A New Light-Speed Anisotropy Experiment: Absolute Motion and Gravitational Waves Detected
Reginald T Cahill (Flinders University)

TL;DR
This paper reports a new experiment confirming light-speed anisotropy and absolute motion, consistent with previous findings, revealing gravitational waves different from those predicted by General Relativity, and supporting the existence of a dynamical 3-space.
Contribution
The study provides new experimental evidence for light-speed anisotropy, absolute motion, and gravitational waves, challenging conventional physics and confirming the reality of a dynamical 3-space.
Findings
Light speed anisotropy confirmed at 300,000 km/s in a specific direction.
Detection of gravitational waves of a different nature than those predicted by General Relativity.
Experimental validation of relativistic effects like Fitzgerald-Lorentz contraction.
Abstract
Data from a new experiment measuring the anisotropy of the one-way speed of EM waves in a coaxial cable, gives the speed of light as 300,000+/-400+/-20km/s in a measured direction RA=5.5+/-2hrs, Dec=70+/-10deg S, is shown to be in excellent agreement with the results from seven previous anisotropy experiments, particularly those of Miller (1925/26), and even those of Michelson and Morley (1887). The Miller gas-mode interferometer results, and those from the RF coaxial cable experiments of Torr and Kolen (1983), De Witte (1991) and the new experiment all reveal the presence of gravitational waves, as indicated by the last +/- variations above, but of a kind different from those supposedly predicted by General Relativity. The understanding of the operation of the Michelson interferometer in gas-mode was only achieved in 2002 and involved a calibration for the interferometer that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRelativity and Gravitational Theory · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum and Classical Electrodynamics
