George FitzGerald

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George FitzGerald
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George FitzGerald

George Francis FitzGerald (3 August 185121 February 1901) was a professor of "natural and experimental philosophy" (i.e., physics) at Trinity College, Dublin, in the late 19th century. Along with Oliver Lodge, Oliver Heaviside, and Heinrich Hertz, he was a leading figure among the group of 'Maxwellians" who revised, extended, clarified, and confirmed James Clerk Maxwell's theory of the electromagnetic field in the late 1870s and 1880s.

In 1883, following from Maxwell's equations, he suggested a device for producing rapidly oscillating electric current, to generate electromagnetic waves, a phenomenon first shown experimentally by Heinrich Hertz.

However, he is better known for his conjecture in 1889 that if all moving objects were foreshortened in the direction of their motion, it would account for the curious result of the Michelson-Morley experiment. FitzGerald based this idea in part on the way electromagnetic forces were known to be affected by motion; in particular, he drew on equations that had been derived a short time before by his friend Oliver Heaviside. The Dutch physicist Hendrik Lorentz hit on a very similar idea in 1892 and developed it more fully the in connection with his theory of electrons. The so-called Lorentz-FitzGerald contraction hypothesis later became an important part of Albert Einstein's special theory of relativity, published in 1905.

FitzGerald was the nephew of George Johnstone Stoney, the Irish physicist who invented the term "electron".

[edit] External links

  • O'Connor, John J., and Edmund F. Robertson. "George FitzGerald". MacTutor History of Mathematics archive.
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