeed, it strikes me as perhaps the simplest way of examining into the motion of the ether near the earth.
Refraction in a Drifting Medium.
69. The reasoning for refraction is precisely of the same kind, and there needs nothing more but to write down the equations, putting Y everywhere instead of V, v/n? instead of v, and consequently a/p, instead of a.
I t is best thus to assume F resnels theory, and leave observation to point out any deviation from it th at may be existent.
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
799
A separate figure may save confusion; and though the general case is easily drawn
(like fig. 17) a special case serves better for illustration, and I depict the case of drift
along incident ray.
Fig. 19.
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&' and e"are the angles between refracted ray and the drift direction and wavenormal respectively ; the angle of refraction, defined as usual, may be called ; so that
6" = < f > - j ,
A A' vj/j}1
sm•
// e
=
- sm V ,
a
.
P
A/F ____________ A F ____ __ V /p V /p cos e" -f* vj/j? cos 6"
AF __ sin ( j - e")
AC
cos e'
These are th e equations to be used in conjunction w ith th e previous set, and so it follows th a t
sin
j — cos
sin i + cos i tan
j tan e" AF 1 cos e" + a/p cos 6"
e BC p cos
1 cos e — a cos
— (/>)
W herefore sin
icos e — a sin </> — a ta n e cos i cos — <f>)
= p j s in y cos e" — - s in </> -j- —ta n e" cos cos
t
M
r
Or
{C0S^ ^^ sin i cos e — p sin^ cos e" = | a 2
s *n
— ^>) ~
</>)j- •
*
j sin 2 — </>) •
W hich show s that th e difference betw een sin and p sin^, or th e error of refraction,
is likew ise o f th e second order o f aberration m a g n itu d e,
ordinarily speaking, n i l ;
800
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
its value being easily obtainable if ever wanted. The displacement of Fraunhofer
lines due to the S uns rotation is a small thing to detect with a prism spectroscope,
but this effect of motion on terrestrial sources, if it is ever to be seen, is 660 times
smaller.
70. I t may, perhaps, be well to check over our results by the less geometrical
method employed by Sir G eorge Stokes, viz., by expressing the fact th a t the inter­
section of the three waves (incident, reflected, and refracted) with the mirror is a joint
intersection, and runs along the mirror at a pace which can easily be written down
(viz.,
AC/t); for the wave advances through the medium at a speed Y, and the
medium helps it along with a component of its drift velocity v cos + so the
total speed of the joint wave intersection as it runs along the mirror is
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V + sin (
vocs (0 + e)
i + e)
which it is easy to see is precisely the same as what we should have obtained by attending to rays and to the figure, viz.,
AC V cos + cos 6
t
sin
(i + e)/cos e
So the equations for reflection and refraction can be written down at once, th u s :
V +
vocs (
sin (i + e)
i —
sin
tf>+ e)
V — v cos (if +
( ir—
together with the values of the aberration angles, obtained, say, by resolving the wave and drift velocities perpendicular to the ray, or resultant direction of advance, and expressing the fact th at they must neutralize each o th e r;
v
sin e
V sin (i — <£)
sin e' sin (i' 4- <p)
fx sin e" sin ( j — <f>)
These two sets of equations contain the entire solution, and of course fi may be
written
if it is a question of passage from one medium to another instead of
from vacuum to a m edium ; the Y and v then expressing speeds in first medium.
71. In Sir G eorge Airy s* beautifully performed and described experiment of the
value of the coefficient of aberration measured by a zenith sector full of water, there
should, we see, on F resnels theory, have been a slight discrepancy, but one wholly
too small to observe with the various inaccuracies inseparable from star-light. If it
is to be detected it must be with light from a terrestrially fixed source. The obser-
Phil. M ag., iv., vo). 43, p. 310.
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
801
vations of H oek and others, performed w ith terrestrial light, aimed only a t disproving Klinkerfues notion th a t an error proportional to the first power was to be expected, and did not aim a t the immense delicacy needed to observe a 3.
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Wave-length
as alteredby Reflexion.
