Zero Infinite
Member
- Joined
- Apr 7, 2006
- Messages
- 33
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2007
1) Who proposed the principle of relativity? Galileo or Newton? My textbooks conflict. On that note, how much do we need to know for frames of reference? Just what they are?
2) Is it necessary in considering the aether model in the Syllabus to mention Descartes, Hooke, Huygens, Young, Fresnel, Stokes, Maxwell? I know at least some of those names need to be considered, but the level of detail varies from textbook to textbook.
3) Is it really necessary to mention anything about Lorentz and Fitzgerald...? Yeah, they made those contraction/dilation formulas, but since we only seem to need to apply them...
4) In terms of equivalence of mass and energy, what is there to explain except E = mc^2
5) Finally, for the dot point "Analyse info to discuss the relationship between theory and evidence..." I don't know what to write. Yeah, I know Einstein predicted it many years before evidence was found, but the word 'analyse' troubles me..
Just need to be sure that I've covered Section 4 of Space thoroughly. I hate these contradictions in various textbooks...
Thanks in advance to anyone who answers.
2) Is it necessary in considering the aether model in the Syllabus to mention Descartes, Hooke, Huygens, Young, Fresnel, Stokes, Maxwell? I know at least some of those names need to be considered, but the level of detail varies from textbook to textbook.
3) Is it really necessary to mention anything about Lorentz and Fitzgerald...? Yeah, they made those contraction/dilation formulas, but since we only seem to need to apply them...
4) In terms of equivalence of mass and energy, what is there to explain except E = mc^2
5) Finally, for the dot point "Analyse info to discuss the relationship between theory and evidence..." I don't know what to write. Yeah, I know Einstein predicted it many years before evidence was found, but the word 'analyse' troubles me..
Just need to be sure that I've covered Section 4 of Space thoroughly. I hate these contradictions in various textbooks...
Thanks in advance to anyone who answers.