Dimensionful vs dimensionless constants

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In summary: So if I have an equation where I have two solutions, I can say that the equation is symmetric. If I have an equation where I have one solution and one infinite solution, that's an asymmetric equation. An equation where two solutions are related (like the distance between two points) is called aproximant symmetry.
  • #1
apeiron
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In describing physical reality, we have two classes of constants, the dimensionless and the dimensionful.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_constant

Which is the more fundamental and why? And exactly what is the meaning of their difference?

I have my own take of course. My feeling is that a constant is always a measurement of an equilibrium resulting from two processes or actions "in balance". In some sense, it is where a dynamic system settles.

All the constants seem to have this basic duality. So c is a dimensionful constant that relates distance and time. G is a dimensional constant that relates distance and mass.

Dimensionless constants also seem to be constructed from other things in interaction.

Wiki says: "Such a number is typically defined as a product or ratio of quantities that have units individually, but cancel out in the combination."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimensionless

So the essential difference between the two classes of constants would seem to be that the dimensionful are the result of asymmetries - you need measurements of two orthogonal axes of description like distance and time - while the dimensionless are the result of what appear to be symmetries. Measurements are made in the one coin (even if more than one axes is required) and so can be canceled out.

So I think this is an interesting difference. One requires pairs of measurements that remain orthogonal and cannot be reduced further, the other requires pairs which do allow reduction to a naked number.

Is this the right way to look at it and what does it mean?

The fine structure constant alpha is a complicated and key example of a dimensionless constant, which may in fact create problems for my simple analysis.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fine_structure_constant

And there may be other good challenges lurking in the considerable list of dimensionless constants given by Wiki.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimensionless
 
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  • #2
Reply Before Reading your Post:

imo, dimensionless constants still have dimension. Otherwise we'd be able to mix different dimensionless constants without any logic breakdown.

Dimensionless constants, in many cases, are ratios of one dimension to itself (like the ratio of the top edge of as rectangle to the side edge of a rectangle). We may call it dimensionless, but we can still look at it as meters per meter.

Mass was a "dimensionless" quantity at one time. You put two objects on a balance and compare their relative distances from the center. The ratio of the distances is dimensionless. I have a professor who insists that the only fundamental units are space and time with this argument.

Anyway, my final point is basically that distance this way per distance that way is not equivalent to my tame taken per your time taken. They both have dimensions even if the units cancel out mathematically.
 
  • #3
aepeiron said:
Which is the more fundamental and why? And exactly what is the meaning of their difference?

I agree with my professor (mentioned above) that space and time are the two fundamental constants. Everything else can be framed from there (considering what I said about mass).

Thus, dimensional constants are more fundamental (but not by definition, just seems to be that way given your definitions).

So the essential difference between the two classes of constants would seem to be that the dimensionful are the result of asymmetries - you need measurements of two orthogonal axes of description like distance and time - while the dimensionless are the result of what appear to be symmetries. Measurements are made in the one coin (even if more than one axes is required) and so can be canceled out.

Is asymmetry necessarily associated with orthogonality? I'm not sure I see asymmetry and symmetry here.
 
  • #4
Pythagorean said:
imo, dimensionless constants still have dimension. Otherwise we'd be able to mix different dimensionless constants without any logic breakdown.

Yes, they would have to define some dimension, or exist in some dimension.

Which would be the difference between physical and mathematical constants?

Pythagorean said:
I agree with my professor (mentioned above) that space and time are the two fundamental constants.

But wouldn't they be the fundamental dimensions and the constants would then be the various way the two aspects of reality are related.

So, for example, c would be the rate at which coherent change can evolve? h or Planck constant seems to describe the fundamental grain of spacetime. G seems to be a measure of the global flatness of spacetime (or rather it scales the local departures from flatness).

So treating spacetime as the fundamental stuff is attractive. But the constants would arise as ways of scaling the relationship between space and time. Or are their irreducible constants which are just spatial or temporal that you can think of?

Pythagorean said:
Is asymmetry necessarily associated with orthogonality? I'm not sure I see asymmetry and symmetry here.

Orthogonality would be the definite requirement. Two unrelated axes of measurement.

