View Full Version : Why does light travel at light speed?
jackpot337
Jul24-04, 06:00 PM
Just was wondering if there was something that pushed photons or if it just a property of light. Also what happens to photons from other stars when they reach our sun?
mathman
Jul24-04, 07:42 PM
Photons travel at light speed because that's the way it is. Photons hitting the sun (doesn't matter where they came from) will interact with the material of the sun (electrons, protons, etc.). Being the sun itself is irrelevant.
urtalkinstupid
Jul25-04, 05:38 AM
It's not as simple as "that's the way it is." Why are they the only things that can travel at c (not including neutrinos which are theorized to travel at c). What property gives them this ability to travel so fast? Is it the no rest mass?
photons are not the only things gthat travel at c (neutrinoes are no longer beleived to travel at c tho'), it's a general property of massless particles.
selfAdjoint
Jul25-04, 08:41 AM
You can derive the relativitic equation for energy e^2 = p^2c^2 + m^2c^4. Here p is the magnitude of the three dimensional momentum, m is the invariant mass of the particle, and c, of course is the speed of light. I repeat that this equation follows from the postulates, the basic definition of relativity.
Now suppose p = 0; then the particle has no momentum => you are looking at it in its rest frame and the equation reduces to e = mc^2 which you might have seen before.
On the other hand suppose m=0; in this case the particle is massless and the equation reduces to e = pv, the energy is the size of the three-momentum times the speed of light. Plug this into the Lorentz transformation for energy and you get the velocity of the particle is c.
So these two predictions come from the relativistic energy equation, the energy of a particle at rest is mc^2 and the speed of a massless particle is c.
Of course in more general states you don't have either of these conditions, but the energy equation is still true.
niranjan
Jul25-04, 12:58 PM
hi,
we know that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light.....but what is it about light that gives it this special status?? i mean it could have been sound...could have been some other thing......n if we if we think logically then anything travelling opposite to the direction of light at velocity "v" will see light going away from it at an speed " c+v"......i know this point has been time n again been said to be false when light comes into picture......but some how 1+1 will always be 2!!
regards, niranjan
pmb_phy
Jul25-04, 01:18 PM
Just was wondering if there was something that pushed photons or if it just a property of light. Also what happens to photons from other stars when they reach our sun?
Nothing needs to be pushed for it to move. The speed of light can be calculated from Maxwell's equations. See
http://www.geocities.com/physics_world/em/mawell_eq.htm
It starts with the permittivity and permiability of free space. They appear in Maxwell's equations as the reciprocal of the the product of the two. That is written as the square of a quantity which is labeled "c". The equations for the E and B fields are then shown to be the solution of a wave equation and c is the speed of the wave.
Pete
urtalkinstupid
Jul25-04, 01:24 PM
photons are not the only things gthat travel at c (neutrinoes are no longer beleived to travel at c tho'), it's a general property of massless particles.
Not true. Photons have a mass, just theoretically no rest mass. So, particles with mass can travel at c as long as they have no rest mass.
niranjan, I like the way you think. Light is relative to the object, but physicists always find some mathematical way to prove it is constant. Simple logic says that if you are moving towards a light source the velocity of light would be dependent on that source.
\vec{v}_{light}=c+\vec{v}_{observer}
Or if the object is moving away from the light source
[tex]\vec{v}_{light}=c-\vec{v}_{observer}[/itex]
Maybe they are the other way around, but logic says light speed should be dependent on velocity of the source of the observer or light source.
So, neutrinos are said to not travel at the speed of light? So, this means they have a rest mass, right?
Sorry, mentors, if my expression of opinion shouldn't go here but rather in a thread in Theory Development.
You can derive the relativistic equation for energy e^2 = p^2c^2 + m^2c^4. Here p is the magnitude of the three dimensional momentum, m is the invariant mass of the particle, and c, of course is the speed of light. I repeat that this equation follows from the postulates, the basic definition of relativity.
...
On the other hand suppose m=0; in this case the particle is massless and the equation reduces to \inline e = pc, the energy is the size of the three-momentum times the speed of light...
so at some level there is this basic assumption or observation about the universe:
"there is a certain speed that is the same to all observers"
nothing said about light or massive or massless or any kind of boson, that would be too clunky----just that the universe has a preferred scale of speed that reads the same in all frames
later, after some algebra and thinking about particulars, we learn that massless things actually GO this speed, and that, as it so happens, light goes this speed
Correct me if I am wrong, but it seems as if the basic postulate does not even assume that anything travels at this speed, not to mention saying anything about light. I just says that in the universe there IS this speed which looks the same regardless of your perspective.
and the equations you mention derive from that, by some algebra
I'm sure this is oversimplifying, but it is a striking idea and immediately prompts one to ask "what if there were two invariant scales instead of just one?" Are there maybe several quantities in the universe that look the same to all observers---a speed and at least one other type of physical quantity.
