What is Light speed: Definition and 320 Discussions

The speed of light in vacuum, commonly denoted c, is a universal physical constant important in many areas of physics. Its exact value is defined as 299792458 metres per second (approximately 300000 km/s, or 186000 mi/s). It is exact because, by international agreement, a metre is defined as the length of the path travelled by light in vacuum during a time interval of 1⁄299792458 second. According to special relativity, c is the upper limit for the speed at which conventional matter, energy or any signal carrying information can travel through space.
Though this speed is most commonly associated with light, it is also the speed at which all massless particles and field perturbations travel in vacuum, including electromagnetic radiation (of which light is a small range in the frequency spectrum) and gravitational waves. Such particles and waves travel at c regardless of the motion of the source or the inertial reference frame of the observer. Particles with nonzero rest mass can approach c, but can never actually reach it, regardless of the frame of reference in which their speed is measured. In the special and general theories of relativity, c interrelates space and time, and also appears in the famous equation of mass–energy equivalence, E = mc2. In some cases objects or waves may appear to travel faster than light (e.g. phase velocities of waves, the appearance of certain high-speed astronomical objects, and particular quantum effects). The expansion of the universe is understood to exceed the speed of light beyond a certain boundary.
The speed at which light propagates through transparent materials, such as glass or air, is less than c; similarly, the speed of electromagnetic waves in wire cables is slower than c. The ratio between c and the speed v at which light travels in a material is called the refractive index n of the material (n = c / v). For example, for visible light, the refractive index of glass is typically around 1.5, meaning that light in glass travels at c / 1.5 ≈ 200000 km/s (124000 mi/s); the refractive index of air for visible light is about 1.0003, so the speed of light in air is about 90 km/s (56 mi/s) slower than c.
For many practical purposes, light and other electromagnetic waves will appear to propagate instantaneously, but for long distances and very sensitive measurements, their finite speed has noticeable effects. In communicating with distant space probes, it can take minutes to hours for a message to get from Earth to the spacecraft, or vice versa. The light seen from stars left them many years ago, allowing the study of the history of the universe by looking at distant objects. The finite speed of light also ultimately limits the data transfer between the CPU and memory chips in computers. The speed of light can be used with time of flight measurements to measure large distances to high precision.
Ole Rømer first demonstrated in 1676 that light travels at a finite speed (non-instantaneously) by studying the apparent motion of Jupiter's moon Io. In 1865, James Clerk Maxwell proposed that light was an electromagnetic wave, and therefore travelled at the speed c appearing in his theory of electromagnetism. In 1905, Albert Einstein postulated that the speed of light c with respect to any inertial frame is a constant and is independent of the motion of the light source. He explored the consequences of that postulate by deriving the theory of relativity and in doing so showed that the parameter c had relevance outside of the context of light and electromagnetism.
After centuries of increasingly precise measurements, in 1975 the speed of light was known to be 299792458 m/s (983571056 ft/s; 186282.397 mi/s) with a measurement uncertainty of 4 parts per billion. In 1983, the metre was redefined in the International System of Units (SI) as the distance travelled by light in vacuum in 1 / 299792458 of a second.

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  1. Samia qureshi

    Understanding Sonic Booms and Light Speed Phenomena

    As speed of the sounding source approaches speed of sound, sonic boom is heard... Can it happen in terms of light too.. ?
  2. G

    Light speed moving objects -- What would it look like?

    Hello community, First of all I want to apologize if what I'm about to post is a complete nonsense, I have to admit that my knowledge in physics and futhermore astrophysics is close to NULL, but from a few years back I've been wondering some things but I didn't have the chance to discuss about...
  3. SF Alba

    I Communicating at Near-Light Speed - Time Dilation

    So, I've been wondering: how would time dilation affect communications? For the sake of visualisation, imagine the Flash is running at 99% the speed of light in a circle around a fixed position. There's a building in this position, and inside this building are his friends. Due to time dilation...
  4. Zahidur

    Does light always travel at light speed?

    I've been told contradicting ideas about this. I've been told that light doesn't travel at a constant speed everywhere (i.e. light slowing down in speed after entering a more dense medium). However, I've also read that light speed is constant everywhere (i.e. if you could travel close to the...
  5. J

    I Light speed and the LIGO experiment

    Hello all, I was thinking about the speed of light and why it's constant and it brought me to the principle of the LIGO experiment for which I have an assumption that I want to verify. I'm a novice at this so please bear with me. From what I know, the LIGO experiment splits an emitting light...
  6. P

    B Speed of Light Lowered in Vacuum: Consequences for Relativity?

