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In [[physics]], the '''speed of light''' in [[Vacuum (science)|vacuum]], commonly denoted by ''c'', is seen as one of the fundamental constants of nature.  The main postulate of [[special relativity]] asserts that the velocity of light is independent of the motion of the light source; the speed of light is the same in any [[inertial frame]] (coordinate system moving with constant velocity with respect to the universe as a whole), irrespective of whether the light is emitted by a body in uniform motion or by a body at rest.
In [[physics]], the '''speed of light''' in [[Vacuum (science)|vacuum]], commonly denoted by ''c'', is seen as one of the fundamental constants of nature.  The main postulate of [[special relativity]] asserts that the speed of light is independent of the motion of the light source; the speed of light is the same in any [[Inertial frame of reference|inertial frame]] (coordinate system moving with constant velocity with respect to the universe as a whole), irrespective of whether the light is emitted by a body in uniform motion or by a body at rest.


Like any theory, special relativity has been subject to experimental test, and agrees with observations to the accuracy attainable up to the present. Some aspects of the theory are not directly measurable, so its validity is based upon those predictions that can be checked. For example, the [[Michelson-Morely experiment]] measures the two-way speed of light, not the one-way speed of light.
In addition, in special relativity the speed of light is the limiting speed for transfer of information, and no causal effect may travel faster than the speed of light.<ref name=Penrose>
 
For further discussion , see {{cite book |title=Shadows of the mind: a search for the missing science of consciousness |author=Roger Penrose |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=gDbOAK89tmcC&pg=PA220 |pages= pp. 220 ''ff'' |isbn=0195106466 |year=1996 |publisher=Oxford University Press}}
 
</ref>
 
Like any theory, special relativity has been subject to experimental test, and agrees with observations to the accuracy attainable up to the present. Some aspects of the theory are not directly measurable, so its validity is based upon those predictions that can be checked. For example, the [[Michelson-Morely experiment]] measures the two-way speed of light, not the one-way speed of light.<ref name=Bohm>
 
For a discussion of the experimental verification of the special theory, see for example {{cite book |title=The special theory of relativity |author=David Bohm |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=45NsN-k9jWgC&pg=PA83 |pages=pp. 83 ''ff'' |chapter=Chapter XXII: Experimental evidence for special relativity |isbn=041514809X |year=1996 |edition=2nd ed |publisher=Psychology Press}}
 
</ref>  Some other properties of the speed of light in vacuum that are supported by experiment to date are: propagation is the same in all directions ([[isotropy]]); independent of polarization (no [[dichroism]]); independent of field strength (magnitude of the associated electric and magnetic fields); and independent of the frequency (color) of the light (no [[dispersion]]).
 
No theory to date can ''predict'' the speed of light from other considerations.


==History==
==History==
[[Galileo Galilei]] suspected that light has a finite velocity and  claimed that he tried in vain to measure it. About forty years later, in 1675,  the Danish atronomer [[Ole Christensen Rømer|Rømer]] estimated that it takes about 11 minutes (660 seconds) for light to travel from the Sun to the Earth. He could make this estimate by observing eclipses of the first satellite of the planet [[Jupiter]]. A few years earlier [[Giovanni Domenico Cassini|Cassini]] had deduced from observations of Mars that the distance from Sun to Earth was about 139&sdot;10<sup>6</sup> km, so that the speed of light was estimated to be 2.1&sdot;10<sup>8</sup> m/s, which is about 30% lower than the modern value. Later Rømer's value was refined, by similar astronomical observations,  to 499 seconds. In 1849 [[Hippolyte Louis Fizeau|Fizeau]] determined by Earth-bound experiments that ''c'' is 3.15&sdot;10<sup>8</sup> m/s. Modern work brought this value down to just under 3&sdot;10<sup>8</sup> m/s.
{{Image|Fizeau apparatus.PNG|right|250px|The Fizeau apparatus for measuring the speed of light by passing it between the teeth of a rotating cog and reflecting it back through adjacent teeth.}}
{{Image|Waves in a box.PNG|right|250px|The wavelengths of standing waves in a box that have zero amplitude (nodes) at the walls.}}
[[Galileo Galilei]] suspected that light has a finite velocity and  claimed that he tried in vain to measure it. About forty years later, in 1675,  the Danish atronomer [[Ole Christensen Rømer|Rømer]] estimated that it takes about 11 minutes (660 seconds) for light to travel from the Sun to the Earth. He could make this estimate by observing eclipses of the first satellite of the planet [[Jupiter]]. A few years earlier [[Giovanni Domenico Cassini|Cassini]] had deduced from observations of Mars that the distance from Sun to Earth was about 139&sdot;10<sup>6</sup> km, so that the speed of light was estimated to be 2.1&sdot;10<sup>8</sup> m/s, which is about 30% lower than the modern value. Later Rømer's value was refined, by similar astronomical observations,  to 499 seconds. In 1849 [[Hippolyte Louis Fizeau|Fizeau]] determined by Earth-bound experiments that ''c'' is 3.15&sdot;10<sup>8</sup> m/s.  
 