By MARCUS.
I'm sure this is oversimplifying, but it is a striking idea and immediately prompts one to ask "what if there were two invariant scales instead of just one?" Are there maybe several quantities in the universe that look the same to all observers---a speed and at least one other type of physical quantity.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
So what could this other type of physical quality be, the best i could
think of is a" physical meter", yard stick, universal mile ,what ever,
im sure time is irrelevant to physical quality, so what is missing?
selfAdjoint
Jul25-04, 02:18 PM
Marcus, I believe you are basically right. Modern texts will say on page 1 or 2, something like "in order to get all the components of our 4-vector into the same units, we have to multiply the time component by something to turn it into a length, like the space components. What do you multiply by a time to get a length? Obviously something with dimensions length over time: a speed! And this speed factor has to be a Lorenz scalar, so that there is only one conversion for everybody. Let's call it c for celeritas (Latin for speed). Hence we get Einstein's second postulate without the light dependence he was forced to by his "operational" framework. (By that last of course i mean he defined the physics in terms of operations people could actually do, an ideal of the radical physicsts, incuding Mach, of the late nineteenth century).
"there is a certain speed that is the same to all observers"
great!
I'm sure this is oversimplifying, but it is a striking idea and immediately prompts one to ask "what if there were two invariant scales instead of just one?" Are there maybe several quantities in the universe that look the same to all observers---a speed and at least one other type of physical quantity.
good question. actually it brought me to a slightly crazy idea right away: from this algebra, it can also be seen, that it is impossible to accellerate a massive particle above c, if initially it was moving slower than c. The same may be true for particles initially moving faster than c - that is they can't be deccellerated to sub-c speeds... Now what if we assume that there is another - greater - velocity? Kinda second "upper-bound" - for super-c particles we can't observe? say this speed equals 2c. and no super-c objects can't be accellerated to super-super-c speeds, and so on... :yuck:
Does it make any sense?
One of the "difficult" questions about that is "why do we live in [0,c] range?" :redface:
Yes, hemmul, the particles you describe are called tachyons. Their mechanics are already well-understood, but there has been any evidence that they actually exist.
- Warren
Simple logic says that if you are moving towards a light source the velocity of light would be dependent on that source.
\vec{v}_{light}=c+\vec{v}_{observer}
Or if the object is moving away from the light source
[tex]\vec{v}_{light}=c-\vec{v}_{observer}[/itex]
Maybe they are the other way around, but logic says light speed should be dependent on velocity of the source of the observer or light source.
No, logic does not say this, or anything like this. Logic is a tool that allows you to derive conclusions from axioms. Please don't misuse terms. What you mean to say is that common sense says that the velocity of light is dependent on the velocity of the emitter. This concept is called "emitter theory" and has been as soundly defeated as any theory in the history of science. The most damning experiment is one that was done with neutral pions, a type of particle made from two quarks, travelling at nearly the speed of light in a particle accelerator. When these pions decay, they produce gammas -- high-frequency light. The speed of these gammas was measured directly, and was found to be -- drum roll, please -- c. Even though the pions were themselves travelling almost the speed of light, the light they emitted was still going c.
The bottom line is simply that your common sense is based upon observations of things around you (chairs, desks, people and so on) that are not moving very fast at all. You have no common sense about things moving near the speed of light. You cannot therefore rely on common sense beyond its limitations. Experiments show us how the universe works, not common sense.
And, no, your post does not belong here at all. Please don't make a habit of posting non-mainstream theories in the wrong forums here.
- Warren
kurious
Jul25-04, 05:25 PM
Light speed = electric field / magnetic field
This is considered to be always equal to 3 x 10^8 m/s in a vacuum for all wavelengths of light.
Not quite kurious. I think you mean:
c = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\epsilon_0 \mu_0}}
http://www.google.com/search?num=30&hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&safe=off&q=1+%2F+sqrt%28the+electric+constant+*+the+magneti c+constant%29+%3D&btnG=Search
- Warren
Not quite kurious. I think you mean:
c = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\epsilon_0 \mu_0}}
http://www.google.com/search?num=30&hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&safe=off&q=1+%2F+sqrt%28the+electric+constant+*+the+magneti c+constant%29+%3D&btnG=Search
- Warren
A physicist once explained in my hearing that
\mu_0
and
\epsilon_0
are not real physical quantities
they are not actual measurable properties of empty space
but are fictions, their formal existence established by convention within the SI system
therefore according to him it does not explain why the speed of light is c
if one merely demonstrates that putting \mu_0
and
\epsilon_0
into Maxwell equations causes one to get out a speed which is c
So I have come to regard this equation:
c = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\epsilon_0 \mu_0}}
as a kind of tautology or a stacked deck
and then the meter got redefined as the distance light in vacuo travels in
exactly 1/299792458 of a Cesium133 atomic clock second which means if you use metric units the speed of light cannot logically be other than
299792458 of those meters per second. It is therefore fruitless to ask why it is what it is. It is the standard speed. (for the metric system and probably for mother universe as well)
I guess maybe the thing to ask is not why is it what it is (why is it 299792458 instead of 299792459?)
but to ask why is it constant? why is it AFAWK the same everywhere in universe? why is it the same for all observers even if the buggers are moving vis-a-vis us? why is there a constant speed standard in the U?
