Speed of Light: Constant or Variable?

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SUMMARY

The speed of light is a constant value of approximately 299,792,458 meters per second in a vacuum, as established by the theory of relativity. However, in mediums such as Bose-Einstein condensates, light can appear to travel at significantly reduced speeds due to interactions with matter, which involves absorption and re-emission processes. This phenomenon does not change the fundamental constant of light speed in a vacuum; rather, it highlights the distinction between light's apparent speed in various materials and its true speed in a vacuum. Understanding this distinction is crucial for discussions in both macro and micro physics.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of Einstein's theory of relativity
  • Familiarity with the concept of Bose-Einstein condensates
  • Basic knowledge of light-matter interactions
  • Awareness of the principles of refraction
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the implications of light speed in different mediums
  • Study the properties and behavior of Bose-Einstein condensates
  • Explore the mathematics behind light refraction and its applications
  • Investigate the relationship between light speed and quantum mechanics
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Physicists, students of physics, and anyone interested in the fundamental principles of light and its behavior in various environments.

wolram
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everywhere i look the statement "the speed of light is constant" is sited, yet in experiments with BOSS EINSTEIN condensates the speed of light has been measured at mere meters per second, this from WIKIPEDIA, so am i missing somthing?
 
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Originally posted by wolram
everywhere i look the statement "the speed of light is constant" is sited, yet in experiments with BOSS EINSTEIN condensates the speed of light has been measured at mere meters per second, this from WIKIPEDIA, so am i missing somthing?
Yes. What you are missing is the other half of the statement.

"The speed of light is constant...IN A VACUUM"
 
Actually what your missin is that the speed of light is constant everywhere. What happens in material is that light interacts with matter, i.e. is absorbed and emitted, making it appear to have slown down, but between those interactions it is still moving at c.
 


Originally posted by russ_watters
Yes. What you are missing is the other half of the statement.

"The speed of light is constant...IN A VACUUM"


uhhh... no. it's the constant everywhere. that's why it's called a "constant".

and it is called the constant (i suppose) because nothing known can travel faster than it.

oh, and "mere meters a second" is technically true, but may be a bit of an understatement.
 


[quotee]Actually what your missin is that the speed of light is constant everywhere. What happens in material is that light interacts with matter, i.e. is absorbed and emitted, making it appear to have slown down, but between those interactions it is still moving at c.[/quote]
Originally posted by maximus
uhhh... no. it's the constant everywhere. that's why it's called a "constant".
Ok, maybe what I used is the high school definition, but its a very common one. Here is a college physics class website that words it that way.

I understand the distinction though.
and it is called the constant (i suppose) because nothing known can travel faster than it.
Well its *A* constant because it never changes. Its constant.

I guess which you use depends on if you are talking macro or microscopically. Relativity or Quantum Mechanics. Thats why while talking about the speed of light in a medium, even though there really is no such thing as "the speed of light through a medium" there is an APPARANT speed of light through a medium - people generally don't make the distinction.
 
off to the T.P. forum this goes!
 
yes it is an understatement maximus, i have seen a report that said,"light stopped in its tracks" aphoton is directed into the condensate and dosent reappear until a second photon is sent in then the firt photon reappears traveling at c, i didnt quote this because i canot recall where i found it, its hard to imagine a photon traveling at c in what is only a tiny volume.
 
The speed of light does depend on what it is traveling through. Thats how you can separate light into its different freqencies.

I've read about them slowing the speed of light to somsething like 38Miles per hour, which is a lot slower than the 3x10^8 m/s that it travels in a vacuum, but I don't know how that fits into everything.
 
Why does refraction occur when light travels from air to a glass block? It is because the speed of light in air and in the glass block is different.
 
  • #10
Kl and Armed, again, it depends on your frame of reference. These other guys are right when in the micro scale - light DOES always travel at C in a vacuum. Light travels from one molecule to the next at C, then is either absorbed and re-emitted or reflected. The effect is that it APPEARS the light has been slowed down.

In the macro scale, it is simply easier to say it has slowed down. The math is much simpler that way.
 

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