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| Eclipse scientists in the swing Museums like the Smithsonian display a Foucault pendulum The 11 August total eclipse of the Sun could settle a 45-year scientific riddle once and for all.
In 1954, Allais observed odd deviations in the swing of a Foucault Pendulum. This device is simply a weight on a wire but, unlike the pendulum in a clock, is permitted to freely rotate as well as swing. And once released, it appears to rotate at a steady rate. It is actually an illusion because, as we all learnt in our physics lessons at school, it is the Earth that is rotating, not the pendulum. Giant pendulums of this kind are now routine exhibits at some of the major museums around the world including the Smithsonian in Washington and the Science Museum in London. But the suggestion that a total eclipse of the Sun can somehow disrupt these swinging weights is highly controversial. 1954 eclipse Maurice Allais started the fuss by conducting an experiment at his Paris laboratory in which he released a Foucault pendulum every 14 minutes - for 30 days and nights - recording the direction of rotation in degrees. It just so happened that the experiment coincided with the 1954 eclipse, and it was during the solar phenomenon that the pendulum took an unexpected turn, changing its angle of rotation by 13.5 degrees.
But the work has polarised scientific opinion. Some say there were flaws in the Frenchman's methods, whilst others claim to have witnessed the unusual effect as well. Explanations have included the anisotropy of space - the condition of having different properties in different directions - gravitational waves and solar radiation. The 1999 total eclipse will help to settle the arguments. Laboratories on four continents set up pendulums and gravity meters to test the effect. Their results will make interesting reading.
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See also: 17 Aug 99 | Eclipse99 Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Total Eclipse stories now: Links to more Total Eclipse stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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