Modern work brought this value down to just under 3&sdot;10<sup>8</sup> m/s. In particular, measurements of the [[resonant frequency|resonant frequencies]] of cavities with dimensions a known number of wavelengths, and the relation ''c=λf'' relating wavelength and frequency to the speed of light resulted in {{nowrap|''c'' <nowiki>=</nowiki> 299,792.5±3 km/s}} in 1950.<ref name=Essen> See {{cite journal |title=The velocity of propagation of electromagnetic waves derived from the resonant frequencies of a cylindrical cavity resonator |author=L Essen |journal=Proc. Royal Soc. London |volume=vol. 204 |issue=No. 1077 |pages=pp. 260-277 |date=Dec. 17, 1950 |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/98433 }}
 
</ref> As shown in the figure, the wavelength of waves in a box that are forced to have zero amplitude at the walls can have only values that are multiples of a half-wavelength. For microwaves, zero amplitude at the walls results because the electromagnetic fields associated with the wave cannot penetrate a metal wall, so the light intensity inside the wall is zero. Naturally, such walls are an idealization and real walls will permit some slight penetration (for example, the [[skin effect]]).
 
In any event, with the imposition of a condition for nodes at the walls, allowed wavelengths can adopt only restricted values. Because wavelength ''&lambda;'' (determining the spatial behavior) and frequency ''f'' (determining the time dependence of the wave) are related to the speed ''c'' (at which the wave would propagate if it were free, and not in a box) as ''&lambda;=c/f'', the frequencies also have only discrete values. By choosing the wavelength by specifying the dimensions of the box, and by measuring the associated frequency, a value for ''c=λf'' is found.
 
A brief history of later developments is found in Sullivan.<ref name=Sullivan>
 
{{cite web |title=Speed of light from direct frequency and wavelength measurements |url=http://nvl.nist.gov/pub/nistpubs/sp958-lide/191-193.pdf |publisher=NIST |author=Donald B Sullivan |year=circa 1991}}
</ref>


==Relation to the metre==
==Relation to the metre==
The universality of speed of light in vacuum, and its propagation being independent of complications like dichroism, anisotropy, dispersion and nonlinearity meant that all observers readily could measure lengths using the ''transit time of light''. In 1975 the 15th CGPM (Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures, General Conference on Weights and Measures)<ref>[http://www.bipm.org/utils/common/pdf/si_brochure_8_en.pdf Bureau International des Poids et Mesures] (Brochure on SI units, 8th ed.; pdf page 65, paper page 157) From the website of the [[Bureau International des Poids et Mesures]]</ref> recommended a ''defined'' speed of light in the [[SI units|SI system of units]]:  
''See also the discussion at [[Metre (unit)|metre]].''
 
The universality of speed of light in vacuum, and its propagation being independent of complications like dichroism, anisotropy, dispersion and nonlinearity meant that all observers readily could measure lengths using the ''transit time of light''. In 1975 the 15th CGPM ([[Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures]], General Conference on Weights and Measures)<ref>[http://www.bipm.org/utils/common/pdf/si_brochure_8_en.pdf Bureau International des Poids et Mesures] (Brochure on SI units, 8th ed.; pdf page 65, paper page 157) From the website of the [[Bureau International des Poids et Mesures]]</ref> recommended a ''defined'' speed of light in the [[SI units|SI system of units]]:  
 
:  {{nowrap|''c'' &equiv; 299&thinsp;792&thinsp;458 m/s}} (exactly), where 'm' = [[Metre (unit)|metre]], 's' =  [[Second (physics)|second]],
 
which is, of course, the same thing as stating the [[Metre (unit)|metre]] is traversed with the transit time of {{nowrap|1/299&thinsp;792&thinsp;458 [[second|s]].}}<ref name=second>
 
