swampwiz said:
I had thought of that, but since there is the abstraction of temperature that is necessary for the 2nd law of thermodynamics - as well as for dealing with the plethora of activity that causes heat flow (i.e., kinetics of molecules, quantum mechanics, etc.)
this is about parameters of a bunch of elementary particles and of specific compounds of stuff. what is the fundamental reason to base a unit definition on that?
- temperature is an extraordinarily useful abstraction.
temperature is another way of saying "energy". the only meaning [itex]k_B[/itex] has is to define what your unit of temperature is. [itex]k_B[/itex] can be anything, as long as it's real, positive, and finite.
I just don't see how luminous intensity is all that useful as the abstraction is very simple.
it isn't. it's superfluous. just as [itex]N_A[/itex] and [itex]k_B[/itex] are (or, more fundamentally, the
kelvin and the
mole).
Jasso said:
It is often convenient to make calculations based on intensity instead of temperature. In fact, most non-contact devices which measure temperature first measure intensity and then do a calculation.
And a fundamental unit is one which can only be measured, not derived from another.
well, the mole is measured in a sense. [itex]N_A[/itex] is not known exactly, unless they redefine what a mole is (and they might very well do that within a decade, maybe not). but i am convinced that the mole is a superfluous unit because what it really reflects is a parameter of the
12C atom.
it was defined when it was for SI for the convenience of chemists. it is not a fundamental unit.
As rbj said, the only true fundamental units are time, length, mass, and charge; if a unit can be stated in terms of those four, then it is not fundamental.
i believe that. as dimensions of physical
stuff, i think that time and length and mass are different stuff. but the electrostatic cgs system and i disagree about how fundamental electric charge is. i think it is totally different stuff than the other three base dimensions. but a statcoulomb is derived and equivalent to [itex]\sqrt{\frac{L^3 M}{T^2}}[/itex]. essentially, it defines the Coulomb constant [itex]\frac{1}{4 \pi \epsilon_0}[/itex] to be the dimensionless 1.
but that can also be done to [itex]G[/itex], [itex]\hbar[/itex], [itex]c[/itex], and [itex]k_B[/itex] and then you would have Planck units. so maybe
no fundamental dimensions of physical stuff exist and it's all just pure numbers in physical reality.
but i like to think of time, length, mass, and charge as fundamental and that [itex]4 \pi G[/itex], [itex]\hbar[/itex], [itex]c[/itex], and [itex]\epsilon_0[/itex] (who gives a rat's @ss about [itex]k_B[/itex]?) are all 1 (
rationalized Planck units). makes it kinda hard to develop a varying-G or VSL cosmology, if you think it's operationally meaningless that they vary (the only parameters that matter are dimensionless).