GALILEAN
ELECTRODYNAMICS
Experience, Reason and Simplicity Above Authority
D.F. Roscoe: Galilean gravitation: solar system orbits
Plus
V.A. Kishkintsev: The Eotvas correction applied to the thermal motion
of gas molecules
P.R. Molnar: Generalization of the dissipative model of the universe
G.F.L. Ferreira, O.N. Oliveira, Jr.: Is the continued use of abstract entities sound?
Correspondence: Equivalence principle test (G.T. Osborne, J.W. McAlister), Equivalence principle test (LC. `pia, J.W. McAlister), Ampere
electrodynamics (P. Graneau)
Galilean Electrodynamics aims to publish high-quality scientific papers based on experimental evidence even if their interpretation of it runs counter to the conventional orthodoxy. In particular, it publishes papers supporting the position that Einstein's interpretation of the Relativity Principle is unnecessarily complicated, has been confirmed only in a narrow sector of physics, leads to logical contradictions, and is unable to derive results that must be postulated, though they are derivable by classical methods.
Though the main purpose of the journal will be publication of logically correct and experimentally supported theories contradicting the Einstein theory, it will, should the occasion arise, publish related, or even unrelated physical topics that rest on logically and experimentally firm ground in challenging other theories cherished by physics orthodoxy.
Where there is more than one theory contradicting accepted opinion and interpretation, but all of them meet the criteria of faultless logic, greater simplicity, and absence of experimental contradiction, none of them shall be favored, except when Occam's razor yields an overwhelming verdict.
All papers are reviewed by qualified physicists, astronomers, mathematicians or engineers. Rejection on the sole grounds that a submitted paper contradicts accepted opinion and interpretation will be ignored. The papers in Galilean Electrodynamics are
generally limited to challenging established orthodoxy or defending it against such direct or indirect challenges.
No paper contradicting experiment will be accepted; however, papers making a case why the current interpretation of observed effects may be erroneous will be considered for publication.
All papers are expected to be in the realm of physics, mathematics, astronomy or engineering; non-mathematical, philosophical considerations will generally not be accepted unless they are fairly short and have something new and outstanding to say. Papers reporting experimental results will be given preference over theoretical papers of equally high standard.
Shorter papers will be preferred over long papers of comparable quality; and papers easily grasped at the level of keen seniors and graduate students will be given emphatic preference over esoteric analyses accessible only to a limited number of specialists.
However, none of these restrictions (other than length and subject area) apply to book reviews, news items, and readers' letters; these are solicited and encouraged to be vividly interesting.
Authors do not have to pay any page charges; but once an author's paper has been accepted (after being submitted in 3 copies in any well readable form), it should be submitted on a diskette (see Instruction to Authors overleaf). Papers submitted in TeX are welcome, but not obligatory.
Magazine
May/June 1993, Vol 4 No 3
20 Pages, 8.5" X 11"
Very Good Condition, Odd hole punch pattern (see photo)
Vintage, Hard-To-Find, Collectible
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