Science  People  Locations  Timeline
Index: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Home > Speed of light


 Contents
frame Cherenkov effect in a "swimming pool" nuclear reactor. The effect is due to electrons moving faster than the speed at which light moves in water.

The speed of light (denoted as c, reputedly from the Latin celeritas, "speed", and also known as Einstein's constant) in a vacuum is exactly equal to 299,792,458  metres per second (approximately 186,282.4  miles per second). The carrier particle of light is the photon. This exact speed is a definition, not a measurement, as the metre is defined in terms of the speed of light and the second. The speed of light through a medium (that is, not in vacuum) is less than c (defining the refractive index of the medium). "Speed of light" is sometimes abbreviated SOL.

1 Overview

According to standard modern physical theory, all electromagnetic radiationElectromagnetic radiation is a combination of oscillating electric and magnetic fields in perpendicular orientation to each other, moving through space, effectively transporting energy from one place to another. Visible light is a form of electromagnetic, including visible light, propagates (or moves) at a constant speed in vacuo, commonly known as the speed of light, which is a physical constantIn science, a physical constant is a physical quantity whose numerical value does not change. It can be contrasted with a mathematical constant, which is a fixed value that does not directly involve a physical measurement. There are many physical constant denoted as c. This speed c is also the speed of propagation of gravityThis article covers the physics of gravitation. See also gravity (disambiguation). Gravitation is the tendency of masses to move toward each other. The first mathematical formulation of the theory of gravitation was made by Sir Isaac Newton and proved ast in the theory of general relativityGeneral relativity (GR or general relativity theory (GRT is the theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915. The conceptual core of general relativity, from which its other consequences largely follow, is the Principle of Equivalence which.

One consequence of the laws of electromagnetism (such as Maxwell's equationsMaxwell's equations are the set of four equations, attributed to James Clerk Maxwell, that describe the behavior of both the electric and magnetic fields, as well as their interactions with matter. Introduction Maxwell's four equations express, respective) is that the speed c of electromagnetic radiation does not depend on the velocity of the object emitting the radiation; thus for instance the light emitted from a rapidly moving light source would travel at the same speed as the light coming from a stationary light source (although the colour, frequency, energy, and momentum of the light will be shifted, thanks to the Doppler effectThe Doppler effect is the apparent change in frequency or wavelength of a wave that is perceived by an observer moving relative to the source of the waves. For waves, such as sound waves, that propagate in a wave medium, the velocity of the observer and t). If one combines this observation with the principle of relativityIn general, the principle of relativity is the requirement that the laws of physics be the same for all observers. Somewhat more particularly, the measurements an observer makes in his frame of reference of an important event are related in a particular w, one concludes that all observers will measure the speed of light in vacuum as being the same, regardless of the reference frame of the observer or the velocity of the object emitting the light. Because of this, one can view c as a fundamental physical constant. This fact can then be used as a basis for the theory of special relativity. It is worth noting that it is the constant speed c, rather than light itself, which is fundamental to special relativity; thus if light is somehow slowed to travel at less than c, this will not directly affect the theory of special relativity.

Observers travelling at large velocities will find that distances and times are distorted ("dilated") in accordance with the Lorentz transforms; however, the transforms distort times and distances in such a way that the speed of light remains constant. A person travelling near the speed of light would also find that colours of lights ahead were blue shifted and those of those behind were red shifted.

If information could travel faster than c in one reference frame, causality would be violated: in some other reference frames, the information would be received before it had been sent, so the 'cause' could be observed after the 'effect'. Due to special relativity's time dilation, the ratio between an external observer's perceived time and the time perceived by an observer moving closer and closer to the speed of light approaches zero. If something could move faster than light, this ratio would not be a real number. Such a violation of causality has never been observed.

A light cone defines locations that are in causal contact and those that are not.

To put it another way, information propagates to and from a point from regions defined by a light cone. The interval AB in the diagram to the right is ' time-like' (that is, there is a frame of reference in which event A and event B occur at the same location in space, separated only by their occurring at different times, and if A precedes B in that frame then A precedes B in all frames: there is no frame of reference in which event A and event B occur simultaneously). Thus, it is hypothetically possible for matter (or information) to travel from A to B, so there can be a causal relationship (with A the 'cause' and B the 'effect').

On the other hand, the interval AC in the diagram to the right is ' space-like' (that is, there is a frame of reference in which event A and event C occur simultaneously, separated only in space; see simultaneity). However, there are also frames in which A precedes C (as shown) or in which C precedes A. Barring some way of travelling faster than light, it is not possible for any matter (or information) to travel from A to C or from C to A. Thus there is no causal connection between A and C.

According to the currently prevailing definition, adopted in 1983, the speed of light is exactly 299,792,458 metres per second. This is approximately 3 × 108 metres per second, that is, about thirty  centimetres (12  inches) per nanosecond. The value of defines the

permittivity of free space () and the permeability of free space () in SI units as:
.

These constants appear in Maxwell's equations, which describe electromagnetism, and are related by:

Astronomical distances are sometimes measured in light years (the distance that light would travel in one year, roughly 9.46 × 1012 kilometres or about 5.88 × 1012 miles) especially in popularised texts.

Read more »

Non User