I do see this as related to symmetry and asymmetry. A symmetry is where you can go back and forth in the same dimension. An asymmetry is where that symmetry is broken. In some sense, another whole new direction now exists.

But this is not essential to the question. The distinction between orthogonal pairs of measurements and sets of measurements where the units cancel is sufficient.
 
  • #5
apeiron said:
Which would be the difference between physical and mathematical constants?

I think the simplest way to put it would be observability. The observability associated with a constant, the more physical it is.

But wouldn't they be the fundamental dimensions and the constants would then be the various way the two aspects of reality are related.

Yes, I mis-spoke. I meant fundamental units, not constants. Units are more associated with dimensionality.

So, for example, c would be the rate at which coherent change can evolve? h or Planck constant seems to describe the fundamental grain of spacetime. G seems to be a measure of the global flatness of spacetime (or rather it scales the local departures from flatness).

This is an interesting perspective and it makes sense intuitively. What would define as "coherent change" though? And would we agree that we must restrict "change" specifically to the linear ratio of distance per time (or it's reciprocal depending on your perspective)?

So treating spacetime as the fundamental stuff is attractive. But the constants would arise as ways of scaling the relationship between space and time. Or are their irreducible constants which are just spatial or temporal that you can think of?

Well, since we're taking care to look at the "history" of a constant (so that we know a dimensionless constant is really a ratio of dimensions) even temporal constants may themselves include hidden ratios in them that have canceled out mathematically.

For instance, the time constant of an RC circuit gives you physical information relevant to the circuit, and it is in units of seconds, but you can express the time constant, tau as

[tex] \tau = RC [/tex]

Where R and C are electrical ratios that come, ultimately, from classical electromagnetic theory, whose units (Ohms and Farads) ultimately come from space, time, and mass. (Of course, we can argue that mass is reducible to space and time itself, but I'm not completely sure if that's the case. I have no formal exposure to GR, for instance, which may have more to say about that, and seems to agree conceptually.)


Orthogonality would be the definite requirement. Two unrelated axes of measurement.

Yes, that seems to be the case to me. Somehow, though, I feel like time is more independent of space then space is of time. From a human perspective, this makes time merciless. We can go back and forward in space at different rates, but we acknowledge a universe in which we only travel forward through time (albeit at different rates, which we somehow control with our velocity).

But then this makes me wonder if time itself is simply an operation on space. There is no absolute time frame we all operate in. Our velocity can only be compared to another object that's "fixed" in our frame. There is no ultimate origin in the universe. There's instead, boundaries imposed on the rate of change of distances between objects.

I do see this as related to symmetry and asymmetry. A symmetry is where you can go back and forth in the same dimension. An asymmetry is where that symmetry is broken. In some sense, another whole new direction now exists.

what do you mean by "you can go back and forth"? Where's an example where you can't go back? In one sense, time is a dimension you can't go back in. It may be convenient to talk about particles that go back in time (Feynman diagrams), but I'm not sure that's something we've actually observed or not. This might be a good question for the particle physics subforum.
 
  • #6
Is this correct?

"Is this correct?

"C is a speed, so it has dimensions of distance per time. For example, it has a value of about 186,000 miles per second, or 300,000,000 meters per second.

A dimensionless constant like Pi is different. Pi is 3.14159... regardless of whether you are measuring in miles, or in meters, or in carob seeds."
 
  • #8
Freeman Dyson said:
A dimensionless constant like Pi is different. Pi is 3.14159... regardless of whether you are measuring in miles, or in meters, or in carob seeds.

pi can also be seen as the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, so you could argue that it has units of distance around per distance across.
 
  • #9
Pythagorean said:
What would define as "coherent change" though? And would we agree that we must restrict "change" specifically to the linear ratio of distance per time (or it's reciprocal depending on your perspective)?

I am thinking of light cones. The inside of a light cone would be coherent in that all parts have the change to exchange signals.

c also seems a good example of the dynamism of constants. We may treat time and space as linear dimensions that can be counted out in standard units. But relativity instead identified a constant that relates the units of these different dimensions in a "constant" fashion.