The second was considered known to an uncertainty of 1 part in 10<sup>14</sup> by the cesium clock, while the wavelength of the standard HeNe source was known only to a larger relative uncertainty of ±2.5 × 10<sup>−11</sup>. With ''length'' = ''ct'' and ''c'' a fixed constant, the length uncertainty could be brought closer to the time uncertainty. For an historical discussion of time and length metrology, see the Nobel lecture {{cite journal |title=Nobel lecture: Defining and measuring optical frequencies |author=John L Hall |journal=Rev Mod Phys |url=http://prl.aps.org/files/RevModPhys.78.1279.pdf |date=Nov. 17, 2006 |volume=vol 78 |issue=No. 4  |pages=pp. 1279-1295 |doi=10.1103/RevModPhys.78.1279}}


:  ''c'' &equiv; 299&thinsp;792&thinsp;458 m/s (exactly), where 'm' = [[metre]], 's' =  [[second]],
</ref>


which is, of course, the same thing as stating the metre is traversed with the transit time of 1/299&thinsp;792&thinsp;458 [[second|s]]. The numerical value for ''c'' in principle could be chosen to be any numerical value whatsoever, because a change in value simply corresponds to a different choice for the length of the metre, which is an arbitrary unit selected by international convention.<ref name=convention>
The numerical value for ''c'' in principle could be chosen to be any numerical value whatsoever, because a change in the defined value of ''c'' corresponds simply to a different choice for the time-of-flight (1&nbsp;m)/''c'' to traverse the metre, and thus traversal of a different length, and thus a standard metre of different length. The length of the standard metre, of course, is an arbitrary unit selected by international convention,<ref name=convention>  


The article [[Metre (unit)|metre]] describes several of these arbitrary definitions, including the 1791 definition as 1/10 000 000 of the length of the meridian of Paris from the north pole to the equator.
The article [[Metre (unit)|metre]] describes several of these arbitrary definitions, including the 1791 definition as 1/10 000 000 of the length of the meridian of Paris from the north pole to the equator.


</ref> A few years later (at the 17th CGPM in 1983)<ref>[http://www.bipm.org/en/CGPM/db/17/1/ Resolution 1], 17th&nbsp;Meeting of the [[General Conference on Weights and Measures]], 1983.</ref> this suggestion was adopted, and the [[Metre (unit)|metre]] was redefined as the length of the path traveled by light in vacuum during a time interval of 1/''c'' of a [[second]], and the notation ''c<sub>0</sub>'' suggested for the defined value of the speed of light in vacuum.<ref name=BIPM>
</ref> and likewise for the choice for the standard time-of-flight (1&nbsp;m)/''c''.
 
A few years later<ref name=BIPM1983>
 
{{cite web |url=http://www.bipm.org/en/CGPM/db/17/1/ |title=Resolution 1 of the 17th meeting of the Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures (CGPM)(1983)|work=1983 definition of the metre |publisher=BIPM |accessdate=2011-03-19}}
 
</ref> this suggestion was adopted, and the [[Metre (unit)|metre]] was redefined as the length of the path traveled by light in vacuum during a time interval of (1&nbsp;m)/''c'' of a [[second]], and the notation ''c<sub>0</sub>'' suggested for the defined value of the speed of light in vacuum.<ref name=BIPM>


See, for example, [http://www.bipm.org/en/si/base_units/metre.html the official definition] and the [[BIPM]] brochure on the SI units:  [http://www.bipm.org/utils/common/pdf/si_brochure_8_en.pdf ''The International System of Units''] §2.1.1 Unit of length (metre), page 112, 8th edition of 2006.
See, for example, [http://www.bipm.org/en/si/base_units/metre.html the official definition] and the [[BIPM]] brochure on the SI units:  [http://www.bipm.org/utils/common/pdf/si_brochure_8_en.pdf ''The International System of Units''] §2.1.1 Unit of length (metre), page 112, 8th edition of 2006.


