- #71
- 24,775
- 792
Yuk, this is hard work. and because the project is eccentric if not bizarre it is mostly in social isolation (but thanks to those who have dropped in so far!)
I am checking to see about these natural units----like ordinary Planck but with |F|=1
instead of the more usual |G|=1
First, they do seem to work better than conventional Planck and this is confirmed by what I notice in Quantum Gravity articles. Increasingly I notice a kappa ("gravitational constant") which is 8piG. And which can be set to equal one to further simplify the equations. The Newtonian G is yielding a little---not yet a secondary constant but not as predominant.
the moment one sets
|F|= |c|=|hbar|=|k|=|e|=1
one has a fairly universal set of units and it is interesting to see what some familiar quantities come out to be.
In part I am just interested in rough sizes, in part I want to know basic constants like Hubble parameter, proton mass, cosmological constant, in these terms because oddly enough I've found it is sometimes actually convenient to work with data that way
rough sizes:
pound E8
year E50
handbreadth E33
pace (32 inch) E34
halfmile E37
lightyear E50
food Calorie E-5
lab calorie E-8
quartervolt E-28
green photon energy 10E-28
average Earth surface temp E-29
2/3 mph E-9
67 mph E-7
cold air speed of sound E-6
one "gee" acceleration E-50
weight of 50 kg sack of cement E-40
power of 160 watt bulb E-49
some constants (approx.):
reciprocal proton mass 2.6E18
electron mass 2.1E-22
Hubble time 1.6E60
Lambda 0.85 E-120
rho-Lambda 0.85 E-120
rho-crit (critical density) 1.16 E-120
more exact Earth year 1.1676 E50
more exact lightyear 1.1676 E50
avg Earth orbit speed E-4
earth mass 1.38 E33
earth radius 7.86 E40
sun mass 4.6 E38
solar surface temp 2.0E-28
CMB temperature 9.6E-32
earth surface pressure 1.4E-106
earth surface gravity 0.88E-50
fuel energy released by one O2 17E-28
density of water 1.225 E8/E99
the time scale is important enough to treat separately:
1/222 of a minute E42
4.5 minutes E45
(to have a named power-of-ten for a convenient time interval, imagine counting out loud rapidly, at the rate of 222 counts a minute, each count is E42 natural time units. A thousand counts is 4 and 1/2 minutes. It just happens that one year is roughly E8 counts, or E50 natural.)
Named powers of ten can help assimilate and remember quantities expressed in natural units. The way I remember Earth surface air pressure is to think of the weight of a sack of cement (E-40) on a sq. handwidth area (E66) which gives me an idea of the pressure E-106, and it is 1.4 of those.
I remember the density of water as 1.225 E8/E99, that is somewhat more than one "pound" per
pint-size cubic handbreadth volume, which simplifies to 1.225E-91.
Richard suggested that a distaste for extreme numbers be called "googlephobia"---isn't google
somebody's name for 10100?
I think of the Earth radius as 7860 halfmiles (a halfmile being E37)
instead of 7.86E40. another way of coping with googlephobia, or of
bridging between humanscale and natural.
I am checking to see about these natural units----like ordinary Planck but with |F|=1
instead of the more usual |G|=1
First, they do seem to work better than conventional Planck and this is confirmed by what I notice in Quantum Gravity articles. Increasingly I notice a kappa ("gravitational constant") which is 8piG. And which can be set to equal one to further simplify the equations. The Newtonian G is yielding a little---not yet a secondary constant but not as predominant.
the moment one sets
|F|= |c|=|hbar|=|k|=|e|=1
one has a fairly universal set of units and it is interesting to see what some familiar quantities come out to be.
In part I am just interested in rough sizes, in part I want to know basic constants like Hubble parameter, proton mass, cosmological constant, in these terms because oddly enough I've found it is sometimes actually convenient to work with data that way
rough sizes:
pound E8
year E50
handbreadth E33
pace (32 inch) E34
halfmile E37
lightyear E50
food Calorie E-5
lab calorie E-8
quartervolt E-28
green photon energy 10E-28
average Earth surface temp E-29
2/3 mph E-9
67 mph E-7
cold air speed of sound E-6
one "gee" acceleration E-50
weight of 50 kg sack of cement E-40
power of 160 watt bulb E-49
some constants (approx.):
reciprocal proton mass 2.6E18
electron mass 2.1E-22
Hubble time 1.6E60
Lambda 0.85 E-120
rho-Lambda 0.85 E-120
rho-crit (critical density) 1.16 E-120
more exact Earth year 1.1676 E50
more exact lightyear 1.1676 E50
avg Earth orbit speed E-4
earth mass 1.38 E33
earth radius 7.86 E40
sun mass 4.6 E38
solar surface temp 2.0E-28
CMB temperature 9.6E-32
earth surface pressure 1.4E-106
earth surface gravity 0.88E-50
fuel energy released by one O2 17E-28
density of water 1.225 E8/E99
the time scale is important enough to treat separately:
1/222 of a minute E42
4.5 minutes E45
(to have a named power-of-ten for a convenient time interval, imagine counting out loud rapidly, at the rate of 222 counts a minute, each count is E42 natural time units. A thousand counts is 4 and 1/2 minutes. It just happens that one year is roughly E8 counts, or E50 natural.)
Named powers of ten can help assimilate and remember quantities expressed in natural units. The way I remember Earth surface air pressure is to think of the weight of a sack of cement (E-40) on a sq. handwidth area (E66) which gives me an idea of the pressure E-106, and it is 1.4 of those.
I remember the density of water as 1.225 E8/E99, that is somewhat more than one "pound" per
pint-size cubic handbreadth volume, which simplifies to 1.225E-91.
Richard suggested that a distaste for extreme numbers be called "googlephobia"---isn't google
somebody's name for 10100?
I think of the Earth radius as 7860 halfmiles (a halfmile being E37)
instead of 7.86E40. another way of coping with googlephobia, or of
bridging between humanscale and natural.
Last edited: