Erwin Finlay Freundlich and testing Einstein's theory of relativity
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1334128
DOI10.1007/BF00394800zbMath0806.01022WikidataQ57390137 ScholiaQ57390137MaRDI QIDQ1334128
Publication date: 24 October 1994
Published in: Archive for History of Exact Sciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Related Items
EMPIRICAL FOUNDATIONS OF THE RELATIVISTIC GRAVITY ⋮ Mesh and measure in early general relativity ⋮ Trust in expert testimony: Eddington's 1919 eclipse expedition and the British response to general relativity ⋮ 'But one must not legalize the mentioned sin': phenomenological vs. dynamical treatments of rods and clocks in Einstein's thought ⋮ Talking at cross-purposes: how Einstein and the logical empiricists never agreed on what they were disagreeing about ⋮ The quest for the size of the universe in early relativistic cosmology (1917--1930) ⋮ Nova Geminorum 1912 and the origin of the idea of gravitational lensing. ⋮ The gravitational bending of light by stars: a continuing story of curiosity, scepticism, surprise, and fascination
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Interpretations and wrong interpretations of special and general relativity theory by contemporaries of Albert Einstein
- The \((n+2)^{nd}\) homotopy group of the \(n\)-sphere
- Lost in the tensors: Einstein's struggles with covariance principles 1912–1916
- Klein, Hilbert, and the Gottingen Mathematical Tradition
- On the Interpretation of Freundlich's Red-Shift Formula
This page was built for publication: Erwin Finlay Freundlich and testing Einstein's theory of relativity