C - Speed of Light: Is Time Relative?

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In summary, the speed of light has not changed. It is still the speed at which we are traveling through time.
  • #1
Tzemach
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Ever since Prof. Davies paper suggesting that the speed of light has changed was published I have been playing with some figures and would like to get some opinions.

We all accept that time is relative, if speed is V=d/t then velocity (speed) is dependent on our unit of time in this instance the speed of light is actually the speed at which we are traveling through time, or am I missing something?
 
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  • #2
Tzemach said:
Ever since Prof. Davies paper suggesting that the speed of light has changed was published I have been playing with some figures and would like to get some opinions.

We all accept that time is relative, if speed is V=d/t then velocity (speed) is dependent on our unit of time in this instance the speed of light is actually the speed at which we are traveling through time, or am I missing something?

You are putting the cart before the horse, and turned the effect into the cause.

Look at the postulate of SR. You'll see clearly that (i) c is a constant in all inertial reference frame and (ii) time dilation is NOT part of the postulate. This means that the starting point here is the constancy of the speed of light, and one of the consequences of that postulate is the time dilation effect.

I'm sure you can see now why turning the tail end back into the head, and using the effect to change the cause, does not really make any sense.

As for Davis's claim, it is still highly controversial (I've listed several recent publications that contradict this on here), and it has more to do with the fine-structure constant that might have changed over time than anything else. Even if this is true, it is still a major jump from the fine structure constant changing to c changing with time.

Zz.
 
  • #3
ZapperZ said:
Look at the postulate of SR. You'll see clearly that (i) c is a constant in all inertial reference frame and (ii) time dilation is NOT part of the postulate. This means that the starting point here is the constancy of the speed of light, and one of the consequences of that postulate is the time dilation effect.
Well in all fairness ZapperZ you really cannot derive the Lorentz factor from the postulate of the constancy of the speed of light alone. That is simply a mathematical impossibility.
 
  • #4
MeJennifer said:
Well in all fairness ZapperZ you really cannot derive the Lorentz factor from the postulate of the constancy of the speed of light alone. That is simply a mathematical impossibility.

Where did I say one could?

Zz.
 
  • #5
Is it simpler to deduce the constancy of time?
 
  • #6
Tzemach said:
Ever since Prof. Davies paper suggesting that the speed of light has changed was published ...

it, to say the least, is controversial. I'm more of the mind of Michael Duff, who, in my opinion blew Davies' claim out of the water with a very sensible fundamental argument that Davies is confusing choice of units with meaningful reality in physics:

from: http://www.arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0208093

The failure to tell the difference between changing units and changing physics is more than just semantics. It brings to mind the old lady who, when asked by the TV interviewer whether she believed in global warming, responded: “If you ask me, it’s all this changing from Fahrenheit to Centigrade that’s causing it”.

when we measure or perceive anything, we are measuring dimensionless numbers. we are measuring or perceiving one (usually dimensionful) physical quantity against a like dimensioned standard (sometimes called a "unit"). a variation in the fine-structure constant, [itex]\alpha[/itex] or the ratio of particle masses (such as [itex]m_p/m_e[/itex]) is something that has operationally meaningful consequence. the variation of a single dimensionful quantity, in and of itself, does not. and blaming any conceivable variation in a dimensionless "constant" such as [itex]\alpha[/itex] on any single component, is not meaningful. if [itex]\alpha[/itex] has changed, there is no meaningful differentiation between saying it because of changing [itex]e[/itex] or [itex]c[/itex] or [itex]\hbar[/itex]. we cannot know.
 
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  • #7
We can add that it is a fact that can permit and even predict some versions of theories like LQG and other. If my memory is not so bad, some people in the Imperial College were working on the possibility of light traveling at different velocities (acording to the energy carried), I'm not sure that Fortini Markopolu examined the idea there, but some people considered the implications and even the possibility of experimental detection of it -the effect becomes accumulative for long cosmological distances for the calculations in LQG-. I don't know if that was the idea when tzemach started the post. If it was the case, resulted inaforutnated the metion of Davies.
 
  • #8
MeJennifer said:
Well in all fairness ZapperZ you really cannot derive the Lorentz factor from the postulate of the constancy of the speed of light alone. That is simply a mathematical impossibility.


You only need two principles. The constancy of the speed of light and the principle that the laws of physics are the same for all inertial observers (i.e., observers agree on events). That and some algebra.
 

FAQ: C - Speed of Light: Is Time Relative?

What is the speed of light in a vacuum?

The speed of light in a vacuum is approximately 299,792,458 meters per second, or about 186,282 miles per second.

How was the speed of light first measured?

The speed of light was first accurately measured by Danish astronomer Ole Rømer in 1676 by observing the time it took for the moons of Jupiter to orbit the planet.

Can anything travel faster than the speed of light?

According to Einstein's theory of relativity, it is impossible for anything to travel faster than the speed of light. This is because the speed of light is considered to be the universal speed limit in the universe.

How does the speed of light relate to time dilation?

Einstein's theory of relativity also states that the passage of time is relative and can be affected by an object's speed. As an object approaches the speed of light, time will appear to slow down for that object in relation to a stationary observer.

What is the significance of the speed of light in modern physics?

The speed of light plays a crucial role in many areas of modern physics, such as understanding the behavior of particles and the structure of the universe. It is also a fundamental constant in many equations, such as Einstein's famous equation E=mc², which relates energy and mass.

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