Page:PlummerAberration.djvu/12

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Jan. 1910.
Aberration and the Principle of Relativity.
263

to V1 are . Hence for E the components of the apparent velocity of S are (by § 6)

or

Now E must infer that his own velocity relative to S, , has these components reversed in sign; and if θ be the angle between V1 and the resultant we have

and we deduce

We take the z-axis perpendicular to V0 and V1 throughout, and

(i) The x-axis parallel to V0. If (λ, μ, ν) are the direction cosines of a star in its true position, S observes this star in the direction (by § 7)

(ii) We turn the x-axis through the angle a to bring it into the direction of V1. The direction cosines of the star in its true position become

and E will observe it in the direction

(iii) We turn the x-axis through the further angle θ to bring it into the direction of V10. The direction cosines of the star in its apparent position become

and when E has corrected this position for his observed relative velocity V10 he will infer that the star lies in the direction

These have to be compared with , remembering that the axes have been turned through an angle α + θ.