hi marcus what does m0 stands for? (in mechanics it usually is the friction parameter i don't there is relation to the hall resistance phenomonon though).
------------------------------
Loop, human notation is influenced by custom, historical accidents and compromise and is sometimes unreasonably awkward
Are you familiar with (and comfortable with) the "coulomb constant" k
Coulomb?
If you are sure about that one, the mu and epsilon can be explained easily.
As you very likely know, the Coulomb constant relates the force and distance between two point charges in the simplest imaginable way
F = k
Coulomb multiplied by QQ'/R
2
The force between the two charges is just equal to the two charges multiplied together and divided by the square of the separation and then multiplied by k
Coulomb.
Well people have the Coulomb constant dressed in some other guises, for slick formula-writing.
k
Coulomb = 1/4pi
e0
e0 = 1/4pi k
Coulomb
m0 = 4pi k
Coulomb/c
2
If people would just use k
Coulomb , or if they pleased, 4pi k
Coulomb , consistently they would not need these epsilon and mu thingees. In some timetested systems of units the epsilon and mu don't exist---no one bothers with them and it works out fine.
The old metric system Gaussian CGS was like that
But in the presentday metric system these epsilon and mu things are dignified with important-sounding names and fervently believed in by engineers---they are called "magnetic constant" and "electric constant"
by the NIST (National Inst. of Standards and Tech.)
MU used to be called "magnetic permeability of the vacuum" but that was just a little too silly for the NIST so they recently started calling it simply "magnetic constant"
And EPSILON used to be called the "electric permittivity of the vacuum" (another styrofoam term) but thankfully the NIST has had the decency to stop using that wording and now simply calls it "electric constant"
http://physics.nist.gov/cgi-bin/cuu/Value?eqrk
or google with keywords [CODATA Klitzing]
In the NIST listing the definition of fine structure const alpha
is
a = e
2/(4pi
e0 hbar c)
That agrees exactly with what you said about 1/alpha.
So the two things are related---but not in a completely simple way. To get from one to the other you need some factors like c, the speed of light, and like epsilon-naught.
Formulas don't always convey physical insight but, for what its worth, here's the connection:
the quantum hall resistance =
m0c/2
a