Does Ether Exist? 19th Century Evidence

  • Thread starter RoughRoad
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Ether
In summary: There is evidence that ether exists. One such evidence is that so-called empty space has properties. Even Einstein acknowledged this. His point was not that ether didn't exist but rather that the concept wasn't needed for calculations! However, without ether, one has some rather severe philosophical conundrums. Maxwell pointed out that there are really only two ways for energy to be transmitted from place to place. One way is kinetically. In other words if I shoot a beam of particles or bullets or baseballs through space, I can transmit energy from place to place. And note that this can occur through totally empty space (except for the projectiles, of course). On the other hand the other way energy is transmitted is by
  • #36
I think the question here is not about the existence of an aether but, rather, is it somehow, 'stationary' and are we all 'moving through it'?

People keep referring to the Michleson Morley experiment as though it is just a bit of ancient history. Has it REALLY not been repeated with more up to date equipment? Is its conclusion really open to question? If I had access to an interferometer and some lab time, it would be one of the first things I tried to do. Surely, if it was a duff experiment, all those years ago, someone would have published a massive rebuttal by now.

So, if we really aren't moving through 'anything', why not just say we're dealing with space and move on.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #37
Michaelson-Morley has been repeated many times (see Wikipedia, among others), and variants of it have also been done using different equipment.
As to the statement that I have posted a hypothesis, I apologize if I posted it in the wrong part of the forum. I don't really consider this a "hypothesis", it's just application of known, accepted ideas (Newton, Einstein, Maxwell) in a different way. Any hypothesis is no more than applying the work of some of these so that the outcome disagrees with some of the work of others in this list.
If the moderator of this thread considers my posts misfiled, I'll be happy to move them. Note that when I posted I was replying to another series of posts regarding "aether", which is in THIS thread.
 
  • #38
jlknapp505 said:
it's just application of known, accepted ideas (Newton, Einstein, Maxwell) in a different way
The idea that the Doppler effect requires a medium is neither well known nor accepted.
 
  • #39
DavidSullivan said:
Is it wrong to think of the time-space continuum as an "ether" of sorts? If gravity can warp the t-s-c such that the path of light is changed, doesn't that mean it is "something?" And doesn't electric and magnetic fields, with their action-at-a-distance, also tend to imply "something"is carrying the fields since changes in those fields are limited to the speed of light?

Conceptually I think of time-space as a medium, if not an ether per se. While not "correct" it helps me get my head around some of the "odd" concepts in physics.

-David

I would say so. As Dalespam already stated, aether is a specific theory originating in the 19th century. The luminous aether has been more or less conclusively disproven via experimental results The aether drag was not the only consequence that would be predicted by the aether model and so even the Mickelson-Morley experiment was not enough to completely debunk the aether model (nor was it by far the only experiment of its type). As time progressed, it was continually shot down by further experimentation and required more and more complicated explanations to account for these results. In the end, the theory was not viable.

To label things as an (a)ether today is still going to carry with it the connotations and inherent properties of the original luminous aether of the 19th century theory. I think it would be far more appropriate to choose a different wording or to avoid comparisons with the aether altogether. To me, it sounds like somebody comparing an astronomical theory with geocentrism, germ theory with miasma theory.
 
  • #40
Would anisotropy of background radiation indicate "aether" on a large scale?
 
  • #41
Me thinks the good professor had his own trinity: matter, space and time. There three makes the universe. I am a heretic to claim that if the three are removed we still remain with ether. So be it.
 
  • #42
DavidSullivan said:
... Conceptually I think of time-space as a medium, if not an ether per se. While not "correct" it helps me get my head around some of the "odd" concepts in physics.

-David

I'm pretty sure that Einstein used this imagery to develop GR, whether he regarded the aether as virtual or real. He was disappointed when the MM experiment gave a null result.

That aside I don't understand why he eventually decided that should the aether exist it would make GR a nonsense. I'm sure it wouldn't, it would just mean slightly modifying things a bit and what's wrong with that?. I can't believe you would need to throw the whole GR concept out of the window.
 
  • #43
sophiecentaur said:
I think the question here is not about the existence of an aether but, rather, is it somehow, 'stationary' and are we all 'moving through it'?

People keep referring to the Michleson Morley experiment as though it is just a bit of ancient history. Has it REALLY not been repeated with more up to date equipment? Is its conclusion really open to question? If I had access to an interferometer and some lab time, it would be one of the first things I tried to do. Surely, if it was a duff experiment, all those years ago, someone would have published a massive rebuttal by now.

So, if we really aren't moving through 'anything', why not just say we're dealing with space and move on.

There's someone who is doing just that, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7T0d7o8X2-E&feature=related"
If there is an aether it would appear it is moving downwards.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #44
That youtube video shows some extremely sloppy science. He sees a result that he doesn't understand: does he check to see if there is any mundane explanation - like some mirror wiggling? No, he immediately decides that this is a Major Discovery.
 
  • #45
jlknapp505 said:
Post 3:
I didn't start out thinking about light, although it was always puzzling to me that light, or ElectroMagnetic Radiation (EMR) had all the properties of a wave but did not require a medium. But I was attempting to visualize Einstein's idea of matter "warping" the space/time continuum that surrounded it. From this I concluded that Space (I dropped the "time" part of it, at least for the moment) had to have structure or it could not "warp". So I wondered what the structure of space was. Is there, for example, something out there between the Earth, for example, and the Sun? I concluded that actually, there was something.
There was gravity and there were also numerous particles, charged and uncharged, atomic and subatomic. I began to think of space as a matrix, dense in the region surrounding planets, thin in the space between. These particles, even though of low density, nonetheless relate to each other by charge (attraction/repulsion) and they also participate in the gravitational fields that permeate all known space. The assumption here is that gravity, although relatively weak, is essentially infinite in range. The attraction simply decreases with the square of distance (Newton's inverse square law). So I wondered: does gravity affect light? The answer is yes, postulated by Einstein, confirmed experimentally. There ARE gravitational lenses.
So: if gravity affects light, does not light also affect gravity? Newton's third law requires that it does.
I then visualized the gravity within space as a kind of fluid, fluid in that it is a relationship between all masses, and that the attraction between these masses changes constantly with relative motion of the masses. I concluded that light, as energy, could cause a temporary change (very small; but then, it doesn't have to be big, it just has to exist) in this relationship. This change, propagating through the fields, is the light wave, and the fields might satisfy the requirements to be a "medium" for light.
So there it is. I look forward to your replies.

It seems logical to conclude that if space warps, then it must have a structure that defines the warping, and I tend to agree with this on a certain level but one has to be careful when defining what this structure might be. One has to keep in mind that light travels at the speed of light (c) in all frames of reference. This right here scraps the idea of an aether since moving through aether would change the speed of light which simply doesn't happen. And even though space warps, this does not imply that there is something (as we traditionally think of things) that is actually warping. The concept of warping spacetime is a mathematical construct that has analogies that we use to picture this construct. The warping rubber sheet that we are all used to is just an analogy, it is not a real thing. Light is mysterious and we don't know what it is, all we know is that it has properties that we can measure or detect, such as speed, frequency, the fact that it seems to be both a wave and particle and so on, but we don't know what light actually is. Therefore to suppose that space must be made of something so that light can move through it doesn't make sense. And to suppose that space must be made of something so it can warp also doesn't make sense because this warping is just a math construct that is used to visualize something we can't visualize. What I'm saying is that space warping may not really be happening, but it works mathematically so the analogy works on a certain level. Reality is much much stranger than we are able to visualize. All we have is analogies. In a nutshell, all I'm saying is that since we don't know what light is (or gravity is), we can't construct what we think space is based on what light does or what gravity does. We can just define relationships.
 
  • #46
Nickelodeon said:
I'm pretty sure that Einstein used this imagery to develop GR, whether he regarded the aether as virtual or real. He was disappointed when the MM experiment gave a null result.

That aside I don't understand why he eventually decided that should the aether exist it would make GR a nonsense. I'm sure it wouldn't, it would just mean slightly modifying things a bit and what's wrong with that?. I can't believe you would need to throw the whole GR concept out of the window.

Are you sure Einstean was disappointed? I thought he knew of the result before the result even came back. GR and SR is based on light being a constant in all frames of reference, so a positive result in the MM experiment would have totally halted all SR/GR theories.
 
  • #47
Nickelodeon said:
I'm pretty sure that Einstein used this imagery to develop GR, whether he regarded the aether as virtual or real. He was disappointed when the MM experiment gave a null result.

That aside I don't understand why he eventually decided that should the aether exist it would make GR a nonsense. I'm sure it wouldn't, it would just mean slightly modifying things a bit and what's wrong with that?. I can't believe you would need to throw the whole GR concept out of the window.

The Michelson-Morely experiment was conducted in 1887, that's [EDIT: sorry, I can't do arithmetic] [STRIKE]8[/STRIKE] 18 years before Einstein published his paper on SR, let alone GR, which came another 10 years after that! Your claim is blatantly wrong, and I don't understand how you could even post it. As far as I know, Einstein was only dimly aware of the results of this experiment in 1905, but it didn't matter because he saw no theoretical need for the luminiferous aether. The whole point of Special Relativity was that by rethinking certain ideas about mechanics (motion, space, and time) it was possible to show that the laws of electrodynamics were NOT inconsistent with the principle that the laws of physics should be the same for all inertial observers. (This perceived inconsistency was the only reason that others had for introducing the concept of the aether in the first place).
 
Last edited:
  • #48
Um... the Michelson-Morley experiment was in 1887, when Einstein was eight years old. He was still a few years away from coming up with SR. :rolleyes:
 
  • #49
jtbell said:
Um... the Michelson-Morley experiment was in 1887, when Einstein was eight years old. He was still a few years away from coming up with SR. :rolleyes:

I don't understand. Was that in response to my post? Because it seems like you are agreeing with me and we are saying exactly the same thing (yet, you are rolling your eyes).
 
  • #50
cepheid said:
jtbell said:
Um... the Michelson-Morley experiment was in 1887, when Einstein was eight years old. He was still a few years away from coming up with SR. :rolleyes:
I don't understand. Was that in response to my post? Because it seems like you are agreeing with me and we are saying exactly the same thing (yet, you are rolling your eyes).
Check the timestamps! It looks like you both posted almost simultaneously.:smile:
 
  • #51
Yes, I was responding to Buckethead, and to Nickelodeon a few posts earlier, who made a similar comment about Einstein and the MMX.
 
  • #52
Nickelodeon said:
There's someone who is doing just that, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7T0d7o8X2-E&feature=related"
If there is an aether it would appear it is moving downwards.

That is a poor demonstration as he has not attempted to discuss various experimental error. The simplest explanation would be that objects in his test setup are slightly loose and being dislocated by gravity.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #53
Nickelodeon said:
There's someone who is doing just that, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7T0d7o8X2-E&feature=related"
If there is an aether it would appear it is moving downwards.
When you say "downwards" are you referring to "towards the centre of the Earth"? Are you suggesting that it is a gravitational effect (local) or that we (Earth) happened to be moving through the Aether in that direction. But his diurnal effect was only slight, was it not? According to your idea and ignoring the gravitational effect, we should be moving 'upwards' at a time 12 hours different. I appreciate that this would only apply exactly whilst near the Equator, but my point still stands.

So it has to be a gravitational effect (?).
Sagging equipment could explain this. (One of those old-age problems),
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #54
I still don’t see how the michelson morley experiment shows that the ether doesn't exist .
I thought it showed length contraction , and this led Hendrik Lorentz to formulate Lorentz transformation. I Don’t see how this had anything to do with the ether .
 
  • #55
cragar said:
I still don’t see how the michelson morley experiment shows that the ether doesn't exist .
I thought it showed length contraction , and this led Hendrik Lorentz to formulate Lorentz transformation. I Don’t see how this had anything to do with the ether .

One of the possible consequences to an aether model is the aether wind. If there is some medium that permeates space that is propagating light, then the Earth will have a relative velocity with this medium. The velocity of the light will thus be different depending upon how the path of the light moves related to the source and receiver's relative velocity to the medium. However, the experiments (which were repeated at different directions, different times of the year and by many many different research groups) showed that the expected shifts due to the aether windwere not existent.

And to reiterate, aether wind was just one of several aspects of the aether model that have been challenged by experimental results.
 
