Page:Eddington A. Space Time and Gravitation. 1920.djvu/43

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THE FITZGERALD CONTRACTION
27

If in some way his motion were reversed so that he returned to the earth again, he would find that centuries had elapsed here, whilst he himself did not feel a day older—for him the voyage had lasted only an instant.[1]

Our reason for discussing at length the effects of these improbably high velocities is simply in order that we may speak of the results in terms of common experience; otherwise it would be necessary to use the terms of refined technical measurement. The relativist is sometimes suspected of an inordinate fondness for paradox; but that is rather a misunderstanding of his argument. The paradoxes exist when the new experimental discoveries are woven into the scheme of physics hitherto current, and the relativist is ready enough to point this out. But the conclusion he draws is that a revised scheme of physics is needed in which the new experimental results will find a natural place without paradox.

To sum up—on any planet moving with a great velocity through the aether, extraordinary changes of length of objects are continually occurring as they move about, and there is a slowing down of all natural processes as though time were retarded. These things cannot be perceived by anyone on the planet; but similar effects would be detected by any observer having a great velocity relative to the planet (who makes all allowances for the effect of the motion on the observations, but takes if for granted that he himself is at rest in the aether).[2] There is complete reciprocity so that each of two observers in relative motion will find the same strange phenomena occurring

  1. Since the earth is moving relatively to our adventurer with the velocity of light, we might be tempted to argue that from this point of view the terrestrial observer would have perpetual youth whilst the voyager grew older. Evidently, if they met again, they could disprove one or other of the two arguments. But in order to meet again the velocity of one of them must be reversed by supernatural means or by an intense gravitational force so that the conditions are not symmetrical and reciprocity does not apply. The argument given in the text appears to be the correct one.
  2. The last clause is perhaps unnecessary. The correction applied for light transmission will naturally be based on the observer's own experimental determination of the velocity of light. According to experiment the velocity of light relatively to him is apparently the same in all directions, and he will apply the corrections accordingly. This is equivalent to assuming that he is at rest in the aether; but he need not, and probably would not, make the assumption explicitly.