And doesn't it introduce an asymmetry? Give meaning to inverse and reciprocals, as you say?

The constant has the effect of shrinking the scale in one direction (space) as you increase the scale in the other (time). And vice versa.

Without c, the relationship between space and time would be symmetric, or perhaps more accurately, vague. Signalling would have no speed limit. But with c, there is always one that is being made smaller if the other is being made larger. This is asymmetric.


Pythagorean said:
Somehow, though, I feel like time is more independent of space then space is of time. From a human perspective, this makes time merciless. We can go back and forward in space at different rates, but we acknowledge a universe in which we only travel forward through time (albeit at different rates, which we somehow control with our velocity).

Good point. But how does it bear on the general nature of constants?

I would say time seems different because it is asymmetric. There is a thermodynamic arrow pointed the one way.

But to model spacetime in GR, time is given an artificial symmetry (travel both ways is allowed) so a time "dimension" can be related to the spatial dimensions via a constant.

Pythagorean said:
what do you mean by "you can go back and forth"? Where's an example where you can't go back? In one sense, time is a dimension you can't go back in. It may be convenient to talk about particles that go back in time (Feynman diagrams), but I'm not sure that's something we've actually observed or not. This might be a good question for the particle physics subforum.

Yes time is an example of something that seems actually an asymmetry but which we find easier to model if we force it into the garb of a symmetry.
 
  • #10
Freeman Dyson said:
A dimensionless constant like Pi is different. Pi is 3.14159... regardless of whether you are measuring in miles, or in meters, or in carob seeds."

Mathematical constants are actually similar in their construction I would say - the equilbrium balance points of a pair of opposed processes.

So pi can be geometrically constructed as the limit of an infinite sided polygon. And you can either build up from the inside of a circle or shrink the polygon to fit from the outside. And pi is arithmetically constructed as a harmonic series, like the classic ¼ pi = 1 – 1/3 + 1/5 – 1/7... (as well as a host of others). You can see the "opposed process" on the alternate pluses and minuses of the series.

It is also worth noting that pi is 3.14159... only in flat space. Its value varies from 2 on a hypersphere to infinity with hyperbolic curved space.

So the constant itself is a constant only at an exact balance point between all possible states of curvature.
 
  • #11
I read a good book on this by John Barow. The history of finding the constants and making them as fundamental as posslbe. The idea was, what constant could you communicate to an alien intelligence that they would immediately understand. It would be universal. Reduce it to its most basic form.

Einstein thought things like Pi were the only real type of constants.

I can't copy and paste google books but here is him talking about it

http://books.google.com/books?id=es...e question of the universal constants&f=false

read pages 35-38
 
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  • #12
I tried to copy and past some of it:

What Einstein is saying is that there are some apparent constants which are created by our habit of measuring things in particular units.
The radiation constant of Boltzmann's is like this. It 15 just a conversion factor between energy and temperature units, rather like
conversion factors between Fahrenheit and centigrade scales temperature. The true constants have to be pure numbers, not quantities that have 'dimensions'. like a speed or a mass or a length.Quantities with dimensions always change their numerical values if we change the units in which they are expressed. Even the speed of light in vacuum can't be one of the true constants Einstein is searching for. A speed has units of length per unit time and so could not shown to be some combination of the 'basiC' numbers. like pi.

Why can't I copy pdf files from my hard drive? Anyway, that is just Einstein's view. The book shows many other views and the history and philosophy of the search for constants.
 
  • #13
DaleSpam said:
Dimensionless ones, definitely. Here is my favorite page on the subject: http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/constants.html

Good cite. The thing that has puzzled me is that the dimensionful constants like c, h and G have the look of being basic. They appear to scale the container - spacetime. While the dimensionless constants of the standard theory are "just" the values of particular elements of the system - the local contents inside the global container. But Baez like many others is more excited by the dimensionless constants. They are the ones that seem more basic.

Constants that aren't dimensionless can be regarded as relating one sort of unit to another. For example, the speed of light has units of length over time, so it can be used to turn units of time (like years) into units of length (like light-years), or vice versa. People who are interested in fundamental physical constants usually start by doing this as much as possible - leaving the dimensionless constants, which are the really interesting ones.

