Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the Second Edition of Volume 2
- Preface to the First Edition of Volume 2
- Preface to the Berkeley Physics Course
- CHAPTER 1 LECTROSTATICS: CHARGES AND FIELDS
- CHAPTER 2 THE ELECTRIC POTENTIAL
- CHAPTER 3 ELECTRIC FIELDS AROUND CONDUCTORS
- CHAPTER 4 ELECTRIC CURRENTS
- CHAPTER 5 THE FIELDS OF MOVING CHARGES
- CHAPTER 6 THE MAGNETIC FIELD
- CHAPTER 7 ELECTROMAGNETIC INDUCTION
- CHAPTER 8 ALTERNATING-CURRENT CIRCUITS
- CHAPTER 9 MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES
- CHAPTER 10 ELECTRIC FIELDS IN MATTER
- CHAPTER 11 MAGNETIC FIELDS IN MATTER
- Appendix A A Short Review of Special Relativity
- Appendix B Radiation by an Accelerated Charge
- Appendix C Superconductivity
- Appendix D Magnetic Resonance
- Appendix E Exact Relations among SI and CGS Units
- Index
Appendix E - Exact Relations among SI and CGS Units
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the Second Edition of Volume 2
- Preface to the First Edition of Volume 2
- Preface to the Berkeley Physics Course
- CHAPTER 1 LECTROSTATICS: CHARGES AND FIELDS
- CHAPTER 2 THE ELECTRIC POTENTIAL
- CHAPTER 3 ELECTRIC FIELDS AROUND CONDUCTORS
- CHAPTER 4 ELECTRIC CURRENTS
- CHAPTER 5 THE FIELDS OF MOVING CHARGES
- CHAPTER 6 THE MAGNETIC FIELD
- CHAPTER 7 ELECTROMAGNETIC INDUCTION
- CHAPTER 8 ALTERNATING-CURRENT CIRCUITS
- CHAPTER 9 MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES
- CHAPTER 10 ELECTRIC FIELDS IN MATTER
- CHAPTER 11 MAGNETIC FIELDS IN MATTER
- Appendix A A Short Review of Special Relativity
- Appendix B Radiation by an Accelerated Charge
- Appendix C Superconductivity
- Appendix D Magnetic Resonance
- Appendix E Exact Relations among SI and CGS Units
- Index
Summary
In 1983 the General Conference on Weights and Measures officially redefined the meter as the distance that light travels in vacuum in 1/299,792,458 of a second. The second is defined in terms of a certain atomic frequency in a way that does not concern us here. The nine-digit integer was chosen to make the assigned value of c agree with the most accurate measured value to well within the uncertainty in the latter. Henceforth the velocity of light is, by definition, 299,792,458 meters/sec. An experiment in which the passage of a light pulse from point A to point B is timed is to be regarded as a measurement of the distance from A to B, not a measurement of the speed of light.
While this step has no immediate practical consequences, it does bring a welcome simplification of the exact relations connecting various electromagnetic units. As we learn in Chapter 9, Maxwell's equations for the vacuum fields, formulated in SI units, have a solution in the form of a traveling wave with velocity c = (μ0ε0)-1/2;. The SI constant μ0 has always been defined exactly as 4π × 10-7, whereas the value of ε0 has depended on the experimentally determined value of the speed of light, any refinement of which called for adjustment of the value of ε0.
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- Electricity and Magnetism , pp. 473 - 476Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011