72. Since the laws of reflexion are so closely obeyed, an image in a mirror will prac­ tically appear just the same whether the medium is stationary or not, and, accord­ ingly, the image may be treated as the virtual source for all questions relating to wave-length and Doppler effect, and the waves coming from that image will in general be affected by the drift otherwise than are the waves coming from the source, because the direction is different.
For instance, sunshine strikes the earth perpendicularly to its motion, but reflected sunshine may coincide with the direction of motion, and, in that case, will have to travel against (or with) the ether wind precisely as if it came from a terrestrial source, and its wave-length will be affected as already reckoned ; in other words, thinking of a mirror moving with the orbital motion of the earth only, considered as circular, the image of the Sun moves as if attached to the mirror (not at twice the rate), and, accordingly, reflected sunshine behaves as regards wave-length precisely as if it were coming from a terrestrial source. [More generally ( ., including eccentricity of orbit and aberration) reflected light as seen by an observer moving with the mirror appears in every respect like direct light.]
For irregular reflexion, e.g.> from white paper or from the Moon or a planet, these tilings can be treated as being themselves the sources.
Change o f Phase caused by Reflexion a Moving Medium.
73. Now consider the phase as affected by reflexion.
Consider the two parallel rays A and B, in fig. 17, distant b from each other, and
let B lag initially by an amount b tan e behind A (§ 67), then, after reflexion, the
distance apart has changed so that
c/bso e = b'/cos =
Hence the gain of lag by reflexion, b' tan — b tan e
say, and th
= c (sin e' — sin e), — — 2a cos i -f i' sin ( — i - i'
which, very approximately, = — 2ac cos i sin </>.
For normal incidence and tangential drift it has its maximum value, 2
MBCCCXCIII.— A.
5 K
802
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
Now whatever the initial lag may be, and it may be arbitrary, the final lag will differ from it by this same am ount; and if the rays, instead of being parallel, are coincident in path, then no difference in phase is caused by reflexion.
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Change o f Energy at Reflexion fro m Moving M irror
74. When reflexion takes place from a moving (receding) mirror, there is some wor
done on the mirror by reason of the intrinsic pressure of light. Calling the energy
per unit volume e +
e',the energy of the incident light per secon
reflected Ye', the pressure is
e+ e', and the work done per s
So Y e - Ye = + e ) v,
or
e1( — a ) = e (1 + a ).
Or consider the mirror fixed *and medium moving with source away from it,
the speed of incident light is V — v, of the reflected is Y + but. bo work is done; so
( V _ v ) e = ( V _|_ v ) e \
Wherefore, on either mode of consideration, the energy of the reflected light is from a
receding mirror less, from an advancing mirror greater, than th at of the incident
light, in the ratio
e! 1 —a
6 1+ a
Possible Effect o f Light Pressure in Astronomy.
75. Light energy per unit volume on Mount W hitney, as determined by Langley amounted to 67 microbarads, or, say, in outside space, three quarters of 10-4 ergs per cubic centim etre; giving a pressure of the same number of dynes per sq. eentim.
This pressure on the Moon is withdrawn during eclipses, but, although equal to the ordinary weight of 10,000 tons or so, it is too small to make sensible perturbations, as it could only push the Moon -^gth inch in a fortnight.
On a small body, however, it may become comparable with gravitation.* On a small-enough dust particle, such as may be in tails of comets, the light pressure and gravitative attraction of the Sun might balance. I make the size about 1 micron diameter for a sphere of the density of water, at any distance. A nything smaller than this would be repelled, and would get up an excessive velocity in time.
[* I find that F itzgerald made a communication years ago to the Royal Dublin Society on this subject.]
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
803
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Direction o f Motion
o fa place on the Earth.
76. Of all the motions to which the earth is subject its orbital motion is the largest, and is the most important for aberrational effects; but two others must not be overlooked, since they may introduce secular variations into the amount of those effects, viz., the diurnal rotation and the motion of the system through space.
The speed of the motion of the system is only approximately known, but it is esti­ mated at 10 9 miles a second, or 1'75 million C.G.S., and its direction is completely specified by stating a point among the fixed stars.