Here Baez says just this...

General relativity and pure quantum mechanics have no dimensionless constants, because the speed of light, the gravitational constant, and Planck's constant merely suffice to set units of mass, length and time. Thus, all the dimensionless constants come in from our wonderful, baroque theory of all the forces other than gravity: the Standard Model.

So QM and GR describe the container - the larger stage that has axes of description that need to be related. I think Baez is missing a point in that the Planck constants create a scale relationship between the axes (as with c and spacetime). That does not seem trivial.

The masses of these quarks, divided by the Planck mass, give 6 dimensionless constants. We also have 3 kinds of massive leptons --- electron, muon, tau. The W and Z bosons also have their masses. Then there is the Higgs, which while still not detected, is very much part of the theory, so we get another mass.
This gives us 6 + 3 + 2 + 1 = 12 dimensionless constants so far.

So the ratio of the observed masses to the theoretical boundary state for mass (the Planck mass) gives us a set of "constants". Fundamental particles always have the same (at rest) size. The Planck mass itself would be a dimensionful constant I believe (relating hc to G). So in a roundabout way, these particle masses are all slices off a dimensionful constant. And if particle masses could be tied back to some gauge symmetry principle, then perhaps they too would be "opened up" - relating the Planck mass to some local resonance or spacetime dimensional principle. So no longer mass compared to mass, but mass compared to "another direction".

Then we have two coupling constants: the electromagnetic coupling constant and the strong coupling constant. The electromagnetic coupling constant is just another name for the fine structure constant; it describes the strength of the electromagnetic field. Similarly, the strong coupling constant describes the strength of the strong force - the force transmitted by gluons, which binds quarks together into baryons and mesons.

Same deal with the bosons as with the fermions. But now substituting a fundamental scale for electromagnetic fields or strong force fields for Planck mass, or upper bound on gravitational curvature?

If this new extension of the Standard Model holds up, and all the neutrinos have nonzero mass, this brings the total of fundamental constants to 25!

The story continues. All the dimensionless constants are local values - slices off the naked strength of the four fundamental forces. Gravity seems easy to relate to a dimensionful view - so much curvature over so much spacetime, two directions that need to be measured and related - but the other three forces are not so easily broken down into a dimensional view. Though the strength of each may be relate via the dimensional structure implied by gauge symmetry perhaps.

This energy density is called the "cosmological constant", and it brings the total of fundamental constants up to 26.

So far we only have a naked measurement and no mechanism that might "open up" this constant as an interaction.

The Higgs has not yet been seen - at least not with any certainty - but of the 26 fundamental constants of nature, 22 describe it or its interactions with other particles! Isn't that weird?

Is the Higgs mechanism then a candidate for making the connection to dimensionful constants? With mixing angles, for example, it seems that the Higgs is a way to relate internal gauge symmetries to external spacetime environments. Literally an opening up.

Considering the pure constants of maths, these do all seem to be a story of two processes or directions of action in interaction. You converge on a point because you are coming towards it from two directions. And this could be from either side in the same dimension - in which case the units would cancel to a dimensionless ratio (though I can't think of examples of "same dimension" maths constants off hand) - or it would be coming from two orthogonal directions and the units of the two directions would become related in a fixed value way.

In fundamental physics, constants seem to arise either as ways to relate the different aspects of the "container" - fixing how variation in one forces a matched variation in the other. Or they fix the size of the contents. They take an interaction, a coupling, like gravity, strong or EW, and cut off a constant slice of the naked value.

Makes some kind of sense to me anyway. :approve:
 
  • #14
From the other replies here, I've realized I've been harboring an assumption in my replies that I didn't quite realize until now. I've been assuming:

a) there's an irreducible sized chunk of spacetime and that spacetime is not continuous.

I believe this is why I'm speaking about units as if they were constants, because I've somehow deduced that a) implies:

b) there are fundamental units pertaining to distance and time themselves, (which I would consider the fundamental constants).

But I have no logical reasoning for why a) would imply b), really, given that a) were actually true.
 
