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Encyclopedia :
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Variable speed of light |
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Variable speed of lightA variable speed of light (VSL) is used by VSL cosmologies to explain observations usually explained by the inflationary models, but they can also explain other cosmological problems.[1] A changing speed of light and our current view of relativity are not compatible. VSL cosmologies have to derive relativistic equations with "hard" or "soft" breaks to the basic relativity principle of Lorentz invariance [1] but a recent paper shows that c can vary without violating special or general relativity. [1] VSL theories often distinguish between the speed of light in vacuum and the value of "c" in gravity but consider the ratio of the two important. VSL cosmologies predict a decreasing speed of c. Some researchers have argued that investigating a change in the speed of light ("c") is not as important or direct as studying a change in the fine-structure constant (alpha) because c has dimensions (m/s). They believe only dimensionless constants should be measured and studied for understanding fundamental concepts, but others disagree demonstrating "time dependence of dimensional constants becomes a well defined concept" [1]. The speed of light's units of length/time may be viewed as unitless (but not dimensionless) because the theory of relativity indicates length and time are equivalent concepts in space-time, but in different dimensions. For comparison, space is viewed as 3 dimensions, but is expressed in only one unit. This allows c to be viewed as a constant, man-made conversion factor between seconds and metres. This viewpoint is used in our current definition of a metre which prevents c from ever changing by definition. The VSL hypothesis is controversial, and most scientists do not accept it. Can the speed of light change?In 1983 the metre was defined as the distance light travels in vacuum during a time interval of 1/299,792,458 of a second. This defines the speed of light (referred to as "c" in this article) in a simple vacuum to be exactly 299,792,458 m/s so that it is a constant by definition. A definition of the metre based on time is completely compatible with (if not required by) our current view of relativity. If, in contradiction to the current view of relativity, the speed of light is somehow half as fast tomorrow, then our old rulers will be twice as long as our new definition of distance (note however that no VSL theory claims that such a drastic change might happen). A simple example of a problem relativity has with a change in the speed of light is that if the conservation of energy and relativity hold through the change, then E=mc2 would require the mass of all objects to change. How can a change in c be detected?There are geological (nuclear decay rates) and cosmological observations that indicate c has not changed a measurable amount, but changes in c have wide-ranging effects that may cause the methods of observation to disguise any change in c. Atomic clock readings over the last few decades provide a very direct method of observation and may someday detect a change, but the readings depend on the hyperfine structure which depends on the value of c, so it may not be possible to use atomic clocks to measure a change in c. A 1973 article [1] shows that c could not have changed by more than 0.5% in the past 300 years based on the observations of eclipses of Jupiter's satellite Io. The analysis assumed gravity was not affected by any change in c. For these reasons, unitless natural constants are believed to be more useful in determing if the unit-based constants (like c, h, and G) are changing (see Does the speed of light change in time by Vladimir Dzuba [1]) What if c changes?In relativity, c defines the relationship between metres and seconds, so every measurement that contains units of metres or seconds has the possibility of being affected. Planck units shows the interconnectedness of units and constants. If c changes (outside of the already known variations allowed in quantum theory), then there would be at least a few profound changes to other constants, equations, or ideas. Here are some possibilites:
History and current researchIn the 1930's, Paul Dirac and others began investigating the consequences of natural constants changing with time. For example, Dirac proposed a change of only 5 parts in 10^11 per year of G (in the force of gravity) but Richard Feynman showed in his famous 1961 lectures (vol 1, chapter 7) that geological evidence indicates the gravitational constant most likely could not have changed this much in the past 4 billion years based on geological and solar system observations (although the observations themselves may depend on assumptions about the constant not changing other constants). Interestingly, creation theorists investigated the idea of a changing c in 1987 ( [1] ) and it was mentioned by Marilyn vos Savant in May 22 1988 Parade magazine. Of recent (2001) renewed interest is the possibility that the speed of light is decreasing. The Australian Centre for Astrobiology [1] renewed interest in the constancy of the speed of light after taking measurements that showed the unitless fine-structure constant (alpha) is one millionth larger today than when light left a distant quasar. Paul Davies of the Centre subsequently published that the possible increase in alpha could be due to a decrease in c since in electrostatic cgs units where e is the charge of a proton. If alpha is not changing, other considerations and cosmological observations may prove and proton charge are not changing above some detectable limit which would limit the possible change in c. Experiments that modify cPhotons move at a speed less than c, unless they are travelling in vacuum. This slow-down is considerable in some circumstances (see Light-slowing experiments). On the other hand, there are also some observations of things moving faster than the speed of light; as long as no information is transmitted, this is not in contradiction with the relativity theory. Varying c in quantum theory"Virtual photons" in quantum theory can have any value within the limits of the uncertainty principle as demonstrated in any Feynman diagram that draws a photon at any angle other than 45 degrees. However, these virtual photons are not directly detectable. To quote Richard Feynman "...there is also an amplitude for light to go faster (or slower) than the conventional speed of light. You found out in the last lecture that light doesn't go only in straight lines; now, you find out that it doesn't go only at the speed of light! It may surprise you that there is an amplitude for a photon to go at speeds faster or slower than the conventional speed, c." - Chapter 3, page 89 of Richard Feynman's book "QED". See AlsoExternal links |
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