Difference between revisions of "Foucault Pendulum"
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− | + | The Focault Pendulum is a famous experiment alleged to give simple, direct evidence of the earth's rotation. Introduced in the 1851, Léon Foucault claimed that the motions were proof the earth's diurnal rotation. Today Foucault Pendulums are popular displays in science museums and universities. | |
− | + | Lady Blount provides a summary of the Foucault Pendulum experiment: | |
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|quote=''“First, when a pendulum, constructed according to the plan of M. Foucault, is allowed to vibrate, its plane of vibration is often variable – not always. The variation when it does occur, is not uniform – is not always the same in the same place; nor always the same either in its rate or velocity, or in its direction. It cannot therefore be taken as evidence; for that which is inconstant cannot be used in favor of or against any given proposition. It therefore is not evidence and proves nothing! Secondly, if the plane of vibration is observed to change, where is the connection between such change and the supposed motion of the Earth? What principle of reasoning guides the experimenter to the conclusion that it is the Earth which moves underneath the pendulum, and not the pendulum which moves over the Earth? What logical right or necessity forces one conclusion in preference to the other? Thirdly, why was not the peculiar arrangement of the point of suspension of the pendulum specially considered, in regard to its possible influence upon the plane of oscillation? Was it not known, or was it overlooked, or was it, in the climax of theoretical revelry, ignored that a ‘ball-and-socket’ joint is one which facilitates circular motion more readily than any other?”' | |quote=''“First, when a pendulum, constructed according to the plan of M. Foucault, is allowed to vibrate, its plane of vibration is often variable – not always. The variation when it does occur, is not uniform – is not always the same in the same place; nor always the same either in its rate or velocity, or in its direction. It cannot therefore be taken as evidence; for that which is inconstant cannot be used in favor of or against any given proposition. It therefore is not evidence and proves nothing! Secondly, if the plane of vibration is observed to change, where is the connection between such change and the supposed motion of the Earth? What principle of reasoning guides the experimenter to the conclusion that it is the Earth which moves underneath the pendulum, and not the pendulum which moves over the Earth? What logical right or necessity forces one conclusion in preference to the other? Thirdly, why was not the peculiar arrangement of the point of suspension of the pendulum specially considered, in regard to its possible influence upon the plane of oscillation? Was it not known, or was it overlooked, or was it, in the climax of theoretical revelry, ignored that a ‘ball-and-socket’ joint is one which facilitates circular motion more readily than any other?”' | ||
|source=Earth Not a Globe, [[Samuel Birley Rowbotham]]}} | |source=Earth Not a Globe, [[Samuel Birley Rowbotham]]}} | ||
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+ | Dr. Samuel Birley Rowbotham further discusses the Foucault Pendulum and its movements in Chapter 14, Section 8 of Earth Not a Globe. Rowbotham provides additional insight in Chapter 14, Section 21. | ||
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+ | Summarily, the line of the pendula must be 25 meters in length to get the minimum effect, and so by necessity, Leon Focault's original experiments between latitudes were conducted outside hung from a tree exposed to the elements. Dr. Rowbotham finds that the variations of the pendula are caused entirely by the contraction and expansion of its line due to temperature variations upon the earth's surface in relation to the nearness of the Sun. These variations match up similarly with the official published results of Focault's experiments. | ||
==The Wrong Direction== | ==The Wrong Direction== |
Revision as of 23:45, 23 August 2018
The Focault Pendulum is a famous experiment alleged to give simple, direct evidence of the earth's rotation. Introduced in the 1851, Léon Foucault claimed that the motions were proof the earth's diurnal rotation. Today Foucault Pendulums are popular displays in science museums and universities.
Lady Blount provides a summary of the Foucault Pendulum experiment:
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Non-Uniform Variation
Samuel Birley Rowbotham informs us that the variation of the pendulum is often non-uniform:
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Dr. Samuel Birley Rowbotham further discusses the Foucault Pendulum and its movements in Chapter 14, Section 8 of Earth Not a Globe. Rowbotham provides additional insight in Chapter 14, Section 21.
Summarily, the line of the pendula must be 25 meters in length to get the minimum effect, and so by necessity, Leon Focault's original experiments between latitudes were conducted outside hung from a tree exposed to the elements. Dr. Rowbotham finds that the variations of the pendula are caused entirely by the contraction and expansion of its line due to temperature variations upon the earth's surface in relation to the nearness of the Sun. These variations match up similarly with the official published results of Focault's experiments.
The Wrong Direction
The Focault Pendulum is often seen to move in the wrong direction entirely. See the following quotes:
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Mach's Principle
As an alternative explanation, Mach's Principle explains that if the earth was still and the all the stars went around the Earth then the gravitational pull of the stars would pull the pendulum. As Mach said "The universe is not twice given, with an earth at rest and an earth in motion; but only once, with its relative motions alone determinable. It is accordingly, not permitted us to say how things would be if the earth did not rotate."