Originally posted by marcus
Hello dav, I was hoping someone else would reply. I'd like to hear other people's comment on the role of Planck scale in physics
and cosmology...
Since no one else is contributing ideas for describing Planck units I will mention some of mine. It is hard to keep track of them all.
Damgo said something about it in a "dimensionless units" thread---to the effect IIRC that the good thing about working
at the scale c=G=hbar=1 is that you can get used to the scale (it is very different from SI but ultimately not all that hard to use) and then many of the formula's are simpler. Working in Planck actually makes things easier!
I would add Boltzmann k=e=1 to that, why not go all the way with the simplification.
You get a ton of simplifications. But there is an initial shock when you encounter things like E38 length is about a mile (1616 meters) and ice melts at 2E-30 or more precisely 1.93.
So how about calculating the mass of the sun?
A million miles is E44. The sun's mass is simply the square of the Earth's orbit speed times the distance to the sun:
E-8 x 93E44
93E36 on the Planck mass scale.
The NIST fundamental constants website gives the metric equivalents of Planck units so you can always convert---just
doing google[fundamental constants] will usually get me
there. You can see from the NIST site that Planck mass is
21.767 micrograms so our figure for the sun's mass can be
converted to about 22x93E30 grams. But there is no need to
convert to grams except as a check, just keeping it expressed
as 93E36 works fine for many purposes.
As a further example of the simplification that comes about:
The surface gravity at the event horizon of a black hole with mass m is simply the reciprocal of 4m
g = 1/4m
And the Hawking temperature as a function of g is just g divided by 2pi
Temp = g/2π
There are simplifications in a lot of different areas so it is not obvious how to summarize the result of changing over to Planck scale except that there are fun surprises.
As an example of a surprise----the ordinary coulomb constant that tells the force between point charges a certain distance apart just turns out to be alpha (1/137.036...)
I will post a few more later as they occur to me. Anyone else cordially invited to point out some of the good things that happen
with this scale.
Normal Earth gravity is 1.8E-51