prj45
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Can anybody explain it to me?
HallsofIvy said:What exactly is your question? The only answer to the question as you have phrased it is "because that's the way the metre is defined"! If you used some other unit for length, you would get another number. In texts on relativity it is common to assume 1 "light-second" as the unit of length so that the speed of light is 1.
If your question is really "why is the speed of light the same in all frames of reference" I doubt that anyone can give you a simple answer.
HallsofIvy said:What exactly is your question? The only answer to the question as you have phrased it is "because that's the way the metre is defined"! If you used some other unit for length, you would get another number. In texts on relativity it is common to assume 1 "light-second" as the unit of length so that the speed of light is 1.
If your question is really "why is the speed of light the same in all frames of reference" I doubt that anyone can give you a simple answer.
prj45 said:"why is the speed of light the same in all frames of reference"
nope, not that.
OK, why does the speed of light appear to be the speed it is when measured?
What initial condition caused it to be the speed we observe it at, and not 10m/s for instance?
dextercioby said:Because some ignorant sadistic idiots from the Bureau of Sèvres wanted the the change the definition of the meter for the third time in 200 years (1983),but just 22 years after the previous.
Ivan Seeking said:Units of measure aside, the speed of light is determined by the permeability and permittivity constants, which are in turn measures of the electric and magnetic properties of space.
We can scarcely avoid the inference that light consists in the transverse undulations of the same medium which is the cause of electric and magnetic phenomena