What would the universe be like if you changed the speed of light?
This is an essay I recently completed on the topic:
If light traveled at a difference speed than 299,792.458 km/s, the universe would be a very different place. Physicists can only hypothesize at what changes would occur in the universe (some feel, for example, that there would be many more black holes) – but it is nearly certain that there would be a much lesser potential of having life on Earth. If the light could only travel half as fast, energy received from the sun would decrease fourfold.
This, however, would only be the case if you changed the speed at which light travels. In actuality, however, the “speed of light” c is not really a measurement; it is a value that describes the relationship between the universe’s change in time and the change in space. More importantly than stating how fast light travels, the speed of light c means that the change in time is exactly equal to the change in space.
If you were to somehow change the speed of light, its role as the absolute measure of speed would remain unaffected. If you were a “God-like observer outside of the universe” (as described by Robert Bristow-Johnson at
www.lns.cornell.edu/spr/2003-11/msg0056602.html), then you would notice the change. If you were to cut the speed of light in half, everything in the universe would move half as fast (and, I think, be only half as big?). From your point of view, a car traveling at 60 mph would instead be moving at 30 mph, and a man of 6 feet and 200 pounds would be 3 feet and 100 pounds. This is assuming (I think?) that the change in the speed of light would not alter any of the other fundamental, dimensionless constants in physics.
To anyone living inside the universe, however, the speed of light would still be c; not c/2. Everything measurable in that perception of reality would have been changed proportionally with the change in c, so nobody would notice any difference. Atoms would be half their “actual” (as far as we know) size. Information would travel half as fast, but across distances that were half as long. The car traveling at 30 mph would not just experience a change in speed, but it would also be only half as big (and be traveling only half as far.) The universe would seem exactly the same to those living within it. To quote an anonymous post from www.physicsforums.com/archive/topic/11694-1.html,[/URL] “Changing a dimensionful number has no meaning [because] our units are defined in terms of the fundamental constants. Change the fundamental constants, and you change the units. But you don’t change the size and shape of the universe; you have only changed the name of your meter stick.”
Meanwhile, the God-like observer looking in on the universe – himself living in an environment with a more absolute reference for length, time, speed, etc. – would see everything in our universe slow down. In debating whether or not such a secondary reality exists, this question ends up being more a discussion of philosophy than physics. In conclusion, however, a change to the speed of light c would not cause any change to the universe in our perception of reality.
Keith Petrower