The Jacaranda explanation is not making sense to me:
In the late nineteenth century, belief in the aether posed a difficult problem for the principle of relativity, because the aether was supposed to be stationary in space and light was supposed to have a fixed velocity relative to the aether. This meant that if a scientist set up equipment to measure the speed of light from the back of a train carriage to the front, and it turned out that the light was slower than it should be, the train must be moving into the aether. Put another way, this optical experiment provides a way to violate the principle of relativity where no mechanical experiment could.
Can someone please explain that or explain how the aether model violated the principle of relativity?
In the late nineteenth century, belief in the aether posed a difficult problem for the principle of relativity, because the aether was supposed to be stationary in space and light was supposed to have a fixed velocity relative to the aether. This meant that if a scientist set up equipment to measure the speed of light from the back of a train carriage to the front, and it turned out that the light was slower than it should be, the train must be moving into the aether. Put another way, this optical experiment provides a way to violate the principle of relativity where no mechanical experiment could.
Can someone please explain that or explain how the aether model violated the principle of relativity?