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The Luminiferous Ether is Detected as a Wind Effect Relative to the Ether Using a Uniformly Rotating Interferometer
Georges Sagnac
Abstract: This is English translation of Georges Sagnacs paper, where he gives a presentation for his “rotating interferometer experiment” which manifested the phenomenon called later the Sagnac effect. This paper was originally published, in French, as: L´ether lumineux d´emontr´e par leffet du vent relatif d´ether dans un interf´erom`etre en rotation uniforme. Note de G. Sagnac, pr´esent´ee par E. Bouty. Comptes rendus, tome 157, 1913, pages 708 710. Translated from the French in 2008 by William Lonc, Canada. The Editor of The Abraham Zelmanov Journal thanks William Lonc for this effort, and also Ioannis Haranas, Canada, for assistance. Special thank go to the National Library of France and Nad`ege Danet in person for the permission to reproduce the originally Sagnac paper in English.
§1. The Method. — I uniformly rotated, at a speed of one or two turns per second around a vertical axis, a horizontal plate (50 cm in diameter) on which the various components of an interferometer were firmly anchored, analogous to the one I used in previous research and described in 1910 (Comptes rendus, tome 150, page 1676). The two interfering beams, after reflection from 4 mirrors placed at the edges of the rotating platform, were superimposed and travelled in opposite directions around exactly the same horizontal circuit circumscribing the area S. The rotating system also contained the light source: a small electric lamp, and the detector L, a fine-grained photographic plate that registered the interference fringes at the focal point of a lens.
In the images d and s, obtained successively during a right-hand rotation of the platform and then a left-hand rotation, both at the same rotation frequency, the central fringe was observed to occur at two different positions. I measure the difference between the centres of the fringes.
First method. — I mark on image d, and then on image s, the position of the central fringe relative to the image of a micrometers vertical graduations placed in the focal plane of a collimator.
Second method. — I measure directly the distance from the vertical central fringe of the image d to the central fringe in image s precisely contiguous to the first but below a thin horizontal line separating the
Georges Sagnac
75
two. I obtain these two contiguous images without touching the photographic plate-holder, by opening-prior to obtaining the images d and s — the two contiguous positions corresponding to the illuminated slit on the edges of the horizontal edges (razor blades) in the collimators focal plane.
§2. Optical rotation effect. — Measured from the fring-spacing,
the displacement z from the interference centre that I observed with the
preceding method is a particular case of the optical rotation effect that I
have defined earlier (Congr`es de Bruxelles de septembre, 1910, tome 1,
page 217; Comptes rendus, tome 152, 1911, page 310; Le Radium,
tome VIII, 1911, page 1), and which, in the context of current ideas,
should be construed as a direct observation of the luminiferous ether.
In a system moving as a whole relative to the ether, the propaga-
tion time between any two points of the system should change in a way
similar to a stationary system subjected to an ether wind, the relative
speed of which at each point of the system will be the same and di-
rectly opposite to the speed of any point, and would contain light waves
in a manner similar to atmospheric wind carrying sound waves. The
observation of the optical effect of such an ether wind relative to the
[stationary] ether will constitute a proof of the ethers existence, just
as the observation of a wind relative to the atmosphere on the speed
of sound in a moving system would constitute — everything else being
equal — a proof of the existence of a stationary atmosphere enveloping
the moving system.
The need to bring to one common luminous point oscillations that
are combined at another point and to thereby produce interference,
reduces to zero the first-order interference effect of the linear translation
of the entire optical system, if the matter constituting the ether does
not produce a circular motion C of the ether within the optical circuit
of area S; that is to say, a rotation or circulation bS in the ether
(Comptes rendus, tome 141, 1905, page 1220; 1910 and 1911, loc. cit.).
I have shown interferometrically (1910 and 1911, loc. cit.) with an
optical path enclosing 20 m2 in vertical projection, that ether drag in
the Suns neighbourhood does not produce a rotational density b of more
than 1/1000 rad. per second in the ether.
In a horizontally mounted optical circuit, at Latitude a, the diurnal
rotation of Earth should, if the ether is stationary, produce a rotation
relative where T
to is
the the
ether with duration of
a density of the sidereal
d4aπysT;inaαveorry
4s8πm6s1ai6nl4lαquraadn.tiptyercosemc-,
pared with 1/1000, the upper limit that I established for a vertically
76
The Abraham Zelmanov Journal — Vol. 1, 2008
mounted optical circuit. I hope to be able to determine whether a cor-
responding small optical rotation exists or not.
It was easier for me to first find a proof for the ethers existence by
rotating a small optical circuit. A rotational frequency N of two turns
per second gave me a rotational density of 4πN relative to the ether
for a rotation of 25 rad. per second. A uniform left-hand rotation of
the interferometer produces a left-handed ether wind ; and delays by x
the phase of the beam (T ) whose motion around the area S is right-
handed, and advances by the other beam R by the same amount, thus
displacing the fringes by 2 x units. The displacement z that I observe between images s and d should be twice that of the former. On the
basis of the value of x observed earlier (loc. cit., 1910 and 1911), we
have
z
=
4x
=
4
bS λV0
=
16 πN S λV0
;
where V0 is the speed of light in vacuum, and λ is the operating wavelength.
For a rotational frequency of N = 2 per sec., and the path area S being 860 cm2, the observed value of z is 0.07 when using indigo light,
and is easily visible in the photographs I attach to this Note and where
the fringe-spacing is between 0.5 and 1.0 mm.
The interference displacement z, a constant fringe-spacing for the
same value of rotation frequency N , disappears on the photographs
when the fringes were made sufficiently narrow; this shows that the
observed effect is very much due to a phase difference related to the ro-
tational motion of the system and that (thanks to counter-screws that
prevent movement of the mounting screws of the optical components)
the displacement of the interferogram, observed in the comparison of
image s with image d, does not arise from accidental relative displace-
ments or elastic effects in the optical components during rotation.
Turbulent air produced above the interferometer by a fan rotating
about a vertical axis and blowing downwards does not produce any dis-
placement of the interferograms centre, given a careful superposition of
the two opposite beams. Any turbulent air, analogous and less intense,
produced during rotation of the system does not affect the experiment.
The observed interference effect is very much the effect of optical
rotation due to the motion of the system relative to the ether, and
directly shows the existence of the ether, a necessary condition for the
luminiferous waves proposed by Huygens and Fresnel.
That is, twice that of 2 x. — Translators comment. W. L.
Vol. 1, 2008
ISSN 1654-9163
THE
ABRAHAM ZELMANOV JOURNAL
The journal for General Relativity, gravitation and cosmology
TIDSKRIFTEN
ABRAHAM ZELMANOV
Den tidskrift f¨or allm¨anna relativitetsteorin, gravitation och kosmologi
Editor (redakt¨or): Dmitri Rabounski Secretary (sekreterare): Indranu Suhendro
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The Abraham Zelmanov Journal ¨ar en ickekommersiell, akademisk tidskrift registrerat hos Kungliga biblioteket. Denna tidskrift ¨ar typsatt med typs¨attningssystemet LATEX. Utf¨ord genom Ubuntu Linux.
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