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Speed of light - Measurement Techniques

Understand the different techniques for measuring the speed of light, how their accuracy has progressed historically, and why this constant defines the metre today.
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How is the speed of light ($c$) calculated using direct measurement of a light beam?
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Summary

Determination Methods for the Speed of Light Introduction The speed of light is one of the most precisely known constants in physics. Throughout history, scientists have developed increasingly accurate methods to measure it, and in 1983, the scientific community adopted it as an exact defined constant. Understanding how light's speed is determined reveals fundamental connections between frequency, wavelength, and electromagnetic properties of the vacuum. This study will examine the main techniques used to measure $c$, their underlying principles, and how they have evolved to achieve extraordinary precision. Fundamental Principle: The Relationship Between Frequency and Wavelength At the heart of measuring the speed of light lies a simple but powerful relationship: $$c = f \lambda$$ where $f$ is frequency (oscillations per second) and $\lambda$ is wavelength (distance between successive wave peaks). This equation tells us that if we can measure both the frequency and wavelength of light, we can calculate its speed directly. This is the principle behind several important measurement techniques. Why This Works Light is an electromagnetic wave. Like any wave, its speed depends on how fast the peaks move past a point (related to frequency) and how far apart those peaks are (wavelength). Multiplying these two quantities gives us the speed at which the wave propagates through space. The Electromagnetic Constant Method There is an elegant alternative way to determine $c$ using fundamental properties of empty space itself. Maxwell's theory of electromagnetism reveals that: $$c = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\mu0 \varepsilon0}}$$ where: $\varepsilon0$ is the electric constant (vacuum permittivity), describing how electric fields interact with the vacuum $\mu0$ is the magnetic constant (vacuum permeability), describing how magnetic fields interact with the vacuum Historical Context The magnetic constant $\mu0$ was historically defined exactly as $4\pi \times 10^{-7}$ henries per meter by the international definition of the electric current unit (the ampere). This meant that if you measured $\varepsilon0$ carefully in the laboratory, you could calculate $c$ directly from this formula. This method provided some of the earliest precise measurements of light's speed. Time-of-Flight Methods The Basic Principle The most intuitive way to measure $c$ is to measure how long light takes to travel a known distance. If light travels a distance $d$ and takes time $t$, then $c = d/t$. Fizeau's Rotating Cogwheel (1849) Hippolyte Fizeau invented a clever optical technique that didn't require timing devices fast enough to measure billionths of a second (which didn't exist in 1849). Here's how it worked: A light beam passes through a gap in a rapidly rotating cogwheel The light travels to a mirror 8 kilometers away On the return journey, the light attempts to pass through the cogwheel again The key insight: if the wheel rotates at exactly the right speed, the light will encounter a tooth instead of a gap upon return, and no light gets back to the observer. If the speed is slightly different, light squeezes past a tooth. By measuring the rotation rate at which light is just blocked, Fizeau could infer how fast light traveled the 8 km distance. Foucault's Rotating Mirror (1862) Léon Foucault improved this technique by replacing the cogwheel with a rapidly rotating mirror. As the mirror rotates while the light travels out and back, the returning beam gets deflected by a measurable angle. The amount of angular deflection directly reveals the light's speed. This method was more precise than Fizeau's and provided measurements accurate to about 1 percent. Cavity Resonance Technique The Physical Setup When electromagnetic waves are confined inside a metal box (called a resonant cavity), they form standing waves—like vibrations on a drum head, but for electromagnetic fields. These standing waves only exist at certain specific frequencies, called resonant frequencies. The resonant frequency depends on the cavity's dimensions and the speed of light: $$f = \frac{c}{2L}$$ where $L$ is related to the cavity's size. Rearranging: $c = 2Lf$. The Measurement Technique To determine $c$ using cavity resonance: Construct a precisely machined metal cavity of known dimensions Inject electromagnetic waves (microwaves) into the cavity Measure the frequency at which resonance occurs (when standing waves form with maximum amplitude) Calculate $c$ from the dimensions and measured frequency Historical Achievement Louis Essen and A. C. Gordon-Smith (1946) used this method with exceptional