Last edited:
  • #56
cragar said:
I still don’t see how the michelson morley experiment shows that the ether doesn't exist .
I thought it showed length contraction , and this led Hendrik Lorentz to formulate Lorentz transformation. I Don’t see how this had anything to do with the ether .

One of the 'explanations' of the MM experiment results was the Lorenz Contraction - that's all. Yes, you can measure a contraction but the fuller appreciation of SR and the other relativistic effects can't be had if that's all that you consider.

My problem with the whole business of wanting an Aether is that everyone's 'personal' bit of Aether must be behaving differently - even when they're going past, close to each other, at different rates. Hanging onto conventional ideas can very often interfere with your appreciation of new ones. There are so many examples of this - the two slits experiment is another of them.
 
  • #57
Vanadium 50 said:
That youtube video shows some extremely sloppy science. He sees a result that he doesn't understand: does he check to see if there is any mundane explanation - like some mirror wiggling? No, he immediately decides that this is a Major Discovery.

Things have moved on since that video was made and he has gone to considerable lengths to minimise any mechanical errors. Apart from that, there are fringe shifts when the apparatus is static in a vertical plane over a 24 hour period but not so in a horizontal plane. Could you give an explanation for why you think that should be?
 
  • #58
sophiecentaur said:
When you say "downwards" are you referring to "towards the centre of the Earth"? Are you suggesting that it is a gravitational effect (local) or that we (Earth) happened to be moving through the Aether in that direction. But his diurnal effect was only slight, was it not? According to your idea and ignoring the gravitational effect, we should be moving 'upwards' at a time 12 hours different. I appreciate that this would only apply exactly whilst near the Equator, but my point still stands.

So it has to be a gravitational effect (?).
Sagging equipment could explain this. (One of those old-age problems),

Whatever it is, and one should perhaps not use the word aether any more, it is more likely to be accelerating towards the centre of the Earth and causing the gravity effect.
As I mentioned before, Martin Grusenick has tried to minimise any mechanical errors but the fringe shifts are quite apparent when the equipment is static in a vertical plane compared to a horizontal plane.
 
  • #59
cepheid said:
The Michelson-Morely experiment was conducted in 1887, that's [EDIT: sorry, I can't do arithmetic] [STRIKE]8[/STRIKE] 18 years before Einstein published his paper on SR, let alone GR, which came another 10 years after that! Your claim is blatantly wrong, and I don't understand how you could even post it. As far as I know, Einstein was only dimly aware of the results of this experiment in 1905, but it didn't matter because he saw no theoretical need for the luminiferous aether. The whole point of Special Relativity was that by rethinking certain ideas about mechanics (motion, space, and time) it was possible to show that the laws of electrodynamics were NOT inconsistent with the principle that the laws of physics should be the same for all inertial observers. (This perceived inconsistency was the only reason that others had for introducing the concept of the aether in the first place).

I'm trying to find where I read the article that prompted my previous post but in the meantime here is a link to an article written by Einstein in 1920 where he states "More careful reflection teaches us, however, that the special theory of relativity does not compel us to deny ether" . http://www.tu-harburg.de/rzt/rzt/it/Ether.html" [Broken] .
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #60
No, but as I said back in https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=2611230&postcount=27" it does compel us "to redefine the word 'aether' in such a way as to remove from it most of the properties usually associated with the term". The only kind of aether which is consistent with SR is a kind of aether that has properties which are consistent with there being no aether.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #61
Nickelodeon said:
Things have moved on since that video was made and he has gone to considerable lengths to minimise any mechanical errors. Apart from that, there are fringe shifts when the apparatus is static in a vertical plane over a 24 hour period but not so in a horizontal plane. Could you give an explanation for why you think that should be?

Can you follow the PF Rules and give us a published reference for this? Otherwise we are chasing ghosts.
 
  • #62
Nickelodeon said:
I'm trying to find where I read the article that prompted my previous post but in the meantime here is a link to an article written by Einstein in 1920 where he states "More careful reflection teaches us, however, that the special theory of relativity does not compel us to deny ether" . http://www.tu-harburg.de/rzt/rzt/it/Ether.html" [Broken] .

We never do physics and accept something as valid based on quotes. Einstein also made many other "blunders" (would you also like quotes for those?). You need to supply valid peer-reviewed publications.