  • #15
Pythagorean said:
From the other replies here, I've realized I've been harboring an assumption in my replies that I didn't quite realize until now. I've been assuming:

a) there's an irreducible sized chunk of spacetime and that spacetime is not continuous.

But I believe this too, for a different reason.

You are taking the view that reality is constructed from fundamental components (by the sounds of it). And so the irreducible chunks of spacetime. It would be the same if you had said reality is constructed of information.

I see it as a top-down issue of resolution - what an observer can hope to see. So there is an ultimate limit placed on our resolution of the very small, or very dense, or very energetic, etc. This is the origin of the Planck scale constants. They are limits because when you focus all your attention on making one dimension of measurement as small and local as possible, you in effect completely lose sight of the other direction to which it is related. So that direction goes to infinity - the infinitely large.

Pythagorean said:
I believe this is why I'm speaking about units as if they were constants, because I've somehow deduced that a) implies:

b) there are fundamental units pertaining to distance and time themselves, (which I would consider the fundamental constants).

But I have no logical reasoning for why a) would imply b), really, given that a) were actually true.

Spacetime is two directions of measurement. So the constant arises as the dynamic balance of measurements across these two directions. The units within each dimension flexes to reflect this.

So yes, the units with which we measure distance and duration are not constant in some independent Newtonian fashion. They are dependent in a relativistic fashion. A constant can only arise as a balance point that equilibrates action.

A top-down resolution approach then says that spacetime would become grainy on the most local view. Or at least break down radically at a limiting scale.
 
  • #16
apeiron said:
The thing that has puzzled me is that the dimensionful constants like c, h and G have the look of being basic. They appear to scale the container - spacetime. While the dimensionless constants of the standard theory are "just" the values of particular elements of the system - the local contents inside the global container. But Baez like many others is more excited by the dimensionless constants. They are the ones that seem more basic.
I agree with Baez on this. The dimensionless ones are really the more fundamental ones. It is an enjoyable and valuable exercise to go through, it turns out that if the dimensionful physical constants (e.g. c, h, G) change in such a way that the dimensionless physical constants (e.g. fine structure constant) are unchanged then none of our measurements will change, but if the dimensionless constants are changed then we can measure something different. In other words, physics is not sensitive to changes in dimensionful constants, only dimensionless constants. So the dimensionless constants are the ones that describe physics. See:
https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=2011753&postcount=55
https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=2015734&postcount=68
apeiron said:
So no longer mass compared to mass, but mass compared to "another direction".
It sounds like you are thinking of geometrized units where mass is given dimensions of length: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometrized_unit_system
 
  • #18
SdogV said:
Fundamental constants are two, definitely.
http://www.nature.com/news/2007/071220/full/news.2007.389.html

Thanks for drawing attention to that paper. I see you commented on it at the time.

I'm surprised there seems to have been little follow up to the result. Have you kept track of the response?
 
  • #19
apeiron said:
Thanks for drawing attention to that paper. I see you commented on it at the time.

I'm surprised there seems to have been little follow up to the result. Have you kept track of the response?
Trying, but little follow up so far. Printed out their revised Feb 2, 2008 (arXiv:0711.4276v2 [physics.class-ph] 4 Dec 2007) version. Clearly it's possible significance lies in unveiling a clue to a relation between inertial and "active" gravitational mass. (Note # 14 in references)

So, the juggling required to make the ratio of units in masses, G to h protocols, equal to 1 is quite interesting. Not ready to report it...yet.
 
  • #20
apeiron said:
In describing physical reality, we have two classes of constants, the dimensionless and the dimensionful.

Which is the more fundamental and why?
I find the dimensional constants most interesting, because they relate to what I think is the most fundamental question about the physical world, i.e. why its structure has the specific set of parameters that it has. Physics has a large and very disparate set of parameters, all of which are defined in terms of the others through its fundamental equations.

So far, it seems to me, physical theory has not really tried to understand the structure of this complicated web of inter-reference. Instead, in searching for a “unified” theory, the goal has been to reduce the number of parameters to a minimum – ideally, the “final” theory would reveal a single mathematical pattern involving as few parameters as possible. I suppose this preference for a purely mathematical foundation would be a reason for looking to the dimensionless parameters as more fundamental.