That there is a limit at all suggests that there are properties of spacetime that prohit faster speeds. What properties could this be? They probably have something to do with curvature.
What other properties can spacetime have? What you're suggesting is that anything other than dimensions and how they curve is an artificial device? Can this be right? Can you define fields (scalar or vector) on spacetime without it being a property of the background without being arbitrary? In other words, where could such fields come from if they are not derived from spacetime itself? And if they can not be derived from the spacetime background, can they be real?
urtalkinstupid
Jul25-04, 07:40 PM
Common sense is a branch of logic. Common sense says speed is dependent on velocity of source or object. My common sense is actually derived from reality based situations. For light to be constant, it would have to have the characteristic of being in two palces at once. Two trains traveling towards each other. Light is coming from two directions. Both light beams hit the two trains. Will the light hit the observers at the same time? It is said yes. Why can it not? Light can not go into the back and front of the train at the same time. By the emitter theory, do you mean how light is emitted and absorbed through different densities?
chroot, take a look at this. I'm sure you won't think much of it. :biggrin: It makes sense to me. After reading Einstein's work and reading this. I've found the link I'm fixing to provide you to make more sense. That's just me though. :rofl: Here it is (http://www.aliceinphysics.com/papers/introduction.html)
Sorry, mentors, if my expression of opinion shouldn't go here but rather in a thread in Theory Development.And, no, your post does not belong here at all. Please don't make a habit of posting non-mainstream theories in the wrong forums here.Common sense is a branch of logic. Common sense says speed is dependent on velocity of source or object. My common sense is actually derived from reality based situations. For light to be constant, it would have to have the characteristic of being in two palces at once. Two trains traveling towards each other. Light is coming from two directions. Both light beams hit the two trains. Will the light hit the observers at the same time? It is said yes. Why can it not? Light can not go into the back and front of the train at the same time. By the emitter theory, do you mean how light is emitted and absorbed through different densities?
chroot, take a look at this. I'm sure you won't think much of it. :biggrin: It makes sense to me. After reading Einstein's work and reading this. I've found the link I'm fixing to provide you to make more sense. That's just me though. :rofl: Here it is (http://www.aliceinphysics.com/papers/introduction.html)I think chroot includes material such as that in 'aliceinphysics' as non-mainstream theories. If you would like to discuss the misunderstanding and misrepresentation of relativity that are evident in 'aliceinphysics', please start a thread in Theory Development.
You might also look through previous posts in PF; IIRC 'aliceinphysics' has been clearly shown to be inconsistent with observational and experimental results.
urtalkinstupid,
You absolutely must stop posting personal theories and crackpot websites to the general physics forums. Consider this your final warning.
If you'd like to discuss your train "paradox," please provide a little more detail -- about where the light is coming from, etc. -- and I will be happy to show you how there is no paradox at all.
- Warren
urtalkinstupid
Jul25-04, 10:42 PM
I'm sure you heard of this "paradox." It really isn't a paradox at all. It was the scenario that Einstein used to support his claims of light travelling at c. It is the old train and lightning scenario. I'll PM you it, if it's cool with you, chroot?
No need to PM it. Post it here, and we'll help you understand it.
The simple fact is that tens of thousands of people in the scientific community have thoroughly examined the theory of relativity for over a century, and there are no paradoxes in it. Any paradoxes you claim to find are only evidence of your own misunderstandings.
- Warren
ArmoSkater87
Jul26-04, 01:57 AM
urtalkinstupid, I dont understand why u are trying to say that light speed isnt constant. It has been proven experimentally sereral times. For example, light coming from stars has been measured from different parts of the world, and every time the speed of light ended up being the same exact number. You might think it might be simply because the earth's orbiting speed is so little compared to the speed of light...well it doesnt matter because chroot pointed out that light has been measured from pions moving at nearly the speed of light, the speed of light measured was once again the same. If light speed wasnt constant, then the time dialation equation predicted by relitivity would be wrong. But the fact is that the model for time dialation is very right and has been proven several times with precise atomic clock. So please, just dont argue about something that has been proven true in so many ways and so many times.
ArmoSkater87,
He's arguing against constant c not because he isn't aware of the experimental evidence; he's arguing only because to him it doesn't make "sense." As he's said, he is not concerned with reality.
