T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1424.1 | In what units? | ELIS02::GARSON | V+F = E+2 | Thu Apr 18 1991 07:43 | 0 |
1424.2 | | JARETH::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Apr 18 1991 08:40 | 10 |
| Re .0:
No. The speed of light, as measured in natural units, is 1. This is a
consequence of the fact that time _is_ space, literally. What one
person observes as purely distance another person might observe as
partly distance and partly duration -- their point of view is "rotated"
in four-dimensional space-time.
-- edp
|
1424.3 | c known only approximatly | SMAUG::ABBASI | | Thu Apr 18 1991 11:04 | 8 |
| the resone i asked, is that i was reading a magazine where apparantly
speed of light in empty space keeps having some digits added to it on
the right of decimal point , (better measurments methods).
the value 180,000 miles per second is only aproximate. excat value
of C seems to keep improving.
i understand that C is independent of the speed of the observer.
|
1424.4 | When in doubt, pun | WEEKS::HALLYB | The Smart Money was on Goliath | Thu Apr 18 1991 11:43 | 1 |
| Measured in miles per second, c is probably irrational.
|
1424.5 | c now known *exactly* | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Apr 18 1991 11:54 | 23 |
| Until recently the speed of light was (except in the "natural" system
of measurement used by relativicists) an irrational number. It is
now a rational number.
The reason for the former is that the probability of any value being a
rational value, unless constrained somehow to so being, is zero.
The reason for the latter is that c was, farily recently, given an
exact value (this sounds screwy, like declaring pi to be exactly 3,
but it isn't). The "second" is now defined so as to make the speed of
light that exact value. The decimal points in the "legislated" value
of c were designed so that the length of the second in the newly
defined units were indistinguishable with the technology of that time
from the "old" second. Now, more accurate measurements of the travel
time of a photon over some distance refines our knowledge of the
"second" rather than of the speed of light. To put it another way,
it used to be that "length" and "time" were fundamental quantities
in the various systems of measurement, while the value of c was derived
-- now, however, length and the speed of light are fundamental and
units of time are derived. In that regard, we are now using a scaled
natural system of measurements.
Topher
|
1424.6 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Be excellent to each other. | Thu Apr 18 1991 17:42 | 6 |
| I thought it was c and the second that were fixed, with
technological advances "refining our knowledge of" the
meter.
Dan
|
1424.7 | | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Apr 18 1991 18:34 | 6 |
| RE: .6 (Dan)
Could be, but that's not what I remember. Let's see if anyone can find
a current reference.
Topher
|
1424.8 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Be excellent to each other. | Thu Apr 18 1991 20:53 | 3 |
| I'll try the DECWET::PHYSICS conference tomorrow.
Dan
|
1424.9 | try to catch this program on TV | SMAUG::ABBASI | | Thu Apr 18 1991 22:14 | 3 |
| since we are taking kind'a physic here, i'd like to point a very
good TV series currently showing on public TV, called 'astronommers' , it is
of 6 series. tonite was first one on channell 11.
|
1424.10 | | ALLVAX::JROTH | I know he moves along the piers | Fri Apr 19 1991 11:34 | 10 |
| It might be more useful to look at dimensionless quantities that
arise in physics, such as the fine structure constant.
My feeling is that if such constants are really irrational or
transcendental and not knowable in terms of some simpler
form (such as being an eigenvalue of some kind) that
it would require knowing "everything" about physics to know them
to full precision.
- Jim
|
1424.11 | 1m = c * 1s / 299,792,458 | GUESS::DERAMO | Be excellent to each other. | Fri Apr 19 1991 11:46 | 14 |
| From DECWET::PHYSICS 120.2:
>> -< exact speed of light >-
>> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> Just to put a current fact in this topic.
>>
>> In 1983, the meter was defined as the distance light travels in a
>> vacuum in one second divided by 299,792,458. That makes c =
>> 299,792,458 m/s EXACTLY. I don't think this number is likely to change
>> in my lifetime.
Later replies discuss how the second is defined.
Dan
|
1424.12 | a few dimensionless constants to think about | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Mon Apr 22 1991 13:46 | 18 |
| .10> It might be more useful to look at dimensionless quantities that
> arise in physics, such as the fine structure constant.
alpha = 1/137.036 = fine structure constant
beta = 1840 = mass of neutron / mass of electron
e^2/G*mp*me = 10^39 = ratio of electromagnetic to gravitational force
Eddington once did a lot of work with these. For example, when the experimental
value of 1/alpha was 136, this was shown to be the number of terms in a 16
dimensional tensor:
(16^2-16)/2 + 16 = 136
When the experimental value became 137, unity was added to the expression above.
When it became 137.04, the game was abandoned.
|
1424.13 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Be excellent to each other. | Mon Apr 22 1991 17:06 | 10 |
| re .-1,
>> beta = 1840 = mass of neutron / mass of electron
I once read that the ratio of the rest mass of a proton
to the rest mass of an electron was equal to 6 * pi^5
(i.e., the known (as of then) digits of the ratio
matched the initial digits of 6 * pi^5).
Dan
|
1424.14 | Looks like 115*2^4 to me | CIVAGE::LYNN | Lynn Yarbrough @WNP DTN 427-5663 | Mon Apr 22 1991 17:31 | 1 |
| Looks like the value of Pi has changed since then. :-)
|
1424.15 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Be excellent to each other. | Mon Apr 22 1991 19:26 | 8 |
| No, the number quoted from a previous reply was the ratio
for a neutron; the 6 pi^5 figure was for a proton.
According to VAX LISP, 6 pi^5 is 1836.118..., and
that was said to be within the bounds known for the
proton/electron rest mass ratio.
Dan
|
1424.16 | See QED | AIWEST::DRAKE | Dave (Diskcrash) Drake DTN 534-2660 | Wed May 01 1991 01:56 | 8 |
| Its interesting to compare this problem with the discussion in
Feynman's QED about the theoretical calculation of the magmetic moment
fo the electron. It is based on an increasing complex look at higher
order coupling between electrons and photons. The number is based on
summing probability amplitudes, so the result would not be based on a
ratio of integers in any easy way. It may be the case that "C" will
also evolve out of similar calculations and therefore would probably
not be ratiol.
|
1424.17 | a flaw in logic, I think | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Wed May 01 1991 13:27 | 12 |
| .16> summing probability amplitudes, so the result would not be based on a
> ratio of integers in any easy way.
I don't think this follows. I can do (and occasionally to my embarrassment,
have done) some fairly complex calculations and ended up with integer solutions.
It is logically possible that all these amplitudes will sum to something which
could be expressed much more simply.
Personally, I think this is possible, but very unlikely. The only reason I have
for thinking that is that so many people have played with these numbers and
this theory. If there were a simple answer, somebody would have stumbled across
it.
|