Speed of Light
Speed of Light
Lightspeed redirects here. For other uses, see Speed of spect to any inertial frame is independent of the motion
light (disambiguation) and Lightspeed (disambiguation). of the light source,[4] and explored the consequences of
that postulate by deriving the special theory of relativity
The speed of light in vacuum, commonly denoted c, is and showing that the parameter c had relevance outside
of the context of light and electromagnetism. After cena universal physical constant important in many areas of
physics. Its value is exactly 299,792,458 metres per sec- turies of increasingly precise measurements, in 1975 the
speed of light was known to be 299792458 m/s with a
ond, as the length of the metre is dened from this con[1]
stant and the international standard for time. According measurement uncertainty of 4 parts per billion. In 1983,
to special relativity, c is the maximum speed at which all the metre was redened in the International System of
matter and information in the universe can travel. It is Units (SI) as the distance travelled by light in vacuum in
the speed at which all massless particles and changes of 1/299,792,458 of a second. As a result, the numerical
is now xed exactly by
the associated elds (including electromagnetic radiation value of c in metres per second
[5]
the
denition
of
the
metre.
such as light and gravitational waves) travel in vacuum.
Such particles and waves travel at c regardless of the motion of the source or the inertial frame of reference of
the observer. In the theory of relativity, c interrelates
space and time, and also appears in the famous equation
of massenergy equivalence E = mc2 .[2]
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
c
Special relativity has many counterintuitive and experimentally veried implications.[19] These include the
equivalence of mass and energy (E = mc2 ), length contraction (moving objects shorten),[Note 4] and time dilation (moving clocks run more slowly). The factor by
3
tial movement of the spot is delayed because of the time
it takes light to get to the distant object at the speed c.
However, the only physical entities that are moving are
the laser and its emitted light, which travels at the speed
c from the laser to the various positions of the spot. Similarly, a shadow projected onto a distant object can be
made to move faster than c, after a delay in time.[38]
In neither case does any matter, energy, or information
travel faster than light.[39]
The rate of change in the distance between two objects
in a frame of reference with respect to which both are
moving (their closing speed) may have a value in excess
of c. However, this does not represent the speed of any
single object as measured in a single inertial frame.[39]
Faster-than-light
and experiments
observations
Certain quantum eects appear to be transmitted instantaneously and therefore faster than c, as in the EPR paradox. An example involves the quantum states of two particles that can be entangled. Until either of the particles
is observed, they exist in a superposition of two quantum
states. If the particles are separated and one particles
quantum state is observed, the other particles quantum
state is determined instantaneously (i.e., faster than light
could travel from one particle to the other). However,
it is impossible to control which quantum state the rst
particle will take on when it is observed, so information
cannot be transmitted in this manner.[39][40]
Another quantum eect that predicts the occurrence of
faster-than-light speeds is called the Hartman eect; under certain conditions the time needed for a virtual particle to tunnel through a barrier is constant, regardless
of the thickness of the barrier.[41][42] This could result
in a virtual particle crossing a large gap faster-than-light.
However, no information can be sent using this eect.[43]
So-called superluminal motion is seen in certain astronomical objects,[44] such as the relativistic jets of radio
galaxies and quasars. However, these jets are not moving
at speeds in excess of the speed of light: the apparent superluminal motion is a projection eect caused by objects
moving near the speed of light and approaching Earth at
a small angle to the line of sight: since the light which
was emitted when the jet was farther away took longer to
reach the Earth, the time between two successive observations corresponds to a longer time between the instants
at which the light rays were emitted.[45]
In models of the expanding universe, the farther galaxies are from each other, the faster they drift apart. This
receding is not due to motion through space, but rather
to the expansion of space itself.[39] For example, galaxies far away from Earth appear to be moving away from
the Earth with a speed proportional to their distances.
Beyond a boundary called the Hubble sphere, the rate
at which their distance from Earth increases becomes
greater than the speed of light.[46]
Propagation of light
4.1
PROPAGATION OF LIGHT
In a medium
The blue dot moves at the speed of the ripples, the phase velocity;
the green dot moves with the speed of the envelope, the group
velocity; and the red dot moves with the speed of the foremost
part of the pulse, the front velocity
fractive index. The refractive index of a material is dened as the ratio of c to the phase velocity v in the material: larger indices of refraction indicate lower speeds.
The refractive index of a material may depend on the
lights frequency, intensity, polarization, or direction of
propagation; in many cases, though, it can be treated as
a material-dependent constant. The refractive index of
air is approximately 1.0003.[54] Denser media, such as
water,[55] glass,[56] and diamond,[57] have refractive indexes of around 1.3, 1.5 and 2.4, respectively, for visible
light. In exotic materials like BoseEinstein condensates
near absolute zero, the eective speed of light may be
only a few metres per second. However, this represents
absorption and re-radiation delay between atoms, as do
all slower-than-c speeds in material substances. As an
extreme example of this, light slowing in matter, two
independent teams of physicists claimed to bring light
to a complete standstill by passing it through a Bose
Einstein Condensate of the element rubidium, one team
at Harvard University and the Rowland Institute for Science in Cambridge, Mass., and the other at the Harvard
Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, also in Cambridge.