- Warren
selfAdjoint
Jul26-04, 10:45 AM
A physicist once explained in my hearing that
\mu_0
and
\epsilon_0
are not real physical quantities
they are not actual measurable properties of empty space
but are fictions, their formal existence established by convention within the SI system
therefore according to him it does not explain why the speed of light is c
if one merely demonstrates that putting \mu_0
and
\epsilon_0
into Maxwell equations causes one to get out a speed which is c
So I have come to regard
c = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\epsilon_0 \mu_0}}
as a kind of tautology or a stacked deck
Marcus, you can measure \epsilon_0 and \mu_0! I don't know where your physicist got this relational stuff, but it would take more than a rumor to convince me they are not as real as the fine structure constant. Maybe you can expain further?
Marcus, you can measure \epsilon_0 and \mu_0! I don't know where your physicist got this relational stuff, but it would take more than a rumor to convince me they are not as real as the fine structure constant. Maybe you can expain further?
you are closer to being the expert on this so I am hoping you will explain the situation to me!
All i can do is start the ball rolling. I think you will agree that using standard SI metric units one cannot measure the speed of light. It is established by the convention that defines the meter
to be exactly 299792458
Now that is all right because we have to have some convention to define the meter-----and it USED to be measured when the meter was defined as the length of a certain piece of metal in Paris. So everybody is happy with that and we accept the fact that the speed of light is not measurable.
But what are these epsilon and mu naughts? Are they experimentally measurable or not? Do they actually mean anything? Let us go to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and check them out.
They may merely be notational conventions---MAY, this is unsubstantiated as you say but lets check it out and try to think what measuring them would amount to.
I'm quite prepared for you to be right (it is conventional to suppose these naughty epsilon and mu things are real physical properties of the vacuum) but I am just dubious or uncertain of that to desire some discussion.
Here we are:
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Constants/
And here are the universal ones, from that menu
http://physics.nist.gov/cgi-bin/cuu/Category?view=html&Universal.x=80&Universal.y=8
the "characteristic impedance of the vacuum" should be the first
on the list and then there should come epsilon and mu naught
Goodness!
It says here that the value of mu_0 is exactly
4\pi \times 10^{-7}
how can something like 4pi be measurable?
surely this can't be an actual physical property of empty space
what kind of intrument can you picture using to measure it?
russ_watters
Jul26-04, 11:28 AM
The simple fact is that tens of thousands of people in the scientific community have thoroughly examined the theory of relativity for over a century, and there are no paradoxes in it. Any paradoxes you claim to find are only evidence of your own misunderstandings.
- Warren Not sure who I would address this to (Einstein's editor?), but names like "train paradox" and "twins paradox" are somewhat misleading. They are only paradoxes when using incorrect physics, ie applying Galilean relativity to situations where it doesn't apply. People read "twins paradox" regarding Relativity and assume its a paradox in Einstein's theory. It isn't. How about "apparent train paradox"? I guess when Einstein was doing his work though, they were still unresolved paradoxes.I dont understand why u are trying to say that light speed isnt constant. It has been proven experimentally sereral times.[emphasis added] [/understatement]
zefram_c
Jul26-04, 12:00 PM
Goodness!
It says here that the value of mu_0 is exactly
4\pi \times 10^{-7}
how can something like 4pi be measurable?
surely this can't be an actual physical property of empty space
what kind of intrument can you picture using to measure it?
I think I know why it would be said that \mu_o and \epsilon_0 are not physically measurable. They depend on the way we define quantities like one metre, one second, one unit of current, etc. For example, in SI one Ampere is that current that enters the Biot-Savart law so that \mu_o is *exactly* as shown. These dimensionful quantities can always be redefined. I have not done the math, but I think we could say that light travels exactly one meter per second, then adjust all other fundamental quantities to recover the same physics. There is a principle that says physics must be independent of the choice of units. On the other hand, no amount of tinkering can let us redefine the value of the fine structure constant, as that is a dimensionless parameter and must be preserved if we redefine our choice of units. That is truly a fundamental parameter of the observed universe.
Not sure who I would address this to (Einstein's editor?), but names like "train paradox" and "twins paradox" are somewhat misleading. They are only paradoxes when using incorrect physics, ie applying Galilean relativity to situations where it doesn't apply. People read "twins paradox" regarding Relativity and assume its a paradox in Einstein's theory. It isn't. How about "apparent train paradox"? I guess when Einstein was doing his work though, they were still unresolved paradoxes.
An excellent point; I prefer to refer to such things as the "twin scenario" or the "twin experiment" to emphasize that there is no unsolved paradox threatening relativity there.
...
So I have come to regard this equation:
c = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\epsilon_0 \mu_0}}
as a kind of tautology or a stacked deck
...
the way I originally wrote this, it could be misunderstood to mean
that I'm considering the speed of light to be a tautology, so I edited it
to make clear that it is this equation that represents the stacked deck.
