speed of light
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speed of light
Does the speed of light always stay the same? If not, under what circumstances can it change?
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Re: speed of light
No the speed of does not remain constant, a case where it changes is when it goes through multiple different mediums.
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Re: speed of light
I think that the speed of light changes depending on the material it travels through. Light moves slower through denser materials as particles can get in its way.
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Re: speed of light
Yeah just to add on, the speed of light does change when passing from medium to medium. But the fastest it can be is the value we denote as "c" (3.00 x 10^8 m/s), which is when it is travelling in a vacuum.
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Re: speed of light
I remember learning in physics something about mediums and light. I know that a vacuum is where light can travel fastest. What is the next fastest medium?
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Re: speed of light
I think for most of the problems we'll be doing this quarter we can just assume that C = the speed of light in a vacuum.
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Re: speed of light
For the intents and purposes of this class, the constant for the speed of light, c, always equals 3.00 x 10^8. However, it is important to note that the speed of light is not constant as it moves from medium to medium. When light enters a denser material, the speed and wavelength of light decrease while the frequency stays the same.
Re: speed of light
When talking about a vacuum, it essentially means that that is how fast light travels through space, and is very similar but not exactly the same on earth when light is traveling through the air.
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Re: speed of light
Throughout this quarter, and for the purpose of this class, the speed of light will remain a constant equal to 3.0 x 10^8 m.sec^-1, however outside of this setting, it is not so absolute, and actually changes relative to the the mediums it travels through.
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Re: speed of light
Drake Choi_1I wrote:I remember learning in physics something about mediums and light. I know that a vacuum is where light can travel fastest. What is the next fastest medium?
I believe water is the next fastest at about 2.25 x 10^8 m.sec^-1, but we'll mainly be working with light in a vacuum
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Re: speed of light
The speed of light in a vaccuum is 3.00x10^8 m/s. It is slower in mediums like air, water, and glass. I think that for this class we'll just use this value.
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