</ref> The value for ''c<sub>0</sub>'' was selected to correspond well with the measured speed of light using the then standard metre defined in terms of a wavelength of krypton-86 radiation. That choice was made to limit any dislocation in switching to the new international standard of length. Reference was made to commonly employed methods and corrections to insure measured transit times in real media could be adjusted to refer to [[Classical_vacuum#Classical_case|classical vacuum]].
</ref><ref name= NIST>
[[NIST]] officially suggests using ''c<sub>0</sub>'' in its documentation, but uses both ''c'' and ''c<sub>0</sub>'' on its web site. See {{cite web |title=Fundamental physical constants, speed of light in vacuum: ''c, c<sub>0</sub>'' |url=http://physics.nist.gov/cgi-bin/cuu/Value?c|search_for=speed+of+light |accessdate=2011-09-04 |publisher=NIST}}
</ref> The value for ''c<sub>0</sub>'' was selected to correspond well with the measured speed of light using the then standard metre defined in terms of a wavelength of krypton-86 radiation. That choice was made to limit any dislocation in switching to the new international standard of length. Reference was made to commonly employed methods and corrections to insure measured transit times in real media could be adjusted to refer to [[Classical_vacuum#Classical_case|classical vacuum]].<ref name=imperfections>
 
The precise wording of the [http://www.bipm.org/utils/common/pdf/si_brochure_8_en.pdf SI brochure] is (p. 167) "that in all cases the necessary corrections be applied to take account of actual conditions such as diffraction, gravitation, or imperfection in the vacuum." and also, regarding the use of accepted frequencies of radiation in the approach to the metre using wavelengths with {{nowrap|''&lambda; <nowiki>=</nowiki> c<sub>0</sub>'' /''f'',}} "provided that the given specifications and accepted good practice are followed".
 
</ref>
 
As an aside, it may be noted that a wavelength of light is traversed in a time 1/''f'', where ''f'' is the frequency of the light. As a consequence of the transit time definition, the wavelength of light of frequency ''f'' in metres is now {{nowrap|''&lambda; <nowiki>=</nowiki>  c<sub>0</sub>'' /''f''}} in [[classical vacuum]].
 
In  1968, the second  was defined as the duration of {{nowrap|9&thinsp;192&thinsp;631&thinsp;770}} periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium-133 atom.<ref name=BIPM1968>


In  1968, the second  was defined as the duration of 9&thinsp;192&thinsp;631&thinsp;770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium-133 atom. Greater precision in time determinations became possible with the development of [[microwave]] and [[laser]] optics, allowing extension of time measurements to higher frequency transitions in the optical regime. Comparison of lengths by comparing their transit times is now far more accurate than methods based upon counting wavelengths.
{{cite web |url=http://www.bipm.org/en/CGPM/db/13/1/ |title=Resolution 1 of the 13th meeting of the Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures (CGPM) (1967/68)|work=1968 definition of the second |publisher=[[International Bureau of Weights and Measures]] (BIPM) |accessdate=2011-03-19}} A note was added in 1999 to correct for nonzero temperatures; see {{cite web |title=Unit of time (second) |work=SI brochure, Section 2.1.1.3 |publisher=BIPM |url=http://www.bipm.org/en/si/si_brochure/chapter2/2-1/second.html |accessdate=2011-03-19}}


In Si units, because of the use of a defined value ''c<sub>0</sub>'':<ref name=W_Rindler>
</ref> Greater precision in time determinations became possible with the development of [[microwave]] and [[laser]] optics, allowing extension of time measurements to higher frequency transitions in the optical regime.<ref name=comb>
 
A detailed explanation of these developments is found at {{cite web |title=Optical frequency comb: The measurement of optical frequencies |url=http://www.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/eng/projects/inms/optical-comb.html |year=2009 |publisher=[[National Research Council of Canada]] |accessdate=2011-04-03}} A more technical discussion is found in {{cite book |title=Metrologia e costanti fondamentali; Volume 166 of Proceedings of the International School of Physics "Enrico Fermi" |chapter=Frequency comb applications and optical frequency standards |author=Th. Udem and F. Riehle |pages=pp. 317 ''ff'' |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=37HD1iIxlH0C&pg=PA317 |editor=TW Hänsch, ''et al.'', eds. |isbn=1586037846 |year=2007 |publisher=IOS Press}}
 
