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e=mc2 Is Wrong - Einstein's
Special Relativity Fundamentally Flawed
In 1905, Albert Einstein published 'On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies' now
known as Special Relativity; this theory revolutionized geometry, math, physics,
science and the classical perspective of the universe as understood since
Newton's time. However, were there intrinsic errors in this theory?
USA (Wire) December 12, 2005 --
Is Albert Einstein's Special Relativity incompatible with the very equations
upon which science's greatest theory is built? New observations made by many
scientists and engineers appear to contradict the great German scientist's
ideas. Apparently there are implicit contradictions present within Relativity's
foundational ideas, documents and equations. One individual has even pointed
that quotations from the 1905 document and Einstein's contemporaries as well as
interpretations of the Relativity equations clearly and concisely describe a
confused and obviously erroneous theory. It is time therefore, for science to
update its thinking on this theory with a comprehensive analysis of the history
leading up to, during and after that revolutionary year of Special Relativity.
As this is the 100 year anniversary of the original release of Special
Relativity, a review of the original assumptions, documents and ideas which led
to the acceptance of this theory is timely and warranted. Every year millions of
students are taught this theory without a critical analysis of Relativity.
Relativity Theory consists of its two variants Special Relativity and General
Relativity and is considered the cornerstone of modern physics.
Albert Einstein borrowed from the ideas of Fitzgerald, Lorentz and Voigt to
create a new concept of the universe. His first work in this regard later came
to be known as Special Relativity and contained many controversial ideas which
today are considered axiomatic. Amongst these are Length Contraction, Time
Dilation, the Twin Paradox and the equivalence of mass and energy summarized in
the equation E=mc2.
This equation became the shining capstone of the new theory along with its first
& second postulates, namely, that the laws of nature are the same from all
perspectives and that the speed of light 'c' is constant in a vacuum regardless
of perspective. Further, the theory also predicted an increase in mass with
velocity. Numerous examples have been given of the 'proof' of the validity of
Special Relativity.
Most notably, experiments using particle accelerators have sped particles to
incredible velocities which apparently provide confirmation of Einstein's
theory. However, doubts remain in the scientific community who have never
totally given up the comfort of a Newtonian world view. This is readily apparent
in that they refer to the Newton's 'Law' of Gravitation whilst Special
Relativity (SR) and General Relativity (GR) are given the polite attribution
'The Theory of' or simply SR 'theory' and GR 'theory.' Einstein would continue
working on the ideas of Special Relativity until producing the aforementioned
even more controversial treatise.
In his later more comprehensive work called the Theory of General Relativity
(1916), Einstein proposed a major re-thinking of cosmology. He conceived of a
space time continuum that is curved by mass; in other words, planets, stars,
galaxies and other stellar objects cause a curvature of space time. The movement
of these objects are determined by the aforementioned curvature.
As a result of these ideas, our understanding of geometry, math, physics,
science and the universe would never be the same. However, some scientists are
reporting that speed of light is not constant from different experimental
observations. One has even reported errors in the fundamental equations. If so,
this would require a major rethinking of the known cosmological models and
assumptions of modern physics.
About the Author:
Michael Strauss is an engineer who had an interest in Relativity since his
earliest math and science courses. To contact the author visit:
www.relativitycollapse.com or
www.relativitycollapse.net.
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