Re: How to Replicate NoEinstein's M-M Invalidation (is Copyrighted.)



On Jan 14, 2:38 pm, "Paul B. Andersen"
<paul.b.ander...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Androcles wrote:
"none" <""doug\"@(none)"> wrote in message
news:13o8t2b50gvdi89@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
|NoEinsteinwrote:
| > To have been a failure, theM-Mexperiment is considered by many
| > to be the greatest scientific experiment of all time.

| It was not a failure. It did not give the results that they were
| expecting but that means their assumptions were wrong.

It certainly was a failure, Michelson was attempting to measure
the speed of light, knowing the speed of Earth through the supposed
aether as he has been commissioned to do by the US Navy.

Michelson measured the speed of light in 1879, but that is not
the Michelson-Morley experiment, which was designed to measure
the speed of the ether.

http://www.oisc.net/Speed_of_Light.htm

--
Paul

http://home.c2i.net/pb_andersen/

Dear Paul: Maxwell proposed to Michelson that Michelson use his new
interferometer to measure the drag on light caused by the suspected
ether. But Maxwell, and all supposed scientists since, was most
naïve. To wit: If 'ether' is capable of slowing the velocity of light
over the dimensions of the M-M experiment, then, ether would slow the
light from the stars, and from the Sun such that no light could reach
the Earth. No light, no life on Earth... Neither Michelson, Morley,
Lorentz, FitzGerald, Einstein, nor any of his army of Einsteiniacs
were, or are, sufficient mentally endowed to realize that "ether drag"
is a non issue. Ether NURTURES light, and only slows short term light
traveling at a velocity greater than 'c'. Long term light traveling
greater than 'c' will eventually tunnel through the ether. And those
tunnels will allow the passage of super fast light over vast distances
without interruption. Some of what detectors interpret as gamma rays
may be capsules of information compressed for super fast transport
across the galaxy. The "reader" for that information would likely
need to travel at a very high velocity to uncompress the data. --
NoEinstein --
.



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