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This entry contributed by Leonardo Motta
Ether, or luminiferous Ether, was the hypothetical substance through which electromagnetic
waves travel. It was proposed by the greek philosopher Aristotle and used by several
optical theories as a way to allow propagation of light, which was believed to be impossible in "empty" space.
It was supposed that the ether filled the whole universe and was a stationary frame of reference, which was rigid to
electromagnetic waves but completely permeable to matter. Hooke endorsed the idea of the existence of the
ether in his work Micrographia (1665), and other several philosophers of the 17th century, including
Huygens, did the same. At the time of Maxwell's mathematical studies of electromagnetism, ether was
still assumed to be the propagation medium and was imbued with physics properties such as permeability and permittivity.
In 1887, a crucial experiment was performed by Michelson and Edward Morley in
an attempt to detect the existence of the ether. The experiment, named the Michelson-Morley experiment in honor
of its authors, shocked the scientific community by yielding results which implied the non-existence of ether. This
result was later on used by Einstein to refute the existence of the ether and allowed him to develop special
relativity without this artificial (and non-existent) constraint.
Electromagnetic Wave, Ether Drag, Michelson-Morley Experiment, Special Relativity

© 1996-2007 Eric W. Weisstein
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