M
mich2
Guest
I agree; in a way; However, we know that such an absolute rest frame was sought by others.I believe Bradley’s aberration of light was once believed to be a proof for a stationary’ aether. There was also the Michelson and Morley experiment, of course. Maybe Newton was skeptical with detecting such an aether.In Galilean and Newtonian mechanics, the laws of physics are identical in any non-accelerating frame. That is an equivalence claim. Newton held an absolute space - ie one which was completely describable by Euclidean geometry and unaffected by external bodies. He also acknowledged that there was no way that we can determine the absolute rest frame or whether a body is static or moving with respect to that frame.He might have been a metaphysical absolutist, but he was a pragmatic relativist.
Thank you for your assistance. I did mention that I believe you clarified some things. For example, the aberration we observe is the movement of the stars in a circular motion due to the revolution of the earth around the sun. From this, I would see that if a galaxie would be moving simply in with a transverse velocity, no aberration would be detected,because the star does not “change it’s direction of movement” although I believe an aberration ought still to exist; I can’t see it otherwise. For example, if the earth was simply moving at 30 km / sec in a transverse direction, we would not detect any aberration at all. My problem with this view, however, is that we ought to observe an different aberration index for a rotating double star system, and I don’t think we do…so, I’m still stuck.(This is with regard to the aberration of starlight). Is there anything else I can do to clarify this?
I’m still unsure of the reason why this is the case.It is certainly the case that stellar aberration does NOT show anything about the motion of the source, and only about the motion of the observer with respect to the line joining the source and observer. That is why stellar aberration is uniformly the same across all sources (depending only on ecliptic latitude), regardless of their velocity with respect to other objects in the Universe.
Andre