The Binary Monster said:
Surely all the ideas here based on the Planck length and/or Planck time are heavily theoretical?
I tried to think how to answer. Probably there's an easy obvious answer, like Yes, but that didnt seem quite right.
personally I don't think I would base the argument on Planck time and Planck length----the Planck temperature is pretty basic
the Planck speed is c, the speed of light
the other quantities can also be pretty basic in their own categories.
the Planck speed c is a basic speed
the Planck temperature T
P is a basic temp
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I guess it is like this, Monster, when you first go to college you take a Freshman physics course and in that course you meet G, c, hbar, and k.
k is the Boltzmann constant, as in PV = nkT, or any of the other kT formulas.
and the professor's strategy will be to make you do problem after problem using these constants to get the answer. over and over.
use G, use c, use hbar, use k, use G, use c, use ...etc.
after a while it dawns on you, the Freshman, that these are fundamental proportions built into the fabric of nature. they are the keys that unlock the doors. they are the ratios in the laws of nature.
much much later, someone you meet casually on a skiing trip says hey
did you know that if you combine G, c, hbar, and k in the only way that you can which makes a temperature then you get a temperature called Planck temperature which is sort of the hottest things can get?
and you say, cool that reminds me of the speed of light which is sort of the fastest things can get.
you say this is "heavily" theoretical?
I don't know as I would say quite that, it is light and deep at the same time.
and tantalizingly ambiguous too. but the feel is not exactly heavy