precision, achieving: $$c = 299,792 \pm 9 \text{ km/s}$$ By 1950, after refinement, Essen improved this to: $$c = 299,792.5 \pm 3.0 \text{ km/s}$$ This measurement was so accurate that it was officially adopted by the International Radio-Scientific Union in 1957 and became the standard value for decades. Interferometric Method The Principle An interferometer splits a laser beam into two paths that travel different distances, then recombines them. The recombined beams create an interference pattern—alternating bright and dark fringes. The spacing of these fringes depends on the wavelength of the light. The Procedure If the laser's frequency $f$ is known precisely (from atomic frequency standards), then measuring the wavelength $\lambda$ gives us $c$ immediately: $$c = f \lambda$$ Modern interferometers achieve this by: Locking a laser to a precisely known low-frequency atomic reference (like the caesium-133 hyperfine transition) Synthesizing higher frequencies through nonlinear optical processes Measuring the wavelength with extraordinary accuracy using interference fringes Precision Achievement By 1972, the National Bureau of Standards used this method with the newly defined metre and second standards to obtain: $$c = 299,792,456.2 \pm 1.1 \text{ m/s}$$ This represented a 100-fold improvement in uncertainty compared to earlier cavity methods. Evolution of Measurement Precision The history of measuring $c$ shows a dramatic progression in accuracy, driven by advances in both measurement techniques and fundamental definitions of units. The Problem: Circular Definitions By the 1970s, physicists faced a conceptual problem. To measure $c$ precisely, they needed to measure distance and time precisely. But the definitions of the metre and second were themselves somewhat arbitrary and could be improved using measurements of light's properties. This created a potential circularity. The 1960 and 1967 Redefinitions 1960: The metre was redefined using the wavelength of krypton-86 light, replacing the old platinum bar standard 1967: The second was redefined using the hyperfine transition frequency of caesium-133 atoms These redefinitions provided much more precise and reproducible unit standards based on atomic physics. The Solution: Defining c Exactly (1983) Rather than continuously measuring $c$ and hoping for incremental improvements, the international scientific community made a bold decision. In 1983, the speed of light in vacuum was defined exactly as: $$c = 299,792,458 \text{ m/s}$$ This is not an approximate measurement—it is an exact, defined constant, just like we define $\pi$ to be exactly the ratio of circumference to diameter. What Changed When c Became Defined? This redefinition had profound implications: The Metre Is Now Defined Through Light's Speed Since $c$ is exact and the second is defined by caesium atoms, the metre is now defined as the distance light travels in exactly $1/299,792,458$ seconds. This is far more precise and reproducible than any physical artifact (like the old platinum bar). Improved Measurements Now Refine the Metre Any new high-precision measurements of light's speed do not change the accepted value of $c$ (it's fixed). Instead, they refine how we physically realize the metre in laboratories. This eliminates circular reasoning and anchors the entire system of units to well-understood physics. Fundamental Importance This exact definition underpins the International System of Units (SI) and ensures that scientific measurements remain uniform and consistent worldwide. Modern Measurement Techniques Today, several sophisticated methods maintain and verify this exact definition: Cavity-Resonator Methods Modern cavity-resonance techniques using precisely machined metal cylinders and microwave engineering determine resonant frequencies with incredible precision. These complement direct optical measurements and provide independent verification that $c$ remains invariant. Frequency-Comb Lasers Frequency-comb lasers represent a revolutionary advance. These lasers emit light simultaneously at many frequencies, evenly spaced like the teeth of a comb. By comparing these optical frequencies to microwave frequency standards, scientists create direct connections between optical and microwave domains, providing unprecedented precision in determining light's propagation properties. Stabilized Cavity Interferometry Fabry-Perot interferometers (cavities with partially reflective mirrors) stabilized by locking them to atomic frequency standards achieve relative uncertainties below $10^{-9}$—that's one part in a billion. Methane-Stabilized Lasers Direct measurements of wavelength and frequency for methane-stabilized lasers achieve uncertainties at the $10^{-11}$ level—one part in 100 billion. These represent some of the most precise measurements in all of experimental physics. <extrainfo> Astrophysical Tests of Light Speed Constancy While the speed of light is now a defined constant, physicists still perform independent checks using astronomical observations: Gamma-Ray Burst Timing Time-of-flight measurements of photons arriving from gamma-ray bursts at different energies test whether different photon energies travel at different speeds. To date, no variation has been detected. Very-Long-Baseline Interferometry This technique monitors apparent superluminal motion in relativistic jets from distant galaxies. Objects moving at nearly the speed of light toward Earth can appear to move faster than light due to relativistic effects. These observations confirm that light always travels at the defined speed $c$. Lunar Laser Ranging Retroreflectors left on the Moon by Apollo astronauts are bombarded with laser pulses from Earth. The round-trip light travel time confirms the constancy of $c$ over the Earth-Moon distance (about 384,000 km) to better than one part in $10^{12}$—an astonishing precision. Pulsar Timing Pulsar signals, observed across a wide range of frequencies, provide independent checks on electromagnetic signal propagation speed across interstellar distances. </extrainfo> Summary and Key Takeaways The speed of light can be determined through several complementary methods: Frequency-wavelength multiplication: Measuring $f$ and $\lambda$ and using $c = f\lambda$ Electromagnetic constants: Using $c = 1/\sqrt{\mu0 \varepsilon0}$ Time-of-flight techniques: Measuring how long light takes to travel a known distance Cavity resonance: Using standing waves in confined spaces Interferometry: Measuring wavelength through interference patterns The precision of $c$ measurements has improved dramatically over 150+ years, from Fizeau's 1% uncertainty to modern precisions of one part in a billion or better. In 1983, the scientific community recognized that $c$ should be treated as an exactly defined constant, with the metre defined in terms of light's speed. This elegant solution unified the measurement system and provided a stable foundation for all of physics.
Flashcards
How is the speed of light ($c$) calculated using direct measurement of a light beam?
By multiplying the frequency and the wavelength ($c = \text{frequency} \times \text{wavelength}$).
What is the relationship between the speed of light ($c$), the magnetic constant ($\mu0$), and the electric constant ($\varepsilon0$) in a vacuum?
$c = 1/\sqrt{\mu0 \varepsilon0}$
What is the currently accepted exact numerical value for the speed of light ($c$) in a vacuum?
$299,792,458\text{ m/s}$
Since 1983, how has the definition of the meter related to the speed of light?
The meter is defined based on the fixed numerical value of $c$ and the definition of the second.
What is the effect of improved measurement techniques on the speed of light ($c$) given its current definition?
They refine the realization of the metre rather than changing the value of $c$.
How is distance to a target determined using a reflected radio pulse and the speed of light?
By measuring the round-trip time and dividing by two.
How did Léon Foucault's method for measuring the speed of light differ from Fizeau's?
He replaced the rotating cogwheel with a rotating mirror.
In Foucault's measurement method, what specific observation provides the speed of light?
The angular deflection of the returning beam.
In the equation $c^2 = 1/(\varepsilon0 \mu0)$, what do $\varepsilon0$ and $\mu0$ represent?
$\varepsilon0$ is vacuum permittivity and $\mu0$ is vacuum permeability.
What was the historically fixed value of vacuum permeability ($\mu0$) by definition of the ampere?
$4\pi \times 10^{-7}\text{ henry per metre}$
How is the speed of light ($c$) inferred using a resonant cavity?
By measuring the frequency ($f$) and wavelength ($\lambda$) of a standing electromagnetic wave ($c = \lambda f$).
How is an interference pattern created in the interferometric method for measuring light speed?
A coherent laser beam is split into two paths and then recombined.
What specific physical constants or transitions were used to redefine the metre and the second in the 1960s?
Metre (1960): Wavelength of a krypton-86 spectral line Second (1967): Hyperfine transition frequency of caesium-133
Which laser technology provides a direct connection between optical frequencies and microwave standards for measuring $c$?
Frequency-comb lasers.
What phenomenon observed in relativistic jets is monitored to confirm light-speed invariance?
Apparent superluminal motion.
To what precision does Lunar laser ranging confirm the constancy of the speed of light ($c$)?
Better than one part in $10^{12}$.
Which astronomical objects provide independent checks on the propagation speed of electromagnetic signals via timing observations?
Pulsars.

Quiz

Which 1849 experiment used a rotating cogwheel and a distant mirror to measure the speed of light?
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Key Concepts
Measurement Techniques
Time‑of‑flight measurement
Interferometry
Cavity‑resonance technique
Fizeau experiment
Foucault rotating‑mirror experiment
Fundamental Constants
Speed of light
Electromagnetic constants (vacuum permittivity and permeability)
Frequency‑comb laser
Metre Redefinition
Redefinition of the metre
International System of Units (SI)