whatzzupboy
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What do the variables M and C reffer to, in the equastion E=MC^2?
The discussion revolves around the interpretation of the variables M and C in Einstein's equation E=mc², specifically focusing on what these symbols represent in the context of physics.
The conversation is ongoing, with various interpretations being explored. Some participants provide definitions and values for C, while others challenge the assumptions made about the equation's application outside conventional contexts. There is no explicit consensus on the interpretations presented.
Participants note the distinction between the speed of light in a vacuum and in other mediums, as well as the relevance of relativistic mass in the context of the equation. Some mention the importance of precision in the values used for C, highlighting the potential for misunderstanding in unit conversions.
whatzzupboy said:ok well I am basing the equastion out side the universe so... what then is C?
irrehaare said:i thought that it depend on the environment where is the light, so the velocity of light in air is different than in water or glass . see more about diffraction of light
whatzzupboy said:ok well I am basing the equastion out side the universe so... what then is C?
whozum said:Outside the universe? Wheres that? Why would there be light there?
whatzzupboy said:ok well I am basing the equastion out side the universe so... what then is C?
Pengwino said:c = the speed of light in a vacuum, ~300,000km/s
Do you know what "~" means?whatzzupboy said:i thought the speed of light was 299,292.6Km/S
HallsofIvy said:You've been told what c is several times now. (And that "out side the universe" makes no sense.)
Did you mean "outside the atmosphere" (i.e. in vacuum) rather than "out side the universe"?
Do you know what "~" means?
xFlankerx said:Owned. But I thought the "C" was the speed of light in meters which would make it ~300,000,000 m/s. What difference does it make? In multipling, you would be multipling by 300,000,000 instead of 300,000.
xFlankerx said:Owned. But I thought the "C" was the speed of light in meters which would make it ~300,000,000 m/s. What difference does it make? In multipling, you would be multipling by 300,000,000 instead of 300,000.
quasar987 said:I suggest you keep you "owned" and "pwned" for yourself. Please.
Btw, I'm not sure I understand your post. When you say "What difference does it make?", are you saking yourself a question and then answering it, or are you really asking that question? Cuz my answer would be: "In so far as every unit system is as good as any other, it makes no difference wheter you take 'c' to be 300,000 km/s, 300,000,000 m/s or 1 M/s, where I have define the lengh 1M to be equivalent to 300,000,000 m (I heard this is what particle physicists use as the unit of length in their calculations)
HallsofIvy said:Oh, dear! I completely missed the "missing" 000!
whatzzupboy said:i thought the speed of light was 299,292.6Km/S
irrehaare said:i thought that it depend on the environment where is the light, so the velocity of light in air is different than in water or glass . see more about diffraction of light