[The New Physics and Its Evolution by Lucien Poincare]@TWC D-Link book
The New Physics and Its Evolution

CHAPTER VI
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It may be compared to a fluid of negligible mass--since it offers no appreciable resistance to the motion of the planets--but is endowed with an enormous elasticity, because the velocity of the propagation of light is considerable.

It must be capable of penetrating into all transparent bodies, and of retaining there, so to speak, a constant elasticity, but must there become condensed, since the speed of propagation in these bodies is less than in a vacuum.

Such properties belong to no material gas, even the most rarefied, but they admit of no essential contradiction, and that is the important point.[20] [Footnote 20: Since this was written, however, men of science have become less unanimous than they formerly were on this point.

The veteran chemist Professor Mendeleeff has given reasons for thinking that the ether is an inert gas with an atomic weight a million times less than that of hydrogen, and a velocity of 2250 kilometres per second (_Principles of Chemistry_, Eng.ed., 1905, vol.ii.p.

526).
On the other hand, the well-known physicist Dr A.H.Bucherer, speaking at the Naturforscherversammlung, held at Stuttgart in 1906, declared his disbelief in the existence of the ether, which he thought could not be reconciled at once with the Maxwellian theory and the known facts .-- ED.] It was the study of the phenomena of polarization which led Fresnel to his bold conception of transverse vibrations, and subsequently induced him to penetrate further into the constitution of the ether.


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