Abstract

Is it possible to demonstrate the velocity addition without using a variable time (as it is done in theory of relativity)? The topic of this paper is to propose and demonstrate an alternative expres-sion based on the conservation of linear momenta. The method proposed here is to start from a physical object (and not from a mathematical point), i.e. from an object with a mass. And the hy-pothesis is inertial mass to be different from gravitational mass. Then, when impulses are added, we get an expression of the velocity addition itself. When numerical predictions are compared with experimental results, the differences are lower than the measures uncertainty. And these numerical results are much close to those predicts by the theory of relativity, nevertheless with a little difference at high velocities. If this demonstration and this expression were validated, it would allow giving an alternative explanation to some experiments and nature observations as Doppler Effect on light celerity. But first, it would be necessary to get from laboratories more precise experimental results, in order to validate or not this hypothesis of the sum of linear momenta with a Variable Inertial Mass.

Highlights

  • The idea is to take an object with a mass

  • First step was to replace the variable time by a variable inertial mass

  • The Newtonian mechanics and the theory of relativity both consider velocity applied to a mathematical point, i.e. to an object without mass

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Summary

Introduction

“The proof was wrong” about theory of relativity according to a serious astrophysician [1]. He wrote that the first proof, especially those coming from the famous eclipse of 1919, was based in part on data manipulation to get the expected results! (2015) Velocity Addition Demonstrated from the Conservation of Linear Momenta, an Alternative Expression. Relativity [3] is the predominant theory which can supply alternative explanations about this topic of high velocities. A velocity addition rule demonstrated without using a variable time would allow an alternative explanation to some nature observations as the Doppler Effect on light celerity, and a universal time would give coherence between the time of the traditional mechanics and the time of the quantum mechanics

The Instantaneous Velocity
Galilean Reference Frames
Velocity Addition in Fizeau’s Experiment
Velocity Addition with Theory of Relativity
The Hypothesis
Demonstration
Comparison with Theory of Relativity
Comparison with Fizeau Experimental Results
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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