By its defintion the value mu_0 (in SI terms) is exactly
4\pi\times 10^-7
and epsilon_0 is actually defined in terms of mu_0 and the speed of light.
so if you somehow know what mu_0 is, then you cannot possibly measure epsilon_0, what it has to be is established by convention
\epsilon_0 = 1/\mu_0c^2
So the value of epsilon_0 (in SI terms) is also conventional and is exactly
\frac{1}{299792458^2\times 4\pi\times 10^-7}
Yes, hemmul, the particles you describe are called tachyons. Their mechanics are already well-understood, but there has been any evidence that they actually exist.
- Warren
Thanks for You reply, Warren,
well, to say the truth i'm not an expert in tachyons ;) what i posted is just some general "scatch"... actually my "question", stated like this:
One of the "difficult" questions about that is "why do we live in [0,c] range?"
is incorrect - because its basis violates the relativity principle :shy:
it's obvious, that in our RF available-velocity-range will be [0,c], but for tachionic observer this range (still talking about our range) will represent [c,2c]...?
or is it [nobody knows,nobody knows] ? - as, according to Your reply, we have no evidence of tachyons' existance (if i got it right) - so they have no evidence of our existance...
putting all this together in a smarter, equivalent, form:
according to our knowledge about tachyons, what is their upper-bound velocity? (relatively to us)
I think I know why it would be said that \mu_o and \epsilon_0 are not physically measurable. They depend on the way we define quantities like one metre, one second, one unit of current, etc. For example, in SI one Ampere is that current that enters the Biot-Savart law so that \mu_o is *exactly* as shown. These dimensionful quantities can always be redefined. I have not done the math, but I think we could say that light travels exactly one meter per second, then adjust all other fundamental quantities to recover the same physics. There is a principle that says physics must be independent of the choice of units. On the other hand, no amount of tinkering can let us redefine the value of the fine structure constant, as that is a dimensionless parameter and must be preserved if we redefine our choice of units. That is truly a fundamental parameter of the observed universe.
...
I must say, in my turn, that this is an excellent point!
And then the question becomes, how are current and voltage ACTUALLY standardized and how are they actually measured at the national labs and BIPM in paris etc.
And in fact current is not, in practice, standardized by measuring the force between parallel wires but by declaring an exact conventional value for the Von Klitzing constant and using quantum hall effect.
So the current scale is referred to the voltage scale (not to force)
And in fact voltage is measured by Josephson junction and standardized by declaring an exact conventional value for the Josephson constant so the voltage scale, operationally or in practice, is based on frequency----the frequency standard of the atomic clock.
The conventional exact values of Klitzing and Josephson constants
used to establish the CIPM 1990 standard ampere and standard volt are listed at the NIST site and called R K_90 and K J_90 .
but if volt and amp are measured this way then there is no grounds to have those values we mentioned for the epsilon and mu naught.
It really is a muddle and as twisty as some theological issue like the infallibility of the pope.
I will go get the conventional exact values of R K_90 and K J_90 .
they should really make them the official definitions of volt and amp and let the chips fall where they may---get it straight and damn the consequences
They are in the "adopted values" menu at NIST
the josephson
K J_90 = exactly 483597.9 x 109 Hz V-1
the von Klitzing resistance is
R K_90 = exactly 25812.807 ohms
zefram_c
Jul26-04, 03:09 PM
Usually the definitions of the fundamental units are set so that they can be easily used as a reference and can be reproduced worldwide. So when the speed of light could be measured more accurately than a "metre" (which I think used to be the wavelength of some atomic frequency times an integer constant), the metre was eventually redefined according to the speed of light measurement.
There is really no a priori reason to set \mu_o to what it is; and we could trade in its definition to fix, say, the von Klitzing resistance. Personally I'm all for that, since it's much better than to measure the very small attractive force between two infinitely long wires anyway. As for the Josephson constant, we can trade in the antiquated definition for the kg, which is a prototype somewhere in Paris. But there seems to be no pressing need for such changes. In any event, the system of choice for most theorists is one in which h = c = \epsilon_0 = \mu_0 = 1 , or maybe multiples of pi depending on what equation you want to simplify. Under this choice, the electron charge can't be set to one.
"As for the Josephson constant, we can trade in the antiquated definition for the kg." Yes!
that would be great
get rid of the metal prototype kilo in Paris!
no pressing need?
grunge grows on Le Grand Kilo and you have to clean it
and if people are actually using the adopted values of
R_K and K_J to measure volt and amp then they are, in effect,
dispensing with the kilo in a certain domain of measurement
so there is internal fractures within the system
the key to the transition is, I believe, the Watt Balance
which allows basing standard of force (and thus mass)
on voltage and current standard
I think there is a pressing need, but that the Watt Balance is
perhaps not quite good enough yet to let people
switch over to an electric newton and to an electric kilo
Under this choice, the electron charge can't be set to one.
