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Den 05.12.2024 19:42, skrev J. J. Lodder:Paul B. Andersen <relativity@paulba.no> wrote:>So if the speed of light, measured with instruments with better
precision than they had in 1983 is found to be 299792458?.000001 m/s,
then that only means that the real speed of light (measured with
SI metre and SI second) is different from the defined one.
Note: measured with SI metre and SI second.
So this is completely, absolutely, and totally wrong.
Such a result does not mean that the speed of light
is off its defined value,
it means that your meter standard is off,
and that you must use your measurement result to recalibrate it.
(so that the speed of light comes out to its defined value)
The 1983 definition of the speed of light is:
c = 299792458 m/s
The 1983 definition of second is:
1 second = 9192631770 ??Cs
The 1983 definition of meter is:
1 metre = 1 second/299792458 m/s
The 2019 definition of meter is:
1 metre = 9192631770 ??Cs/299792458 m/s
If the speed of light is measured _with the meter and second
defined above_ it is obviously possible to get a result slightly
different from the defined speed of light.
So I was not "completely, absolutely, and totally wrong".
Are you are saying that if we got the result 299792458.000001 m/s
then the metre would have to be recalibrated to:
1 metre = 9192631770 ??Cs/299792458.000001 m/s ?
In other words, it means that you can nowadays
calibrate a frequency standard, aka secundary meter standard
to better accuracy than was possible 1n 1983.
Or are you saying that we would have to recalibrate the meter to:
1 metre = 9192631770.0000306 ??Cs/299792458 m/s ?
This is no doubt true,
but it cannot possibly change the (defined!) speed of light.
In still other words, there is no such thing as an independent SI meter.
The SI meter is that meter, and only that meter,
that makes the speed of light equal to 299792458 m/s (exactly)
Jan
You wrote:In fact, the kind of experiments that used to be called
'speed of light measurements' (so before 1983)
are still being done routinely today, at places like NIST, or BIPM.
The difference is that nowadays, precisely the same kind of measurements
are called 'calibration of a (secudary) meter standard',
or 'calibration of a frequency standard'.
Is any such recalibration of the meter ever done?
And which "frequency standard" are you referring to?
The definition of a second?
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