Zz.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #63
Furthermore, as DaleSpam pointed out, the properties of the "modern aether" are totally different from the 19th century aether. Remember my rabbit and giraffe analogy?
 
  • #64
Born2bwire said:
I would say so. As Dalespam already stated, aether is a specific theory originating in the 19th century. The luminous aether has been more or less conclusively disproven via experimental results The aether drag was not the only consequence that would be predicted by the aether model and so even the Mickelson-Morley experiment was not enough to completely debunk the aether model (nor was it by far the only experiment of its type). As time progressed, it was continually shot down by further experimentation and required more and more complicated explanations to account for these results. In the end, the theory was not viable.

To label things as an (a)ether today is still going to carry with it the connotations and inherent properties of the original luminous aether of the 19th century theory. I think it would be far more appropriate to choose a different wording or to avoid comparisons with the aether altogether. To me, it sounds like somebody comparing an astronomical theory with geocentrism, germ theory with miasma theory.

Agreed - I'm not trying to infer any relationship between the aether of old and space-time beyond t-s seeming to act as a "medium" of sorts.

-David
 
  • #65
Vanadium 50 said:
Can you follow the PF Rules and give us a published reference for this? Otherwise we are chasing ghosts.

I have several emails from him between 11th Nov 09 and 21st Jan 10 in which he describes, and with detailed photographs, the general progress he is making and his attempts to minimise any artifacts caused by temperature differentials, etc.. Obviously not peer reviewed in the formal sense and I don't think reviewing a published account will be of much use. It would need independent research to verify his findings under controlled conditions. Although he has some external finance he is funding it mainly by himself and with whatever bits and pieces organisations give him.

However, it would be still be good to hear your opinion as to possible causes for the fringe shifts, assuming they exist and aren't ghosts.
 
  • #66
ZapperZ said:
We never do physics and accept something as valid based on quotes. Einstein also made many other "blunders" (would you also like quotes for those?). You need to supply valid peer-reviewed publications.

Zz.

I only provided that particular 1920 address to illustrate that Einstein still had the 'ether' very much in his thought processes. I was just defending myself against Cepheid (post 47)
 
  • #67
Nickelodeon said:
I only provided that particular 1920 address to illustrate that Einstein still had the 'ether' very much in his thought processes. I was just defending myself against Cepheid (post 47)

Yeah, but ZapperZ's criticism still applies. Furthermore you took a quote out of its context. There may have been more information there that would indicate just what kind of "more careful reflection" Einstein was referring to, and what kind of ether SR does not preclude, according to him. EDIT: either way, I strongly suspect that what DaleSpam and others have been trying to point out (about the luminferous aether as it was originally conceived being obsolete) still applies.
 
  • #68
cepheid said:
Yeah, but ZapperZ's criticism still applies. Furthermore you took a quote out of its context. There may have been more information there that would indicate just what kind of "more careful reflection" Einstein was referring to, and what kind of ether SR does not preclude, according to him. EDIT: either way, I strongly suspect that what DaleSpam and others have been trying to point out (about the luminferous aether as it was originally conceived being obsolete) still applies.

Is anyone reading the article? The quote is not key to my argument but the title is ..

"Ether and the Theory of Relativity
Albert Einstein, an address delivered on May 5th, 1920, in the University of Leyden.

The original version is available in the Collected Papers of Albert Einstein. "


and, strange as it would seem, I would wholeheartedly agree with you that the luminiferous ether as it was originally conceived is obsolete.
 
  • #69
DaleSpam said:
Please identify one experiment that that is inconsistent with ether not existing. If a concept is not needed for calculations of the outcome of any physical experiment then how is that scientifically different from it not existing?

I am sorry bjacoby, but there is no evidence supporting your position. The only way to scientifically assert that there is an aether is to redefine the word "aether" in such a way as to remove from it most of the properties usually associated with the term. Sure, you can do that if the word "aether" is important to you for some reason, but it would not have anything to do with what most people mean when they use the word.