Alas no! If you do that then the value for the electron charge will be a function of the fine structure constant!
The ways of the theorist are oft-times inscrutable. In their place I would imagine setting e = 1 (as you mention) and then the epsilon and mu naughts would involve alpha.
the way I originally wrote this, it could be misunderstood to mean
that I'm considering the speed of light to be a tautology, so I edited it
to make clear that it is this equation that represents the stacked deck.
The speed of light is a tautology nowadays. The meter was originaly concieved of as 10^-7 of the distance from the north pole to the equator. It was later redefined in the 1800's to be the distance between two marks on a platinum bar that was kept in paris. In the 1960's, it was defined as a certain number of wavelengths of a certain transition of krypton. Finally, in the 1980's, it was defined to be the distance that light travelled in a certain amount of time. This is the definition that's still in use today. This defintion of the meter makes the speed of light a defined constant (like 2.54 cm/in), rather than a number to be measured experimentally.
By the 1980's realtivity had been well tested, and nobody in the scientific community was (or is) in any doubt as to its accuracy. The new definition of the meter simply providied a more accurate and precise standard to measure distances.
I gather that the original old prototype of the meter (scratches on a bar) is still kept somewhere in Paris. However, because relativity is valid, one should expect that one could replace the current definition of the meter with (a copy of) the less accurate "scratched bar" meter and come up with basically the same answer. Of course the bar is subject to problems like changes in length with temperature and deformation due to forces that has to be taken into account in such a comparison, problems that the new definition doesn't have. So claiming that you can heat the bar and expand it shouldn't be seen as a disproof of relativity, it should be seen as an indication that the bar is an imperfect standard (it was the best standard for a long time, nowadays we do much better).
si-meter (http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/gen99/gen99730.htm)
si-meter-2 (http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/meter.html)
Interestingly enough, sound waves also travel at constant speed. All frequencies arrive at our ears at the same time from a train whistle... despite being emitted at different frequencies. If the transmission media has a retarding effect, shouldn't low frequency signals travel faster than higher frequencies, given they travel less total distance? [this is a classical question and merely a test].
Pythagorean
Aug10-04, 08:18 AM
Interestingly enough, sound waves also travel at constant speed. All frequencies arrive at our ears at the same time from a train whistle... despite being emitted at different frequencies. If the transmission media has a retarding effect, shouldn't low frequency signals travel faster than higher frequencies, given they travel less total distance? [this is a classical question and merely a test].
Is this true? Do sound (if so, I'm assuming all) waves travel at a constant velocity regardless of observers velocity?
Pythagorean
Aug10-04, 08:27 AM
In general reading of this thread, I realized that space/time hasn't really been defined. I will be going into my first physics class in less than a month, and I've only gotten as far as caclulus 1 in math, but here is my understanding of relativity from a philosophical (laymen) perspective that may help to understand one more thing.
Please correct me if i'm wrong. This is what I learned from Brian Greene's "The Fabric of The Cosmos"
Firstly, when Einstein created his theory, he did not want to call it the Theory of Relativity, because it was inevitebly about an absolute, called space/time. Space and time are relative like voltage and amps, but space/time is an absolute, the absolute being this in laymen terms:
the faster you travel through space, the slower you travel through time
the slower you travel through space, the faster you travel through time
this is where the twins paradox comes from.
now, philosophically, this implies to me that light does not age, or is not otherwise affected by the phenomenon we call time. That is why it appears to be have a constant velocity to us regardles of our speed, because of the difficulty in separating our observations from the concept of time.
selfAdjoint
Aug10-04, 09:08 AM
No, that is not what Einstein did. He didn't even have a spacetime concept in his early papers, that was introduced by the mathematician Minkowski, and Einstein had to chew it over a little before he accepted it.
Relativity is relative! Speed has no meaning except as it relates to two specific objects which have a relative speed between them. If the relative speed is higher they will see each other's lengths shorter and each other's time running slower. Einstein emphasized from the beginning that that is all there is, no standard observer exists to tell us "what really happened."
Einstein, not in his first paper but eventually, settled on two postulates from which all of relativity can be derived logically:
1. Every unaccelerated observer can do physics and get the same answers as every other unacclerated observer.
2. All unaccelerated observers will measure the same speed for light.
Books which then prove the Lorentz transformations and all the rest of special relativity from these postulates by theorem-proof math are not the easy way to learn SR, but they exist, and physicists know and can follow them.
Pythagorean
Aug10-04, 09:46 AM
I do not refute your points, as I am inexperienced.
I will, however quote the book to clear up my original statements which were not precise:
"Absolute spacetime is as absolute for special relativity as absolute space and absolute time were for Newton, and party for this reason Einstein did not suggest or particularly like the name, "realativity theory." Instead, he and other physicists suggested invariance theory, stressing that the theory, at its core, involves something that everyone agrees on, something that is not relative."