But this assumes that the differences between physical parameters are inessential. In other threads I’ve argued that the profound structural differences among these parameters – space and time, mass and charge, energy and momentum, etc. etc. – are required in order that any of them be observable / measurable.

If we assume there is a reason why the universe is organized so that every observable has a set of other observables in terms of which it can be defined and measured, then a logical place to begin an analysis of this inter-referential structure would be with the dimensional constants – each of which seems to have a unique character.

For example, Planck’s constant describes a minimal unit of action – a kind of “atom of happening” between things. Is there any other irreducible unit in physics? The speed of light defines a maximal velocity, which also defines null-vectors in spacetime. And the gravitational constant says something still quite mysterious about the connection between mass and the spacetime metric.

It’s not the numeric value of these constants that’s significant – as noted above, their values depend entirely on the units we choose to express them in. And they’re not necessarily more basic to the structure of the physical world than the dimensionless constants. But I think they must represent the key interdependencies that we ultimately need to understand.
 
  • #21
ConradDJ said:
It’s not the numeric value of these constants that’s significant – as noted above, their values depend entirely on the units we choose to express them in. And they’re not necessarily more basic to the structure of the physical world than the dimensionless constants. But I think they must represent the key interdependencies that we ultimately need to understand.

So are you saying like me that the essential three - h/c/g - are the emergent limits that define the system, then the other "dimensionless" parameters are the scales of various "resonances, various local further symmetry breakings, that occur in self-organising fashion within these limits?

So h/c/g sets up the stage, then the other constants emerge as further symmetry breakings that fit within the dimensional arrangement thus crisply created.

Which is why h/c/g are more fundamental. And it is not their individual measured values that are significant (we can set them to 1) but rather their relationship to each other - the room they create between themselves.

This being so, if we can define the mathematical nature of the relationship (arrive at a ToE) then it may turn out that there is no arbitrariness about the physical scale of nature. The necessary ratio may be built into the maths much as all compound growth stories can be reduced to a tale of the constant e.
 
  • #22
DaleSpam said:
In other words, physics is not sensitive to changes in dimensionful constants, only dimensionless constants. So the dimensionless constants are the ones that describe physics.

This makes sense to me... that is, if we just take the basic structure of physics as given – if we assume the mathematics of spacetime and quantum interaction – then the fundamental issue becomes how to understand why we have all these particles with their particular masses, and why the coupling constants are what they are.
apeiron said:
The thing that has puzzled me is that the dimensionful constants like c, h and G have the look of being basic. They appear to scale the container - spacetime. While the dimensionless constants of the standard theory are "just" the values of particular elements of the system - the local contents inside the global container.
apeiron said:
Which is why h/c/g are more fundamental. And it is not their individual measured values that are significant (we can set them to 1) but rather their relationship to each other - the room they create between themselves.


I agree that this seems to be the more basic question – i.e. why this strangely complex structure of space and time and interaction, in the first place?

And I like this notion that we have a number of distinct structures that “make room” between them for things to happen in. My guess is that our main difficulty in seeing what’s going on in fundamental physics comes from the fact that we’re so used to taking the “container” of space and time for granted. It’s hard to imagine anything without assuming that, so it’s tempting to take the viewpoint Pythagorean’s professor, that measures of space and time have to be the starting-point. Ultimately, it seems, all observations come down to determining when and where something happens.

Against this is the fact that “clocks and rods” are clearly not primitive, physically... a fact that bothered Einstein quite a bit. You can’t physically measure distances or durations unless you have an “instrument” at least as complex as an atom. So given what we know about the history of the universe, there was a period of some hundreds of thousands of “years” – as we measure them now, looking back – during which no measurement of space and time was physically possible.

So what do the dimensional constants have to tell us about this? If we abstract from their values (as measured in terms of space and time), they seem to indicate different levels in the world’s primitive “topology”.

