The Voice of Allan Zade

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Aurora Experiment

Foreword

The Aurora experiment is one of the most fundamental and forbidden experiments of 20th-century physics. It is the first experiment that reveals several aspects “that cannot exist” in the philosophy of humankind of that time.

This experiment falls into the category of one-way experiments that were unreachable for researchers of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Strictly speaking, it becomes feasible only after the invention of atomic clocks. Modern optical clocks offer a significantly better possibility for such experiments due to their higher frequency and greater stability of operation.

Moreover, the experiment does not require any “clock synchronization procedure” that eliminates all possible questions about “wrong clock synchronization.” That is another groundbreaking aspect of the Aurora experiment. Many researchers still do not understand this aspect today, as “clocks have to be synchronized before any measurement.” It is not necessary for the Aurora experiment. Additionally, that aspect eliminates all speculations about the “so-called flow of physical time that magically interacts with all physical things.”

Moreover, the experiment demonstrates the anisotropy of light propagation by varying the orientation of the measuring device. Therefore, it destroys the “fundamental idea of 20th-century physics” about the constant speed of light in the observer-bound reference frame. For that reason, the experiment became the most forbidden one in the entire physics.


The Book of Physics
Roland de Witte Experiment and Aurora Effect
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