This is an introduction to SR and Newton's Bucket on the position (or lack of position) of space. (that was a pun).
edit: italicized invariance theory
Chronos
Aug10-04, 03:43 PM
Explaining light speed in terms of mu and epsilon an interesting concept. The fact that c is finite also has some important ramifications. If c were infinite, the universe, including time itself, would cease to exist! So the question is what exactly do mu and epsilon represent. Simple speaking, they can be explained in terms of strain wave propogation [I believe it was Kelvin who first remarked on the similarities between strain wave propogation and electromagnetic wave propogation]. Epsilon represents the elasticity constant and mu is the inertial constant. Combined, the result is the vacuum impedence, which is directly measurable and known to be 377 ohms. Direct measurement of mu and epsilon is, unfortunately, problematic. It could, however, yield vital clues about how the universe evolved.
NOTE: I do not view this the same as saying 'free space' has intrinsic properties, merely that interactions at a distance between mass possessing bodies behave as if free space was an elastic medium [trying to avoid an 'aether' controversy].
...Epsilon represents the elasticity constant and mu is the inertial constant. Combined, the result is the vacuum impedence, which is directly measurable and known to be 377 ohms. Direct measurement of mu and epsilon is, unfortunately, problematic. It could, however, yield vital clues about how the universe evolved....
If a substance has elasticity and inertia, can it also break, rip, or tear? Can a wave be set up such that the medium cannot sustain the rate of change and tears in the process, like a wave that crests when it approaches the shore?
Thanks.
loke137
Aug12-04, 06:43 AM
There is no pointing talking about what is spacetime...is it a bed?? a elastic medium?? jelly beams??...if you are a physicist, that shouldn`t matter...what matters is the model that your theory predicts fits reality..and dont start question what is reality!!! hehee, measurements...
However, if you are an epistemologist, then it is another matter.
loke137
Aug12-04, 06:59 AM
And sorry, I forgot to point my view on the thread subject. Eletromagnetic waves move with speed c because we constructed a theory in which there was a ent which moved with c, to wich we gave the name eletromagnetic wave. It is not proclamation of Fortune, but a prediction of a theory, which could be wrong. <classical eletrodynamics>
However, if you like General Relativity. A photon moves in such way in vaccum because it is a massless boson, thus definying its geodesic (see we gave its name, not the other way around), and the prediction is that such geodesic is localy straight and has a tangent vector (spacial) of magnitude c!!!!
Anyspeed light travels at is lightspeed?
selfAdjoint
Aug12-04, 10:20 AM
As used in relativity, light speed (c) is the speed light or any electromagnetic radiation traavels in the vacuum. The behavior of light in media is not a topic for relativity but for quantum theory.
DrDaleCoxStudent
Aug14-04, 12:40 AM
As you approach the speed of light time slows down. At the speed of light time stops.
As you approach the speed of light time slows down. At the speed of light time stops.I think you mean, 'as perceived by an observer in one frame, time in a moving frame is slower; however, within your own frame, to you time passes at the rate it always does, no matter what anyone else in other frames perceives' ... or something like that.
Gerinski
Aug14-04, 10:04 AM
It seems to me that light (EM radiation) does not "travel" at any "speed".
The terms "travel" and "speed" imply the existence of space and time. There must be a distance in space to travel through, if 2 points are not separated by any distance you don't "travel" between them, you are simultaneously in both of them.
And the same about time, the term "speed" implies a measurement of a time interval, since speed will be the distance in space which has been covered divided by that time interval. If 2 events are not separated by any time interval, you can not have any "speed" between them, you experience both of them simultaneously.
For the EM radiation, space distance does not exist, space is shrinked to zero size so all the points which we perceive as being "swept" by a light beam are actually a single point for the radiation itself, all of those spacetime points (which we perceive as being separated by distance) are coexisting "at the same place".
Time too is frozen ( I think that means that rather than being shrinked to zero size it is extended to infinite size, which in fact amounts to much the same as being shrinked to zero size).
All of the events covered by the light beam (what we would picture as a diagonal line in a light-cone diagram) are actually "the same place at the same instant", they coexist. Light would not measure any distance nor time interval between them.
Therefore I would say that the "universe inhabited" by EM radiation is in fact a single point.
Rather than light "travelling at any speed", it's us (matter) that when "sweeping through" that point, from our perspective the point "unfolds" outwards and appears as extended events in spacetime (different places at different times).
All the "different" events along the course of that light-cone line, are just different perspectives of a single event, which shows us a different face as we look at it from different points of our extended spacetime.
The surface of the sun at the moment it emits a photon, the earth 8 minutes
later, alpha-centauri 4 years later ...., all are different faces of a single "thing" (although for what concerns us they are surely and very really different places at different times !) it's just that "what something is to us" may not necessarily be the same as "what it really is" when released free from our material constraints.