</ref>
 
In Si units, because of the use of a defined value {{nowrap|''c <nowiki>=</nowiki> c<sub>0</sub>'':}}<ref name=W_Rindler>
{{Cite book
{{Cite book
  |last=Rindler |first=W
  |last=Rindler |first=W
Line 38: Line 93:
<blockquote><p>“Note that consequently the speed of light is and remains ''precisely'' {{nowrap|299 792 458}} meters per second; improvements in experimental accuracy will modify the meter relative to atomic wavelengths, but not the value of the speed of light!”</p>
<blockquote><p>“Note that consequently the speed of light is and remains ''precisely'' {{nowrap|299 792 458}} meters per second; improvements in experimental accuracy will modify the meter relative to atomic wavelengths, but not the value of the speed of light!”</p>
<p>-''W Rindler'', Relativity: Special, General, and Cosmological, p. 39</p></blockquote>
<p>-''W Rindler'', Relativity: Special, General, and Cosmological, p. 39</p></blockquote>
To this remark it may be added that the defined speed of light ''c<sub>0</sub>'' has by virtue of its definition the properties of isotropy, no dichroism, no dependence upon field strength, and no dispersion, regardless of what experiment may discover about, for instance, the propagation of light in some real medium approximating ideal vacuum, for instance, propagation in outer space or in good terrestrial vacuum. A discovery of anisotropy in terrestrial vacuum, as an example hypothetical situation, would not change ''c<sub>0</sub>'', but would instead lead to a specification by the [[CGPM]] that the measurement must be corrected for anisotropy to refer terrestrial vacuum to the reference medium [[Classical_vacuum#Classical_case|classical vacuum]], or (perhaps) that the standard metre had to be measured in a particular standard direction when using terrestrial vacuum.


==Other systems of units==
==Other systems of units==
In systems of units where lengths are not measured by times of transit, but are independent units (for example, the [[Bohr radius]]), the speed of light is not a matter of definition but of measurement. For example, in [[atomic units]], the speed of light has the simple form ''c = 1/&alpha;'' where ''&alpha;'' is the [[fine structure constant]], a measured quantity.<ref name=Mohr>
In systems of units where lengths are not derived units based upon times of transit, but are independent units (for example, wavelengths of light at a chosen frequency), improvements in measurements of length or time lead to more accurate determination of the speed of light. However, it may be noted that the ''comparison'' of lengths even in such units can be made by comparing the transit time of light along the lengths. Such time-of-flight methodology may or may not be more accurate than the determination of a length as a multiple of the fundamental length unit.
 
An extensive discussion of different measurements of the fine structure constant is found in {{cite journal |url=http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Constants/RevModPhys_80_000633acc.pdf |author=PJ Mohr, BN Taylor and DB Newell |journal=Rev Mod Phys |volume=vol. 80 |pages=633 ''ff'' |issue=No. 2  |year=2008 |title=CODATA recommended values for the physical constants: 2006 }}
 
</ref><ref name= Reiher>
 
{{cite book |title=Relativistic quantum chemistry: the fundamental theory of molecular science |author=Markus Reiher, Alexander Wolf |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=tpsHi7F16dMC&pg=PA7 |pages=p. 7 |isbn=3527312927 |year=2009 |publisher=Wiley-VCH}}
 
</ref> In such units, improvement in measurements leads to more accurate determination of the speed of light. However, it may be noted that the ''comparison'' of lengths even in such units is more accurately made by comparing the transit time of light along the lengths, because transit times are more accurately measured than are the lengths of the paths as multiples of the fundamental length unit, at least using present techniques.


==Notes==
==Notes==
<references />
<references />[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]

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In physics, the speed of light in vacuum, commonly denoted by c, is seen as one of the fundamental constants of nature. The main postulate of special relativity asserts that the speed of light is independent of the motion of the light source; the speed of light is the same in any inertial frame (coordinate system moving with constant velocity with respect to the universe as a whole), irrespective of whether the light is emitted by a body in uniform motion or by a body at rest.

In addition, in special relativity the speed of light is the limiting speed for transfer of information, and no causal effect may travel faster than the speed of light.[1]

Like any theory, special relativity has been subject to experimental test, and agrees with observations to the accuracy attainable up to the present. Some aspects of the theory are not directly measurable, so its validity is based upon those predictions that can be checked. For example, the Michelson-Morely experiment measures the two-way speed of light, not the one-way speed of light.[2] Some other properties of the speed of light in vacuum that are supported by experiment to date are: propagation is the same in all directions (isotropy); independent of polarization (no dichroism); independent of field strength (magnitude of the associated electric and magnetic fields); and independent of the frequency (color) of the light (no dispersion).

No theory to date can predict the speed of light from other considerations.

History

(PD) Image: John R. Brews
The Fizeau apparatus for measuring the speed of light by passing it between the teeth of a rotating cog and reflecting it back through adjacent teeth.
(PD) Image: John R. Brews
The wavelengths of standing waves in a box that have zero amplitude (nodes) at the walls.

