phenylalanine
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What gives light its speed? And why does it travel at c, not faster or slower?
The speed of light, denoted as c, is fundamentally determined by the magnetic permeability (\u03bc0) and electric permittivity (\u03b50) of space, which are intrinsic properties of the vacuum. Light travels at approximately 3 x 108 m/s in a vacuum, but this speed decreases in mediums like water due to absorption and re-emission processes. According to Special Relativity, massless particles, such as photons, must travel at this constant speed, which is unique and cannot be surpassed. The underlying reasons for the specific values of these constants remain largely unexplained in contemporary physics.
PREREQUISITESPhysicists, students of physics, and anyone interested in the fundamental properties of light and the constants of the universe.
h8ter said:Personally, I think the velocity of light through space has to do with the rate at which the energy is emitted and absorbed. Like in space, it is emitted and absorbed at a rate that allows it to go 3x10^8~m in one second. This value differs from water. It is emitted and absorbed to a lesser extent which gives it a slower speed. Those are just PERSONAL thoughts. I strongly agree with the magnetic permeability and electric permitivity; I just think it is easily explained through emission and absorption.
phenylalanine said:What gives light its speed? And why does it travel at c, not faster or slower?
These are questions so basic to physics that they may never be literally known. That c has the units of velocity or its current numerical value most probably does not translate to some other regions of infinite space (likewise for other fundamental constants). Isn't it said that physics answers only "how" questions?What gives light its speed? And why does it travel at c, not faster or slower?
I believe you are close to correct.Is it true that light travels slower though a medium because the photons are absorbed and emited?