At the turn of the 20th century, Frederick T. Trouton and Henry R. Noble (TN) performed a little known æther drift experiment which came to be known as the electrostatic analogue of Michelson-Morley’s famous experiment. If the æther were real, they said, a capacitor charged with “high” voltage should exhibit a “jerk” and a subsequent “spontaneous” torque, thus demonstrating the existence of an æther wind. Trouton and Noble failed to observe the torque and paved the way to the special theory of relativity. We have replicated the TN experiment. We obtained positive results: the principle of relativity is disproved. Other TN-like experiments allowed us to observe the stimulated rotational motions (TN’s long-sought effect), the stimulated translational motions (Biefeld-Brown effect), and the sustained rotation of charged, suspended capacitors. Video movies are presented at the conference. TN’s failure is analyzed. The concept of stimulated forces is explained in light of its relevance to the future of space locomotion.
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22 January 1999
Space technology and applications international forum -1999
31 Jan - 4 Feb 1999
Albuquerque, New Mexico (USA)
Research Article|
January 22 1999
Stimulated forces demonstrated: Why the trouton-noble experiment failed and how to make it succeed Available to Purchase
Patrick Cornille;
Patrick Cornille
1Theoretical physicist and experimentalist, 12 rue Maurice Ravel, 94440 Santeny, France
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Jean-Louis Naudin;
Jean-Louis Naudin
2Engineer. Experimentalist. 3bis, rue des Porettes, 77120 Samoreau, France
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Alexandre Szames
Alexandre Szames
3Doctoral student (CNAM-Paris), 30 rue Fessart, 92100 Boulogne, France
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Patrick Cornille
1
Jean-Louis Naudin
2
Alexandre Szames
3
1Theoretical physicist and experimentalist, 12 rue Maurice Ravel, 94440 Santeny, France
2Engineer. Experimentalist. 3bis, rue des Porettes, 77120 Samoreau, France
3Doctoral student (CNAM-Paris), 30 rue Fessart, 92100 Boulogne, France
AIP Conf. Proc. 458, 1005–1013 (1999)
Citation
Patrick Cornille, Jean-Louis Naudin, Alexandre Szames; Stimulated forces demonstrated: Why the trouton-noble experiment failed and how to make it succeed. AIP Conf. Proc. 22 January 1999; 458 (1): 1005–1013. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.57711
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