However, the popular description of light being stopped
in these experiments refers only to light being stored in
the excited states of atoms, then re-emitted at an arbitrarily later time, as stimulated by a second laser pulse.
During the time it had stopped, it had ceased to be
light. This type of behaviour is generally microscopically
true of all transparent media which slow the speed of
light.[58]
5.3
5
to travel half the globe along the surface is about 67
milliseconds. When light is travelling around the globe
in an optical bre, the actual transit time is longer, in
part because the speed of light is slower by about 35%
in an optical bre, depending on its refractive index
n.[69] Furthermore, straight lines rarely occur in global
communications situations, and delays are created when
the signal passes through an electronic switch or signal
regenerator.[70]
Similarly, communications between the Earth and spacecraft are not instantaneous. There is a brief delay from
the source to the receiver, which becomes more noticeable as distances increase. This delay was signicant for
communications between ground control and Apollo 8
when it became the rst manned spacecraft to orbit the
Moon: for every question, the ground control station had
to wait at least three seconds for the answer to arrive.[71]
The communications delay between Earth and Mars can
vary between ve and twenty minutes depending upon the
relative positions of the two planets. As a consequence of
this, if a robot on the surface of Mars were to encounter
a problem, its human controllers would not be aware of it
until at least ve minutes later, and possibly up to twenty
minutes later; it would then take a further ve to twenty
minutes for instructions to travel from Earth to Mars.
5.2
Astronomical distances are sometimes expressed in lightFor example, given the equatorial circumference of the years, especially in popular science publications and
Earth is about 40,075 km and c about 300,000 km/s, media.[74] A light-year is the distance light travels in one
the theoretical shortest time for a piece of information year, around 9461 billion kilometres, 5879 billion miles,
MEASUREMENT
or 0.3066 parsecs. In round gures, a light year is nearly of the speed of light yield an accurate realization of the
10 trillion kilometres or nearly 6 trillion miles. Proxima metre rather than an accurate value of c.
Centauri, the closest star to Earth after the Sun, is around
4.2 light-years away.[75]
5.4
Distance measurement
Earth
Earth
Earth
Sun
Jupiter
Sun
Jupiter
Sun
Jupiter
Sun
Jupiter
Earth
Time
Time of eclipse if observed from Sun
5.5
High-frequency trading
The speed of light has become important in highfrequency trading, where traders seek to gain minute advantages by delivering their trades to exchanges fractions
of a second ahead of other traders. For example traders
have been switching to microwave communications between trading hubs, because of the advantage which microwaves travelling at near to the speed of light in air,
have over bre optic signals which travel 3040% slower
at the speed of light through glass.[79]
Measurement
Jupiter-Sun
Earth-Jupiter
Earth-Sun
40
50
60
70
80
90 100 110 120 130 140 150 160 170 180 190 200 210 220 230 240 250 260 270 280 290 300 310 320 330 340 350
Angle swept by Earth-Sun line relative to Jupiter-Sun line in degrees
6.2
Source
Apparent
Source
7
Astronomical Union (IAU), was:[88][89]
light
time
for
499.004783836(10) s
unit
c = 0.00200398880410(4)
173.144632674(3) AU/day.
distance:
AU/s
6.1.1
Astronomical unit
MEASUREMENT
angle, the known speed of rotation and the distance to the modes of microwaves of a microwave cavity of precisely
distant mirror the speed of light may be calculated.[92]
known dimensions. The dimensions were established to
0.8 m using gauges calibrated
Nowadays, using oscilloscopes with time resolutions an accuracy of about
[96]
As
the wavelength of the modes
by
interferometry.
of less than one nanosecond, the speed of light can
was
known
from
the
geometry
of the cavity and from
be directly measured by timing the delay of a light
electromagnetic
theory,
knowledge
of the associated frepulse from a laser or an LED reected from a mirror.
