Light
Light is electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength that is visible to the eye (visible light) or, in a technical or scientific setting, electromagnetic radiation of any wavelength. The three basic dimensions of light (i.e., all electromagnetic radiation) are:
Speed of light
Although some people speak of the "velocity of light", the word velocity should be reserved for vector quantities, that is, those with both magnitude and direction. The speed of light is a scalar quantity, having only magnitude and no direction, and therefore speed is the correct term.
Related Topics:
Velocity - Vector - Magnitude - Direction - Scalar
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The speed of light has been measured many times, by many physicists. The best early measurement is Ole Rømer's (a Danish physicist), in 1676. By observing the motions of Jupiter and one of its moons, Io, with a telescope, and noting discrepancies in the apparent period of Io's orbit, Rømer calculated a speed of 227,000 kilometres per second (approximately 141,050 miles per second).
Related Topics:
Ole Rømer - 1676 - Jupiter - Moon - Io - Telescope - Kilometre - Second - Mile
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The first successful measurement of the speed of light using an earthbound apparatus was carried out by Hippolyte Fizeau in 1849. Fizeau directed a beam of light at a mirror several thousand metres away, and placed a rotating cog wheel in the path of the beam from the source to the mirror and back again. At a certain rate of rotation, the beam could pass through one gap in the wheel on the way out and the next gap on the way back. Knowing the distance to the mirror, the number of teeth on the wheel, and the rate of rotation, Fizeau measured the speed of light as 313,000 kilometres per second.
Related Topics:
Hippolyte Fizeau - 1849
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Léon Foucault used rotating mirrors to obtain a value of 298,000 km/s (about 185,000 miles/s) in 1862. Albert A. Michelson conducted experiments on the speed of light from 1877 until his death in 1931. He refined Foucault's results in 1926 using improved rotating mirrors to measure the time it took light to make a round trip from Mt. Wilson to Mt. San Antonio in California. The precise measurements yielded a speed of 186,285 mile/s (299,796 km/s ). In daily use, the figures are rounded off to 300,000 km/s and 186,000 miles/s.
Related Topics:
Léon Foucault - 1862 - Albert A. Michelson - 1877 - 1926 - Mirror - Time - California
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | Visible electromagnetic radiation |
| ► | Speed of light |
| ► | Refraction |
| ► | Optics |
| ► | Color and wavelengths |
| ► | Measurement of light |
| ► | Light sources |
| ► | Theories about light |
| ► | See also |
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