The Famous Experiment Performed by Prof. Michelson. If there is an ether, and a stationary ether, and if the earth moves with reference to this ether, the earth, in moving, must set up ether “currents”—just as when a train moves it sets up air currents. So reasoned Michelson, a young Annapolis graduate at the time. And forthwith he devised a crucial experiment the explanation of which we can simplify by the following analogy:
Which is the quicker, to swim up stream a certain length, say a hundred yards, and back again, or across stream the same length and back again? The swimmer will answer that the up-and-down journey is longer.[4]
Our river is the ether. The earth, if moving in this ether, will set up an ether stream, the up stream being parallel to the earth’s motion. Now suppose we send a beam of light a certain distance up this ether stream and back, and note the time; and then turn the beam of light at right angles and send it an equal distance across the stream and back, and note the time. How will the time taken for light to travel in these two directions compare? Reasoning by analogy, the up-and-down stream should take longer.
Michelson’s results did not accord with analogy. No difference in time could be detected between the beam of light travelling up-and-down, and across-and-back.
But this was contrary to all reason if the postulate of an ether was sound. Must we then revise our ideas of an ether? Perhaps after all there is no ether.
But if no ether, how are we to explain the propagation of light in space, and various electrical phenomena connected with it, such as the Hertzian, or wireless waves?
There was another alternative, one suggested by Larmor in England and Lorentz in Holland,—that matter is contracted in the direction of its motion through the ether current. To say that bodies are actually shortened in the direction of their motion—by an amount which increases as the velocity of these bodies approaches that of light—is so revolutionary an idea that Larmor and Lorentz would hardly have adopted such a viewpoint but for the fact that recent investigations into the nature of matter gave basis for such belief.
Matter, it has been shown, is electrical in nature. The forces which hold the particles together are electrical. Lorentz showed that mathematical formulas for electrical forces could be developed which would inevitably lead to the view that material bodies contract in the direction of their motion.[5]
“But this is ridiculous,” you say; “if I am shorter in one direction than in another I would notice it.” You would if some things were shortened and others were not. But if all things pointing in a certain direction are shortened to an equal extent, how are you going to notice it? Will you apply the yard stick? That has been shortened. Will you pass judgment with the help of your eyes? But your retina has also contracted. In brief, if all things contract to the same amount it is as if there were no contraction at all.
Lorentz’s Plausible Explanation Really Deepens the Mystery. The startling ideas just outlined have opened up several new vistas, but they have left unanswered the two problems we set out to solve: whether there is an ether, and if so, what is the velocity of the earth in reference to this ether? Lorentz maintains that there is an ether, but the velocities of bodies relative to it must forever remain a mystery. As you change your position your distances change; you change; everything about you changes accordingly; and all basis for comparison is lost. Nature has entered into a conspiracy to keep you ignorant.