quencies
enabled
a
calculation
of
the
speed of light.[96][98]
This method is less precise (with errors of the order of
1%) than other modern techniques, but it is sometimes The EssenGordon-Smith result, 2997929 km/s, was
used as a laboratory experiment in college physics substantially more precise than those found by optical
classes.[93][94][95]
techniques.[96] By 1950, repeated measurements by Essen established a result of 299792.53.0 km/s.[99]
6.3
Electromagnetic constants
6.4
Cavity resonance
Interferometry
/4
3/2
/2
7.2
sure the frequency of the light. One way around this problem is to start with a low frequency signal of which the frequency can be precisely measured, and from this signal
progressively synthesize higher frequency signals whose
frequency can then be linked to the original signal. A
laser can then be locked to the frequency, and its wavelength can be determined using interferometry.[104] This
technique was due to a group at the National Bureau of
Standards (NBS) (which later became NIST). They used
it in 1972 to measure the speed of light in vacuum with a
fractional uncertainty of 3.5109 .[104][105]
History
9
backed by the writing of Alhazen and Aristotle.[116][117]
In the 1270s, Witelo considered the possibility of light
travelling at innite speed in vacuum, but slowing down
in denser bodies.[118]
In the early 17th century, Johannes Kepler believed that
the speed of light was innite, since empty space presents
no obstacle to it. Ren Descartes argued that if the speed
of light were nite, the Sun, Earth, and Moon would be
noticeably out of alignment during a lunar eclipse. Since
such misalignment had not been observed, Descartes concluded the speed of light was innite. Descartes speculated that if the speed of light were found to be nite, his
whole system of philosophy might be demolished.[109] In
Descartes derivation of Snells law, he assumed that even
though the speed of light was instantaneous, the more
dense the medium, the faster was lights speed.[119] Pierre
de Fermat derived Snells law using the opposing assumption, the more dense the medium the slower light traveled. Fermat also argued in support of a nite speed of
light.[120]
10
HISTORY
ing a Leyden jar, and found that its numerical value was
very close to the speed of light as measured directly by
Fizeau. The following year Gustav Kirchho calculated
that an electric signal in a resistanceless wire travels along
the wire at this speed.[124] In the early 1860s, Maxwell
showed that, according to the theory of electromagnetism
he was working on, electromagnetic waves propagate in
empty space[125][126][127] at a speed equal to the above
Weber/Kohrausch ratio, and drawing attention to the numerical proximity of this value to the speed of light as
measured by Fizeau, he proposed that light is in fact an
electromagnetic wave.[128]
7.7
7.5
Special relativity
7.6
11
et Mesures (CGPM) in 1975 recommended using the
value 299792458 m/s for the speed of light.[137]
8 See also
Light-second
9 Notes
[1] Exact value: (299792458 60 60 24 /
149597870700) AU/day
[2] The speed of light in imperial units and US units is based
on an inch of exactly 2.54 cm and is exactly 186,282 miles,
698 yards, 2 feet, and 5 21/127 inches per second.[12]
[3] However, the frequency of light can depend on the motion
of the source relative to the observer, due to the Doppler
eect.
[4] Whereas moving objects are measured to be shorter along
the line of relative motion, they are also seen as being rotated. This eect, known as Terrell rotation, is due to the
12
10
10
References
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[91] Gibbs, P (1997). How is the speed of light measured?". [104] Sullivan, DB (2001). Speed of Light from Direct FreUsenet Physics FAQ. University of California, Riverside.
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[123] Newton, I (1704). Prop. XI. Optiks. The text of Prop.
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[107] Michelson, A. A. (1927). Measurement of the Veeditions.
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[108] Sarton, G (1993). Ancient science through the golden age
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[110] Gross, CG (1999).
The Fire That Comes
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[129] Michelson, AA; Morley, EW (1887). "On the Relative Motion of the Earth and the Luminiferous
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12.
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[117] Lindberg, DC (1974). Late Thirteenth-Century Synthesis in Optics. In Edward Grant. A source book in me- [135] Resolution 6 of the 15th CGPM. BIPM. 1967. Retrieved 2010-10-13.
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978-0-674-82360-0.
[136] Barger, R.; Hall, J. (1973).
Wavelength
of
the
3.39-m
laser-saturated
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[118] Marshall, P (1981). Nicole Oresme on the Nature, Reline of methane.
Applied Physics Letters 22
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Bibcode:1973ApPhL..22..196B.
(4):
196.
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[119] Florian Cajori, A History of Physics in its Elementary
Branches: Including the Evolution of Physical Laborato- [137] Resolution 2 of the 15th CGPM. BIPM. 1975. Retrieved 2009-09-09.
ries (1922)
11.2
Modern references
17
[138] Taylor, EF; Wheeler, JA (1992). Spacetime Physics: Introduction to Special Relativity (2nd ed.). Macmillan. ISBN
0-7167-2327-1.
a Partial Vacuum.
Astrophysical Journal
82:
2661.
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doi:10.1086/143655.
Newcomb,
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Nature 34 (863):
29
32.
Bibcode:1886Natur..34...29..
doi:10.1038/034029c0.
11
11.1
Further reading
Historical references
Perrotin, J (1900). Sur la vitesse de la lumire. Comptes rendus de l'Acadmie des sciences
(in French) 131: 7314.
12 External links
Test Light Speed in Mile Long Vacuum Tube.
Popular Science Monthly, September 1930, p. 17
18.
Denition of the metre (International Bureau of
Weights and Measures, BIPM)
Speed of light in vacuum (National Institute of Standards and Technology, NIST)
Data Gallery: Michelson Speed of Light (Univariate Location Estimation) (download data gathered
by Albert A. Michelson)
Subluminal (Java applet demonstrating group velocity information limits)
18
De Mora Luminis at MathPages
Light discussion on adding velocities
Speed of Light (University of Colorado Department
of Physics)
c: Speed of Light (Sixty Symbols, University of
Nottingham Department of Physics [video])
Usenet Physics FAQ
Speed of light illustration (Speed of light as LiveCounter)
12
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