Haibara Ai
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Can someone explain to me what Aether is? And what's the difference between the Higgs field and the aether?
thanks
thanks
When people started to learn that light acted like a wave, they reasoned that there was some medium which the light was a wave perturbation on. This was a fairly reasonable assumption at the time, as all known waves at the time occurred in some medium. They called this medium for electrodynamics the aether. As with sound in air or ocean waves on the water, the relevant speed is the speed with respect to the medium. So they thought that the speed of light (or maxwell's equations in general) were only true in one coordinate system ... the "aether frame" in which the aether is at reast. Experiment later showed that such an aether did not exist (or at the very least had no effect on experiment and therefore was not a subject for science). So the aether is now a defunct topic accept for certain gravity theories that try to add in a dynamic background field that breaks lorentz invariance... but these are not mainstream.Haibara Ai said:Can someone explain to me what Aether is?
As described above, the aether is not related to the Higgs at all.Haibara Ai said:And what's the difference between the Higgs field and the aether?
Haibara Ai said:Can someone explain to me what Aether is? And what's the difference between the Higgs field and the aether?
thanks
robousy said:...I would add that an aether in the 5th dimension would still preserve 4D lorentz invariance, and have some quite interesting effects.
For example, consider a scalar field coupled to an aether field u^ain the fifth dimension:
\mathcal{L}_{\phi}= \frac{1}{2} (\partial\phi)^2 -\frac{1}{2} m^2\phi^2-\frac{1}{2\mu^2_\phi}u^a u^b\partial_a\phi\partial_b\phi