    Hello ! A few days ago, I came across this article http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-30944584 And I was wondering if it has any consequences with the relativity ? I mean, in my mind, light velocity is supposed to be constant in vaccum, c0 = 3e08 [m/s] approximatively... What...
  7. E

    Is light speed really constant?

    Big masses like planets and stars have gravitational fields. Gravitational fields curve space around them. So in theory a particle having mass moving at fixed speed, from its own perspective, will accelerate when moving closer to such a planet. It'll be moving at fixed speed in a curved space...
  8. Ananay Wadehra

    Conditions of Big Bang & Light Speed Travel: Exploring Relativity

    According to Einsteins Theory of relativity if an object traveled at the speed of light, it's mass would become infinite, time would seem to stop relative to others and it length would become absolute zero. The same conditions were thought of at the Big Bang, when time didn't seem to have...
  9. S

    Could we "catch" the light from prehistoric Earth and see dinosaurs?

    My first question on your forum. I just found you last week and have spent a whole lot of time reading. My question: Not actually a question, but a supposition seeking confirmation. Were it possible to travel faster than light, could we "catch" the light from prehistoric Earth and see...
  10. S

    Proving Lorentz Transform Without Light Signal

    The thought experiment used to prove Lorentz transform uses a light signal as an assumption. What if there was something other than the light signal then Lorentz transformation would have totally different term in place of 'c'(speed of light).
  11. nandodean

    Questions of Absolute Light Speed & Mass by an Engineer

    Hello everybody. I am an spanish student of a bsc in Chemical Engineering, so as you can imagine, all this questions are going to be purely curiosity. First of all, sorry for any english language mistake I can commit. I have always been curious of the spacetime issues, and how the world really...
  12. xpell

    Are all massless particles "born" at light speed?

    (I think) I know that massless particles can only exist traveling at c, but I find it somehow counter-intuitive (like many other real things... :D ) Would anyone please be so kind to confirm that, for instance, a gamma photon generated by the radioactive decay of a stationary isotope is already...
  13. mileymo

    Travel to Light Speed: Acceleration & Deceleration

    How long/what distance would it take a spaceship (with a hypothetical propellant-less engine) to accelerate to near light speed, and secondly, how low long/what distance would it take to decelerate back to zero again?
  14. nilesh_pat

    Light Speed: Possibilities & Limitations

    why only light has speed of 299792458 m/s. Possibility to increase the speed. With regards Nilesh
  15. G

    Age of the observable Universe?

    Forgive my ignorance?.. If we can see 13.8-ish billion light years away how can the universe be the same age? Matter cannot travel at the speed of light, so how are we as far away (in light years) as the universe is old?
  16. Rupert Young

    How can the observable universe be 46 billion lyrs in size?

    I watched a BBC documentary that said that the observable universe is about 46 billion light years in size. How can this be if the age of the universe is 13.7 billion years (and nothing travels faster than the speed of light)?
  17. B

    Do Particles at LHC Travel Near Light Speed?

    If particles at the LHC are traveling very near the speed of light, are they affected by the slowness of time? Also, how can they travel near the speed of light when the planet is rotating around the sun and the solar system is traveling around the galaxy and the galaxy is moving through space...
  18. Stephanus

    When Will B2 Be Received by A?

    Dear PF Forum, There's one thing still bothering me. The speed of light. Supposed two observer, A and B A is from the west, B from the east. Separated by 100 lys. B sends a signal, say, B1 to A. So B1 will be received by A in 100 years, right? Now, supposed B travels at 0.8c and at the distance...
  19. J

    Approaching Light Speed: Why Would It Fail?

    Ok Little background knowledge I am a huge scifi nerd I know some about modern physics mostly conceptual not mathematical The limit of my mathematics is the rocket equation. Anyway as most good ideas this one came to me in my sleep. I understand that the general convention is travel to the speed...
  20. amateur physic

    Is comunication faster that light possible: yes( maybe )

    i think it is possible but its too complicated to write down in english so i think comunication faster than light is possible without anything acctualy moving faster than light. If you had a big stick between Earth and the sun and you push the stick towards the sun for 1 inch it will instantly...
  21. T

    Perceiving Time and Speed at Near Light Speed

    Two spaceships pass by each other. Both are traveling at near the speed of light. How will each spaceship percieve each other speed and time? Besides how do you do it mathematically?
  22. Noctisdark

    Observing Objects Near Light Speed: Time Dilation or Reality?