Galileo Galilei suspected that light has a finite velocity and claimed that he tried in vain to measure it. About forty years later, in 1675, the Danish atronomer Rømer estimated that it takes about 11 minutes (660 seconds) for light to travel from the Sun to the Earth. He could make this estimate by observing eclipses of the first satellite of the planet Jupiter. A few years earlier Cassini had deduced from observations of Mars that the distance from Sun to Earth was about 139⋅106 km, so that the speed of light was estimated to be 2.1⋅108 m/s, which is about 30% lower than the modern value. Later Rømer's value was refined, by similar astronomical observations, to 499 seconds. In 1849 Fizeau determined by Earth-bound experiments that c is 3.15⋅108 m/s.

Modern work brought this value down to just under 3⋅108 m/s. In particular, measurements of the resonant frequencies of cavities with dimensions a known number of wavelengths, and the relation c=λf relating wavelength and frequency to the speed of light resulted in c = 299,792.5±3 km/s in 1950.[3] As shown in the figure, the wavelength of waves in a box that are forced to have zero amplitude at the walls can have only values that are multiples of a half-wavelength. For microwaves, zero amplitude at the walls results because the electromagnetic fields associated with the wave cannot penetrate a metal wall, so the light intensity inside the wall is zero. Naturally, such walls are an idealization and real walls will permit some slight penetration (for example, the skin effect).

In any event, with the imposition of a condition for nodes at the walls, allowed wavelengths can adopt only restricted values. Because wavelength λ (determining the spatial behavior) and frequency f (determining the time dependence of the wave) are related to the speed c (at which the wave would propagate if it were free, and not in a box) as λ=c/f, the frequencies also have only discrete values. By choosing the wavelength by specifying the dimensions of the box, and by measuring the associated frequency, a value for c=λf is found.

A brief history of later developments is found in Sullivan.[4]

Relation to the metre

See also the discussion at metre.

The universality of speed of light in vacuum, and its propagation being independent of complications like dichroism, anisotropy, dispersion and nonlinearity meant that all observers readily could measure lengths using the transit time of light. In 1975 the 15th CGPM (Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures, General Conference on Weights and Measures)[5] recommended a defined speed of light in the SI system of units:

c ≡ 299 792 458 m/s (exactly), where 'm' = metre, 's' = second,

which is, of course, the same thing as stating the metre is traversed with the transit time of 1/299 792 458 s.[6]

The numerical value for c in principle could be chosen to be any numerical value whatsoever, because a change in the defined value of c corresponds simply to a different choice for the time-of-flight (1 m)/c to traverse the metre, and thus traversal of a different length, and thus a standard metre of different length. The length of the standard metre, of course, is an arbitrary unit selected by international convention,[7] and likewise for the choice for the standard time-of-flight (1 m)/c.

A few years later[8] this suggestion was adopted, and the metre was redefined as the length of the path traveled by light in vacuum during a time interval of (1 m)/c of a second, and the notation c0 suggested for the defined value of the speed of light in vacuum.[9][10] The value for c0 was selected to correspond well with the measured speed of light using the then standard metre defined in terms of a wavelength of krypton-86 radiation. That choice was made to limit any dislocation in switching to the new international standard of length. Reference was made to commonly employed methods and corrections to insure measured transit times in real media could be adjusted to refer to classical vacuum.[11]

As an aside, it may be noted that a wavelength of light is traversed in a time 1/f, where f is the frequency of the light. As a consequence of the transit time definition, the wavelength of light of frequency f in metres is now λ = c0 /f in classical vacuum.

In 1968, the second was defined as the duration of 9 192 631 770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium-133 atom.[12] Greater precision in time determinations became possible with the development of microwave and laser optics, allowing extension of time measurements to higher frequency transitions in the optical regime.[13]

In Si units, because of the use of a defined value c = c0:[14]

“Note that consequently the speed of light is and remains precisely 299 792 458 meters per second; improvements in experimental accuracy will modify the meter relative to atomic wavelengths, but not the value of the speed of light!”

