At the end of the 19th century light was regarded as an electromagnetic wave
propagating in a material medium called ether. The speed c appearing in
Maxwell's wave equations was the speed of light with respect to the ether.
Therefore, according to the Galilean addition of velocities, the speed of light
in the laboratory would differ from c. The measure of such difference would
reveal the motion of the laboratory (the Earth) relative to the ether (a sort
of absolute motion). However the Earth's absolute motion was never evidenced.
Galileo addition of velocities is based on the assumption that lengths and
time intervals are invariant (independent of the state of motion). This way of
thinking the spacetime emanates from our daily experience and lies at the heart
of Newton's Classical Mechanics. Nevertheless, in 1905 Einstein defied Galileo
addition of velocities by postulating that light travels at the same speed c in
any inertial frame. In doing so, Einstein extended the principle of relativity
to the electromagnetic phenomena described by Maxwell's laws. In Einstein's
Special Relativity the ether does not exist and the absolute motion is devoid
of meaning. The invariance of the speed of light forced the replacement of
Galileo transformations with Lorentz transformations. Thus, relativistic length
contractions and time dilations entered our understanding of the spacetime.
Newtonian mechanics had to be reformulated, which led to the discovery of the
mass-energy equivalence.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures. To appear in Handbook of Spacetime, edited by A.
Ashtekar and V. Petkov, Springer-Verlag Gmb