    Hello PF, A question on special relativity I've not found an answer to,I tried to google it but no luck, so here is it : If you were to observe a moving body whose speed is very near to the speed of light, will you see it slowly due to time dilation, or you'll observe it as it really is, very...
  23. SpanishOmelette

    Riddle Me This: Vibrating at Light Speed & Time Travel

    Riddle me this. If it was possible to vibrate at near the speed of light, would that still create the effect of time passing faster for you but your surrounding passing through time at the same rate? Just wondering. I am aware that A) Time travel backwards would not function, due to the...
  24. seb7

    Measuring possible one-way anistropy of light speed

    wiki says "Experiments that attempted to directly probe the one-way speed of light independent of synchronization have been proposed, but none has succeeded in doing so" Here's a proposed experiment which I could not find any evidence of this being performed before.. Central light source...
  25. Eric Ward

    Light speed is not constant or accurate

    Hi all, this my first forum ever. I'm a self taught physicist. So pardon my ignorance. I pose this question. If speed :s = distance :d ÷ by time :t Then how can we possibly measure our cosmos accurately with a measure of speed aka "Light Speed". The problem I see with this is TIME is a variable...
  26. dbmorpher

    Is Reflective Fiction a Potential Problem for Starships at High Speeds?

    While the main problems of a functioning starship are commonly known such as energy requirements and radiation I have realized another problem when near the speed of light. The dynamic Casimir effect occurs when a reflecting object reaches relativistic velocities. Therefore a starship with a...
  27. H

    What do you mean, approaching the speed of light?

    If velocity is relative and dependent on an observer then how does an isolated object "approach the speed of light"? Approaching the speed of light relative to what? Does the ubiquitous constant velocity/closed compartment analogy break down at relativistic speeds? If one were traveling "near...
  28. C

    Fast Intersection of Crafts: Tau Ceti-Sol Trip

    Hi, I am currently plotting a piece of writing and wonder if anyone could give me some feedback on the following: - Space craft 1 is a beam/ sail craft with constant acceleration of 1 G to a speed of 0.2c. It travels along a straight line between Tau Ceti and Sol (circa 12 ly). Ship time...
  29. S

    Is the speed of light based on an incorrect assumption?

    Hi there. Just wondering if the speed of light is wrong for a 3 dimensional universe. As each photon of light traverses space its velocity is 299 792 458 m/s. And since each photon has a wavelength and amplitude, then the actual distance that each photon travels, depending on its wavelength and...
  30. H

    Time Dilation at Near Light Speed: Answers to a Thought Exercise

    I'm fairly new to the concepts provided by special and general relativity, and was wondering if someone could provide an answer to a thought exercise I came across regarding time dilation on an object going near light speed. Say a spaceship were connected by a live video feed to a monitor on...
  31. 1

    What happens to electron wave as it travles to light speed

    everyone knows that if an electron travels close to light speed, they gain mass, but how about the wave side of things? since gravity and electromagnetism are 2 completely different things (is gravity and magnetism both waves?) would the electron wave traveling close to light speed be not...
  32. B

    Light speed and uncertanty principle

    Is it true that if time stood still it would violate the uncertainty principle. therefor if you traveled at the speed of light time stands still and you would violate the uncertainty principle. if this is true does that sugest that QFT sets a lower max speed that matter can travel at than what...
  33. P

    Explaining Why Accelerating a Spacecraft to Light Speed is Impossible

    Homework Statement In terms of the energy involved (using formulas provided), explain why accelerating a spacecraft to the speed of light is impossible. Homework Equations time, mass and length dilation formulas, and a few astrophysics formulas, E = Ek + mc2, projectile motion formulas The...
  34. W

    Neutron Star at Near Light Speed

    What would happen to a neutron star (on the cusp of becoming a black hole) if it were sped up to near the speed of light? Or more easily done, if I sped up to near the speed of light. Would the additional mass from the near light speed cause the neutron star to collapse in on itself and form a...
  35. AbhiFromXtraZ

    The Principle of Invariant Light Speed

    While reading Special Theory of Relativity from Feynman Lectures, I fell into the confusion about invariant speed of light. What I'm asking for is an explanation about this. No matter whether physical explanation or mathematical. So my question is Why the speed of light is same for a person...
  36. T

    Why are time dilatation & length contraction infinite at light speed?