-W Rindler, Relativity: Special, General, and Cosmological, p. 39

To this remark it may be added that the defined speed of light c0 has by virtue of its definition the properties of isotropy, no dichroism, no dependence upon field strength, and no dispersion, regardless of what experiment may discover about, for instance, the propagation of light in some real medium approximating ideal vacuum, for instance, propagation in outer space or in good terrestrial vacuum. A discovery of anisotropy in terrestrial vacuum, as an example hypothetical situation, would not change c0, but would instead lead to a specification by the CGPM that the measurement must be corrected for anisotropy to refer terrestrial vacuum to the reference medium classical vacuum, or (perhaps) that the standard metre had to be measured in a particular standard direction when using terrestrial vacuum.

Other systems of units

In systems of units where lengths are not derived units based upon times of transit, but are independent units (for example, wavelengths of light at a chosen frequency), improvements in measurements of length or time lead to more accurate determination of the speed of light. However, it may be noted that the comparison of lengths even in such units can be made by comparing the transit time of light along the lengths. Such time-of-flight methodology may or may not be more accurate than the determination of a length as a multiple of the fundamental length unit.

Notes

  1. For further discussion , see Roger Penrose (1996). Shadows of the mind: a search for the missing science of consciousness. Oxford University Press, pp. 220 ff. ISBN 0195106466. 
  2. For a discussion of the experimental verification of the special theory, see for example David Bohm (1996). “Chapter XXII: Experimental evidence for special relativity”, The special theory of relativity, 2nd ed. Psychology Press, pp. 83 ff. ISBN 041514809X. 
  3. See L Essen (Dec. 17, 1950). "The velocity of propagation of electromagnetic waves derived from the resonant frequencies of a cylindrical cavity resonator". Proc. Royal Soc. London vol. 204 (No. 1077): pp. 260-277.
  4. Donald B Sullivan (circa 1991). Speed of light from direct frequency and wavelength measurements. NIST.
  5. Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (Brochure on SI units, 8th ed.; pdf page 65, paper page 157) From the website of the Bureau International des Poids et Mesures
  6. The second was considered known to an uncertainty of 1 part in 1014 by the cesium clock, while the wavelength of the standard HeNe source was known only to a larger relative uncertainty of ±2.5 × 10−11. With length = ct and c a fixed constant, the length uncertainty could be brought closer to the time uncertainty. For an historical discussion of time and length metrology, see the Nobel lecture John L Hall (Nov. 17, 2006). "Nobel lecture: Defining and measuring optical frequencies". Rev Mod Phys vol 78 (No. 4): pp. 1279-1295. DOI:10.1103/RevModPhys.78.1279. Research Blogging.
  7. The article metre describes several of these arbitrary definitions, including the 1791 definition as 1/10 000 000 of the length of the meridian of Paris from the north pole to the equator.
  8. Resolution 1 of the 17th meeting of the Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures (CGPM)(1983). 1983 definition of the metre. BIPM. Retrieved on 2011-03-19.
  9. See, for example, the official definition and the BIPM brochure on the SI units: The International System of Units §2.1.1 Unit of length (metre), page 112, 8th edition of 2006.
  10. NIST officially suggests using c0 in its documentation, but uses both c and c0 on its web site. See Fundamental physical constants, speed of light in vacuum: c, c0. NIST. Retrieved on 2011-09-04.
  11. The precise wording of the SI brochure is (p. 167) "that in all cases the necessary corrections be applied to take account of actual conditions such as diffraction, gravitation, or imperfection in the vacuum." and also, regarding the use of accepted frequencies of radiation in the approach to the metre using wavelengths with λ = c0 /f, "provided that the given specifications and accepted good practice are followed".
  12. Resolution 1 of the 13th meeting of the Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures (CGPM) (1967/68). 1968 definition of the second. International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM). Retrieved on 2011-03-19. A note was added in 1999 to correct for nonzero temperatures; see Unit of time (second). SI brochure, Section 2.1.1.3. BIPM. Retrieved on 2011-03-19.
  13. A detailed explanation of these developments is found at Optical frequency comb: The measurement of optical frequencies. National Research Council of Canada (2009). Retrieved on 2011-04-03. A more technical discussion is found in Th. Udem and F. Riehle (2007). “Frequency comb applications and optical frequency standards”, TW Hänsch, et al., eds.: Metrologia e costanti fondamentali; Volume 166 of Proceedings of the International School of Physics "Enrico Fermi". IOS Press, pp. 317 ff. ISBN 1586037846. 
  14. Rindler, W (2006). Relativity: Special, General, and Cosmological, 2nd ed.. Oxford University Press, p. 39. ISBN 0198567316.