I did not mean anyone to get the idea that I thought that dimensionless quantities had no meaning.
mfb said:
No. The fine-structure constant, for example, is roughly 1/137. It is a dimensionless number, it has a physical meaning to say "it is smaller than 1".
Well, without knowing that the fine structure constant is what is intended - or a context suggesting that - the number "1/137" has no meaning ... it could be, say, the probability that someone in my household wears a red shirt. "fine structure constant" is the "thing it is a number of" of which I wrote.
Another technological species would get the same
value for Plank's constant too - but they would express it in different actual digits - trivially because they'd use a different system of symbols, and non-trivially because they'd use different units. (They'd also get the same number for the probability of a red shirt ... but only trivially different digits.)
But I think I know what you mean:
You mean that OP needs to realize that the units are also important when it comes to figuring out what the numerical value of a measurement of a physical quantity is telling you - not just it's definition. Students/novices often forget to include the units in their thinking after all.
Indeed - more information even than that may be needed.
i.e. "the probability of an event occurring in a particular time period" may not all that helpful without the time period in question or some idea of how the probability varies with time.
Asking if the fine structure constant could be bigger than 1 is much more profound than asking if the decay constant could be bigger than 1.
The decay constant can be trivially bigger than 1 by choosing different units. But, if it is a probability (asks OP) how can this make sense?
OP
did provide units in several posts though.
iirc: one post asked what a decay constant of "100 per year" could mean (inferring the context: given the definition provided in OP's fact sheet.)
Of course it's meaning is ambiguous in terms of probability - it just means that the mean-life of the state is 1/100 years.
I think the short-direct answer to OPs question is that the fact-sheet definition is, at best, incomplete, and should not be relied upon.
I'd favor that response ... but it would be valid to point out that it is a probability
divided by a time period - not a probability.
I figure you mean to point out that the numerical value depends on the measure used for time.
... sooooo... I figure OPs question is well and truly answered now?