The speed of the diurnal rotation i. s -e-q-u--a-to1-—rsiai—dl-ec-r-ierac—lumd--af-ye-r-e-n--c-e X cos .lati.tude, or very small compared with that of light, and its direction is simply from west to east. It causes a variation in the observed total aberration, amounting to nearly 2 per cent, at the equator.
Both these motions are steady. The orbital motion is not quite constant in speed, and goes through the whole plane cycle of directions, but its average value may be stated as t o ,o~oo that of light, and its direction is sufficiently expressed for practical purposes by saying that it is in the plane of the ecliptic, and at right angles to the Suns direction. For instance, a half-moon is roughly in the line of the earths orbital motion. We are moving as if going away from an increasing half-moon or towards a decreasing half-moon. Another way of putting the matter, is th a t at midnight the annual and diurnal motions approximately agree in direction, at midday they are opposed. At the epoch of the solstices the agreement is good, ., the orbital motion at a solstice is from east to west at noon, from west to east at m idnight; and at no time of the year is the error of this statement of very great practical import, for even at the equinoxes 91 '7 per cent, of the motion is in the direction stated. A clock might easily be made to point out the direction of orbital motion. By starlight it is never difficult to realize it, for there are usually planets enough to make the ecliptic manifest, and there is no difficulty in estimating whereabouts the Sun is. Hold a twenty-four hour watch in the plane of the ecliptic with its noon line pointing west, and its hour hand will constantly indicate the direction of the earths orbital motion. The only difficulty is knowing where the plane of ecliptic is. Consider a terrestrial globe with its axis tilted 2 3 ^, and rotating by internal mechanism once in twenty-four hours. The plane of ecliptic is horizontal, and the direction of motion will be given by a pointer revolving once a year in a horizontal plane, or, more simply, by the appropriate radius of a horizontal card with 365 days of the year written round its circumference. With that alone, however, it would be a little puzzling to compare this slowly changing direction with the position of any given locality on the rotating Garth. The whole might be turned by hand till the required locality came to the top, with the axis in the meridian, and then the pointer would agree with the direction of
5K 2
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804
DR. OLIVER LODGE ON ABERRATION PROBLEMS.
motion; or,-more simply, there need be no globe at all, but simply a polar axis revolving once a day opposite to the earth, and carrying with it a dial with the names of the months and days recorded round its circumference, set on the axis at an obliquity of 23j°, and adjusted once for all to coincide with the ecliptic. The date on the card will then point out the line of motion. The clock, if kept to G.M.T., would never give the motion more erroneously than a small correction analogous to the equation of time. By giving the card one step forward every 29th of February, it could be kept right until the whole thing wanted th at ^ o t h part of a rotation per century about a vertical axis which precession demands. [My assistant, Mr. E. E. Robinson, has connected a clock through a H ookes joint with a pointer which moves so as very fairly to indicate the direction of orbital motion at any instant.]
Electrical methods o f detecting Motion through Ether.
77.I t might perhaps appear possible th at electrical methods may succeed in showing a first-order eflect of terrestrial motion, since charged bodies in motion repel each other with modified force.
I t is not possible to control or vary it except by combining the above several kinds of movement, and F itzgerald has suggested a plan of observing whatever effect may be caused by the alternate agreement and disagreement between the earths orbital motion and the solar systems proper motion : say by measuring the attraction of charged parallel plates at intervals of six months.
But, inasmuch as the force between charged bodies is independent of the direction of their motion, or (otherwise) because the electrical attraction between parallel moving charges depends on the product of their velocities, it must be the second-order of aberration magnitude th at is really involved.
Description of P lates 31 and 32.
P late 31. Details of optical frame, showing the mode of supporting the mirrors, both the silvered and the semi-transparent.
Plate 32. Details of whirling machine, showing the pair of steel disks, 1 yard in diameter, driven by an electric motor,
l/difi
Phdl.Trctns.l&VS.MPlate 31.
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rnxoiuntengthe
m jr r o r M s o ois to par" &
omcL,
a p a ru x th m o v e r ri m t to th e re fle c te d b&CtOTt.
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Phil.Trcuns.18 9 3.A
3 .
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EXPERIMENTAL WHIRLING MACHINE.
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