Fizeau-foucault Apparatus

  Fizeau-Foucault apparatus (1850) was designed by the French physicists Hippolyte Fizeau and Lon Foucault for measuring the speed of light. The apparatus involves light reflecting off a rotating mirror, toward a stationary mirror some 20 miles (35 kilometers) away. As the rotating mirror will have moved slightly in the time it takes for the light to bounce off the stationary mirror (and return to the rotating mirror), it will thus be deflected away from the original source, by a small angle.  
Foucault based his apparatus on an earlier experiment by Fizeau who, in 1849, used two fixed mirrors, one partially obscured by a rotating cogwheel. Fizeau's value for light's speed was about 5% too high.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
canada east
leif erickson
cathaoirleach
houma
erection
dil constitution
president of the irish republic
leopold ii, holy roman emperor
queen latifah
quintillus
jaco pastorius
roy hattersley
leopold i, holy roman emperor
florianus
in my head
philip iv of spain
house of commons of southern ireland
christy martin
dodi al fayed
edmund fitzalan howard, 1st viscount fitzalan of derwent
td
ceann comhairle
judith butler
square integrable
metropolitan area express (portland, oregon)
max
symphonic poem
brownstown, pennsylvania
brownstown, lancaster county, pennsylvania
texas guinan
donna karan
oshiruko
john browning
american bobtail
parallel algorithm
japanese bobtail (cat)
japanese clothing
list of japanese rock bands
oriental cat
kakigori
anmitsu
japanese hip hop
ramen museum
dragon ash