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Naty1
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My question is whether the speed of light, as defined below, is precisely the same as the speed of light in free space, without gravity.
DISCUSSION
I'm trying to figure out if the standard value for "c" is or is not corrected for the very,very slight influence of Earth's gravitational field (potential) for a stationary observer relative to Earth's surface.
The definition appears to occur at the surface of the Earth where there is a weak gravitational field; if the speed of light is defined from the frame of reference of a stationary observer on the Earth's surface, the gravitational field will make the speed appear slightly different (slower) than if the observer were in gravitational free fall...or the definition were in a gravity free location.
So it seems like that gravitational acceleration (crude estimate below) may be enough to change the last few integers in the definition of light speed...but I did not do any calculations. In any event, even if all nine digits of light speed remain the same, there is still a slight possible theoretical difference. (In other words, a fixed frame of reference at the Earth's surface is a coordinate type reference frame, right, where different speeds of light will generally be observed.)
DEFINITION
From http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physic..._of_light.html
Quote:
from Peter Bergmann's THE RIDDLE OF GRAVITATION,:
Quote:
DISCUSSION
I'm trying to figure out if the standard value for "c" is or is not corrected for the very,very slight influence of Earth's gravitational field (potential) for a stationary observer relative to Earth's surface.
The definition appears to occur at the surface of the Earth where there is a weak gravitational field; if the speed of light is defined from the frame of reference of a stationary observer on the Earth's surface, the gravitational field will make the speed appear slightly different (slower) than if the observer were in gravitational free fall...or the definition were in a gravity free location.
So it seems like that gravitational acceleration (crude estimate below) may be enough to change the last few integers in the definition of light speed...but I did not do any calculations. In any event, even if all nine digits of light speed remain the same, there is still a slight possible theoretical difference. (In other words, a fixed frame of reference at the Earth's surface is a coordinate type reference frame, right, where different speeds of light will generally be observed.)
DEFINITION
From http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physic..._of_light.html
Quote:
Is c, the speed of light in vacuum, constant?
At the 1983 Conference Generale des Poids et Mesures, the following SI (Systeme International) definition of the metre was adopted:
The metre is the length of the path traveled by light in vacuum during a time interval of 1/299 792 458 of a second.
This defines the speed of light in vacuum to be exactly 299,792,458 m/s. This provides a very short answer to the question "Is c constant": Yes, c is constant by definition!
from Peter Bergmann's THE RIDDLE OF GRAVITATION,:
Quote:
...The magnitude of the gravitational acceleration on the Earth's surface is very roughly 10m/s..the acceleration a free falling refeence frame should have relative to earth...as the radius of the Earth is some 6,000 km distance from the center (of the gravitational source) the acceleration relative to the free falling frame changes very roughly at 1.6 x 10^-6/sec^2
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