Planck’s constant is a minimal, irreducible unit of “action”. We normally define action as energy * time, or equivalently as momentum * distance... but perhaps we should take action itself as the “primitive” parameter from which these others are derived. And in quantum physics, action is always interaction. So apart from its value, this constant essentially tells us that at bottom, the physical world is structured as a web of discrete interaction-events. It suggests to me that the connectedness of events is basic, deeper than the spacetime structure that overlays it.

With the velocity of light, we can again abstract from its value, as compared with other (smaller) velocities as measured in space and time, and arrive at a basic fact about the topology of the interaction-web, namely that it breaks down into two distinct components with very different spacetime structures. The layer of interactions at light-speed always connects events over null spacetime intervals, and so has a topology independent of the spacetime metric So it seems to be more “primitive” than the layer of interactions via massive particles, which operate within the spacetime metric defined by the gravitational constant.

Maybe these are clues to the stages through which our spacetime emerged in the early universe. The picture is not very clear... and I’m not sure it resembles your picture of a local-global polarity and symmetry-breaking. The main question for me is how, in a web of interaction-events that has no a priori structure, patterns could arise that would be “measurable” – i.e. at least meaningfully definable – in terms of each other. That is, I’m taking the inter-referential aspect of the observable world as a primary feature.
 
  • #23
Let’s try to change thinking. IF all is "space-time", as suggested in the Matsas et al paper...
arXiv:0711.4276v2 [physics.class-ph] 4 Dec 2007
... then everything can be described with directions, (say) X, Y, and Z and lengths of delta's x, y, and z PLUS time in directions, X, Y, and Z, with durations t(x), t(y) and t(z) using the light velocity, "c", to describe the "reality” that “we” (i.e. animate and inanimate accommodate to and observe) i.e. a philosophy of REAL physics that involve:
(1) Motion (from here to there), (2) Growth (from small to large), and (3) Shape (inanimate elements or temporal animate figures that accommodates to it’s environmental surroundings through –don’t laugh- my interest, “panpsychistic properties that vary from primeval elements to plants to animals to “sophisticated?” human consciousness”).
Our accepted measurements of Kg are easily converted to cubic meters/second squared, m^3/sec^2, from “G”; and then energy is m^5/sec^2; momentum is m^4/sec^3; pressure is m^2/sec^3; surface tension is m^3/sec^3; force is m^4/sec^4, etc…..
e.g, M = m^3/sec^2 implies that E = c^3 x^2 or c^5 ^2..

That is, light velocity and time and/or length(wave?) describe all IF
One handles the 3 by 3 by 3 by 3 determinant matrices (too deep for me) properly of
{X, Y, Z}, {x, y, z} , {t(x), t(y), (z)} and {1 , 2, 3 }
assumming that measurements of G and h are accurate and used in all of their variability to define things like m^3/sec^2 and m^2/sec.
This line of thinking arises from the possibility that c^2 can imply m^2/”x” sec per “y”sec, since light can be omni-directional..
Can someone kill this line of thinking? Or help? At aged 82, I really have other things to do, like swim or entertain my lady.
 
  • #24
ConradDJ said:
Against this is the fact that “clocks and rods” are clearly not primitive, physically...

This would be because a world of mass is not the universe in its most primitive state. A world of radiation is.

Mass introduces something new and measurable because it can be "located" - it can travel at less than the speed of light and so lags behind the natural lightspeed equilibration of action. Gradients of possible action are set up that can be measured (from the point of view of the baseline max/ent equilbrium of the system).

So the question becomes whether h/c/g can characterise a realm of pure radiation completely - a realm where there is only lightspeed action and so no lags, no local gradients to be measured, and only a scaleless, isotropic, equilbrium.

If h scales locality - the smallest definable points - and g scales globality - the flattest possible global dimensionality (g scaling deviations from flatness, so acting as a negative yardstick on flatness), then c is all we seem to need to scale the middleground rate of equilibration between these upper and lower limits.

The universe is actually a dynamic process rather than a static dimensional stage - it expands/cools. And c then defines the rate at which these two kinds of action achieve their equilibrium balance.

That seems a pretty complete picture of a realm of just radiation, as in the early moments of the big bang, and again probably at its ultimate heat death.

All the other constants, the dimensionful ones, seem irrelevant in such a purely relativistic realm without matter.

So the argument goes, we know that a purely radiation universe is more primitive. Literally so if we consider the first moments of the big bang and the final heat death of the universe. So what constants are actually needed to describe this world? Those in turn would be the fundamental ones. Are any of the dimensionful constants required in this context?

ConradDJ said:
Planck’s constant is a minimal, irreducible unit of “action”. We normally define action as energy * time, or equivalently as momentum * distance... but perhaps we should take action itself as the “primitive” parameter from which these others are derived. And in quantum physics, action is always interaction. So apart from its value, this constant essentially tells us that at bottom, the physical world is structured as a web of discrete interaction-events. It suggests to me that the connectedness of events is basic, deeper than the spacetime structure that overlays it.

Yes, the relativistic view I take above is just a bunch of fleeting interactions as there is nothing that persists stably at any location. There are no particles of matter drifting about at sublight speed to complicate things, just a host of virtual events.

The Planck scale does define the idea of spatiotemporal location - the smallest possible place in spacetime, and so the natural scale of these virtual events. For any action, this is the scale from which it starts.

ConradDJ said:
With the velocity of light, we can again abstract from its value, as compared with other (smaller) velocities as measured in space and time, and arrive at a basic fact about the topology of the interaction-web, namely that it breaks down into two distinct components with very different spacetime structures. The layer of interactions at light-speed always connects events over null spacetime intervals, and so has a topology independent of the spacetime metric So it seems to be more “primitive” than the layer of interactions via massive particles, which operate within the spacetime metric defined by the gravitational constant.

So yes, you are seeing the basic issues exactly the same way. Have you been reading Charlie Lineweaver's papers which are the best I have come across (along with Paul Davies, his co-author) on the thermodynamics of cosmology?

ConradDJ said:
Maybe these are clues to the stages through which our spacetime emerged in the early universe. The picture is not very clear... and I’m not sure it resembles your picture of a local-global polarity and symmetry-breaking. The main question for me is how, in a web of interaction-events that has no a priori structure, patterns could arise that would be “measurable” – i.e. at least meaningfully definable – in terms of each other. That is, I’m taking the inter-referential aspect of the observable world as a primary feature.

I see it definitely in terms of a phase transition, a symmetry breaking that leads to max asymmetry. The universe is a system that expands/cools and we are looking at it from within that grand transition.

At the big bang moment, the local and global scale were "the same size". So in a state of symmetry. At the heat death, the local and global aspects of the universe will be as far apart as possible. So once h=g in some sense. And in the future, they will be maximally separate. And c scales the equilibrium rate of this separation.
 

FAQ: Dimensionful vs dimensionless constants

What is the difference between dimensionful and dimensionless constants?

Dimensionful constants have units attached to them, while dimensionless constants do not. This means that dimensionful constants represent physical quantities with a specific numerical value, while dimensionless constants are unitless and represent ratios or proportions.

What are some examples of dimensionful and dimensionless constants?

Examples of dimensionful constants include the speed of light (meters per second), Planck's constant (energy multiplied by time), and the gravitational constant (cubic meters per kilogram per second squared). Examples of dimensionless constants include the fine-structure constant (unitless), the adiabatic index (unitless), and the Boltzmann constant (unitless).

How do dimensionful and dimensionless constants affect scientific calculations?

Dimensionful constants play a crucial role in conversions and calculations involving different units of measurement. Dimensionless constants, on the other hand, are often used to simplify mathematical equations and models by eliminating unnecessary units.

Can dimensionless constants change over time or in different scenarios?

Yes, dimensionless constants can change depending on the context or scenario in which they are used. For example, the fine-structure constant has been shown to have a slight variation in different areas of the universe. Additionally, dimensionless constants may be affected by changes in fundamental physical laws or theories.

Why are dimensionful and dimensionless constants important in scientific research?

Dimensionful and dimensionless constants are important because they provide a way to quantify and compare physical phenomena. They also allow for the establishment of universal laws and principles that can be applied in various fields of science. Furthermore, understanding the values and implications of these constants can lead to new discoveries and advancements in scientific understanding.

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