    Considering that speed of light is constant and finite, then why are the time dilatation and length contraction infinite to a frame of reference moving at the speed of light? We know that a moving frame of reference experiments time dilatation and length contraction from the point of view of a...
  37. D

    Higgs field at near light speed

    I'm a high school student and I don't know much about this stuff e.g. the Higgs Field but i know that the Higgs field gives mass to some particles. I also learned that the mass of an object is relative to its speed. So my question is, what happens to the Higgs field at those near light speeds to...
  38. R

    Constancy of the light speed

    Just a thought for the constancy of the light speed. Since photons are massless and therefore if they do not add the velocity of the moving light source i.e doesn't follow Newtons first law of inertia. It is only the surrounding that moves wrt the observer. The observer and the point light...
  39. W

    Questioning Light Speed: An Advanced Physics Mystery

    Hi everyone, First I want to say that I hardly know anything about advanced physics, and I'm just looking to ask something that I've been thinking about for a while. So I'd also appreciate if you kept the explanation somewhat understandable :P Anyway, here's my question: If light from...
  40. C

    Light Speed: Exploring the Possibilities of e=mc2

    Howdy, This is my first post. Please be gentle. ;-) I have been thinking about the speed of light. Scenario 1: I'm on a train traveling at the speed of light. Everything in the train immediately about me appears normal. The reflection in the windows, looking down at myself, indeed...
  41. D

    Observing objects moving close to light speed

    Would someone be kind enough to tell me if I'm getting this correct. Problem A A spherical light source is 1 light year away from Point A at point B. It moves at near light speed in a circumference around Point A to Point C for a distance of 1 light year. When the light reaches it's...
  42. W

    Calculating Ratio of Electrical Current to Light Speed: A Challenge!

    Homework Statement If a 0.505m long wire is excited into its lowest electrical resonance by a 2.2E7 Hz electrical oscillator, what is the ratio of the speed of the electrical current to that of light? Assume that the wire is like a tube with both ends closed. f=2.2E7 L=0.505 v=...
  43. K

    Einstein and his theory of light speed

    Einstein theorized that if you were to go the speed of light or even faster then the light around you would become paralyzed. But if you're going that fast then the light wouldn't be able to catch up to you, so technically wouldn't the light around you would become black because the light...
  44. H

    How Does Light Change Direction and Speed in Different Materials?

    Everyone knows that if a light come in a material will change speed(will become less),and from wikipedia I read that light wants to go from his faster way. So when material 'eat' from light some speed,then light as more 'clever',goes from a sooner way.(that what we call "refraction."). So my...
  45. seb7

    So, is light truly relative, or is its speed constant regardless of movement?

    ok, light isn't relative, or is it? Its said that galaxy far across the universe appear to be moving away from us at beyond light speed; as since the universe is expanding all around us. So, does that mean light within these distant galaxies moves around relative to within its own local...
  46. T

    Shift in Mercury's Perihelion by finite light speed

    Someone published a simple computation of the relativistic shift in Mercury's perihelion (over and above classical, ie. the small correction over the classical-mechanical shift) by more or less using the principle of relativity. I believe it was a she and she computed how far mercury travels...
  47. rshreyas

    Light Speed: Can Einstein's Theory Explain It?

    all objects travel at a speed .when we come to light , the speed is approximately 3 * 108 . i am confused about how can it travel with such a speed . i have surfed in the internet but it only says that it is not yet proved . i wish to know the answer . this could help me to study optics more...
  48. I

    Does time control light speed?

    Hi all, I am wondering if time has any control over light or is it vice versa? For instance, is light speed controlled by time? I have read that it is impossible for anything to travel faster than light and time slows down the closer you get to light speed. Is this because of time being in...
  49. J

    Light Speed: Exploring the Nature of Reality with Jack

    Hey folks, My first post. I'm a retired guy who liked physics in college, but couldn't quite get my head around calculus, so I was never able to confirm the things I learned through mathematical equations. I read primary lit., but I don't have the math skills to understand it. Physics became a...
  50. B

    How is light speed constant and in all directions ?

    this is my first post so please go easy on me : D My question basically is : how does time dilation work if you are moving towards a source of light ? if i am moving with a speed , 150 km/s and there is a light beam moving in the same direction as i am with a speed of 300km/s , according to...
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