So, DaleSpam, are you saying that empty space has no properties? There is PLENTY of evidence to support the assertion that such a statement is false! And of course Einstein was referring to the necessity of having an aether for HIS calculations. That does not mean he meant that might not be needed for ANY calculations. Even Einstein was smart enough to know he wasn't God and therefore did not have knowledge of ANY and ALL calculations that one might perform.

The old argument used to be that light was a wave and therefore REQUIRED an aether to propagate. OF course now we know that this is not true. One might assert that radio waves are "waves" (hence the name! :) although there are those who assert that they are photons as well. Thus there are certain difficulties here. But logically one must assert that in physics in any phenomenon where there are waves propagated there must be media for them to propagate in. To deny that is to deny logic and create a religious dogma. Which is what it seems you are trying to do.
 
  • #70
cragar said:
I still don’t see how the michelson morley experiment shows that the ether doesn't exist .
I thought it showed length contraction , and this led Hendrik Lorentz to formulate Lorentz transformation. I Don’t see how this had anything to do with the ether .

What MM showed was NOT that the aether does not exist (as is widely touted throughout physics) but rather that he found no "aether-drift". What fell was Newtonian mechanics of light and the idea that somehow the Earth was plowing through the aether and such plowing could be detected.

Clearly the people saying that 19th century (Newtonian) aether theory has crashed and burned are correct. However, one cannot logically dismiss the general concept of an aether so long as space has properties and one cannot explain how waves can propagate without any medium. The fact that the speed of light measures the same in all reference frames is particularly troubling to a mechanical concept of the Aether as it was viewed in the 19th century. But then now we know that light is not a wave so the problem isn't so great.
 
<h2>1. What is Ether?</h2><p>Ether, also known as luminiferous ether, was a hypothetical substance believed to fill all of space and serve as a medium for the propagation of electromagnetic waves in the 19th century.</p><h2>2. Why was Ether believed to exist in the 19th century?</h2><p>In the 19th century, scientists believed that light was a wave and needed a medium to travel through, similar to how sound waves travel through air. Ether was proposed as this medium for light waves.</p><h2>3. What were some of the experiments used to try and prove the existence of Ether?</h2><p>The most famous experiment was the Michelson-Morley experiment in 1887, which aimed to measure the speed of Earth's movement through the hypothetical Ether. Other experiments included the Fizeau experiment and the Trouton-Noble experiment.</p><h2>4. Did these experiments provide evidence for the existence of Ether?</h2><p>No, these experiments did not provide conclusive evidence for the existence of Ether. In fact, they showed that the speed of light was constant regardless of the direction or speed of Earth's movement, which contradicted the idea of Ether.</p><h2>5. Why was the idea of Ether eventually rejected by scientists?</h2><p>As more experiments were conducted and theories were developed, it became clear that the concept of Ether was unnecessary and did not align with the laws of physics. The theory of relativity, proposed by Albert Einstein in 1905, provided a new understanding of the nature of light and rendered the concept of Ether obsolete.</p>

1. What is Ether?

Ether, also known as luminiferous ether, was a hypothetical substance believed to fill all of space and serve as a medium for the propagation of electromagnetic waves in the 19th century.

2. Why was Ether believed to exist in the 19th century?

In the 19th century, scientists believed that light was a wave and needed a medium to travel through, similar to how sound waves travel through air. Ether was proposed as this medium for light waves.

3. What were some of the experiments used to try and prove the existence of Ether?

The most famous experiment was the Michelson-Morley experiment in 1887, which aimed to measure the speed of Earth's movement through the hypothetical Ether. Other experiments included the Fizeau experiment and the Trouton-Noble experiment.

4. Did these experiments provide evidence for the existence of Ether?

No, these experiments did not provide conclusive evidence for the existence of Ether. In fact, they showed that the speed of light was constant regardless of the direction or speed of Earth's movement, which contradicted the idea of Ether.

5. Why was the idea of Ether eventually rejected by scientists?

As more experiments were conducted and theories were developed, it became clear that the concept of Ether was unnecessary and did not align with the laws of physics. The theory of relativity, proposed by Albert Einstein in 1905, provided a new understanding of the nature of light and rendered the concept of Ether obsolete.

Similar threads

Replies
14
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • Other Physics Topics
Replies
1
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
6
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
14
Views
2K
Replies
7
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
31
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
335
Back
Top