It's just our fate that we can not perceive all the faces of the point simultaneously, we are forced to see them one after another, forced to move to a different position in space and time to see a different face, if we are in the earth today looking at the sun, we have no way but to wait at least over 4 years if we want to see the "alpha-centauri face" of this event.
(would this suggest that in fact its the extended universe of matter the one that "travels" through a miriad of "radiation point-like "things" "?)
Gerinski
Aug14-04, 11:11 AM
Originally Posted by DrDaleCoxStudent
As you approach the speed of light time slows down. At the speed of light time stops.
I think you mean, 'as perceived by an observer in one frame, time in a moving frame is slower; however, within your own frame, to you time passes at the rate it always does, no matter what anyone else in other frames perceives' ... or something like that.
I understand this relativity principle between material objects, but I'm not so sure it applies all the same for light itself .... If really so, then I guess all my reasoning above was incorrect and I'm sorry for confusing the subject even more.
But can you please reconfirm ? in the frame of reference of the light itself, space and time look exactly the same as for us? I mean, distances and time intervals have the same extension?
I read things like "it takes no time for light itself to travel between the event "sun at earth's time 2004" and the event "alpha-centauri at earth's time 2008", an hypotetical clock on the light beam would not measure any time interval"
If this is correct, then I guess my previous reasoning still holds
aekanshchumber
Aug17-04, 12:23 PM
look the light answer is that because it is light. but detailed is,as you might know that a photon has zero mass so a a very little energy willaccelerate it and will reach the ultimate speed thats of cource is 'c'.
Prometheus
Aug17-04, 12:43 PM
I read things like "it takes no time for light itself to travel between the event "sun at earth's time 2004" and the event "alpha-centauri at earth's time 2008", an hypotetical clock on the light beam would not measure any time interval"
Light, once emitted, does not age. Once emitted, light does not pass through time. Light involves no motion through time, and all of its motion is constant motion through space. The statement "it takes no time" is a roundabout, and I consider somewhat confusing and misleading, way to make this statement.
Blueplanetbob
Aug17-04, 02:05 PM
I always thought that photons could not travel faster than light speed because the balance of the universe dictated that speed?
Gerinski
Aug17-04, 03:31 PM
Light involves no motion through time, and all of its motion is constant motion through space
Thanks, this seems to support a bit my previous discussion, doesn' it?
Since the light wave is present in several points in spacetime (it's light-cone line), but it involves no motion through time, the term "travelling" does not seem appropiate for what light "does" through our specetime. WE perceive the "timeless" or "coexisting" presence of the light wave in those points as a movement or "travel", because those points appear to us separated in different places and different times.
But regardless of how we perceive it, as for light itself all those points in spacetime might be considered as being "together".
Again it seems to me that a "timeless -or atemporal- presence" is perceived by us as a motion, "at the speed of light".
Thanks so much for this clarifying discussion ! as you can guess I'm just an afficionado, and I always found the issue of the speed of light as one of the most intriguing!
Be careful light does not have a rest frame, consequently statemnts like:"an hypotetical clock on the light beam would not measure any time interval" and "Light, once emitted, does not age", have no meaning in relativity.
aekanshchumber
Aug18-04, 01:00 AM
best possible explanation is,
we know that there is light travels at ultimate speed, the maximum possible speed that could be attained in the universe. when you move past or toward the light you tries calculate the speed of light, which is constant. You are calculating something that happens instantaneously of course the value will be the same 'c'.
Chronos
Aug18-04, 01:15 AM
Apologies for interrupting. jcsd gave the correct explanation.
Chronos
Aug18-04, 01:25 AM
Clarification for bob: if c had an infinite velocity in our reference frame, the universe we observe would instantly collapse. That is what the Maxwell equations demand, and what Einstein realized when he made 'the biggest mistake of his career' by adding the cosmological constant. That Einstein dude turned out to be pretty smart.
Blueplanetbob
Aug18-04, 04:39 AM
I am a bit wary of a cosmological constant. First of all Einstein introduced it because he did not want an expanding universe, then he took it out, now its back again.
Could the electromagnetic force travel at any speed faster than light speed, say 200,000 mps and still keep within the parameters of the energy fluctuations allowed without destroying the balance of the universe?
I am a bit wary of a cosmological constant. First of all Einstein introduced it because he did not want an expanding universe, then he took it out, now its back again.Ah, but look at why it's now back! Because there are good observations which are consistent with cosmological models with this constant in them (OK, it's the other way round, but the observations are what triggered the renewed interest). Also note that it's only one proposed means of accounting for the observations ... you could make a case that it gets more attention than other means because of its pedigree (and you'd've been right in the first few years; now it's possible to argue that it does fit the data better than the alternatives ... stay tuned for another decade or three!)
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