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majorpickle01 t1_j292333 wrote

In short, yes.

In not short, there are some more fringe theories coming out of quantum mechanics that posit that the speed of light (or more specifically the speed of causality) has changed slightly over time. However I've never seen anything serious come out of such papers.

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_PM_ME_PANGOLINS_ t1_j29nz9i wrote

There’s nothing we’ve found that says it has to have the value that it does, or that it can’t change at all, so it’s not completely out there to investigate the maths of if it did change over time and whether that predicts anything measurable.

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majorpickle01 t1_j29yae1 wrote

I don't think it's out there at all and it could be a fascinating avenue of research haha. I wasn't trying to be dismissive - I just know there's been a few papers put out speculating on a changing value of speed of causality, just I don't think there's been enough evidence or testability to really "mean" anything scientifically

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CompactOwl t1_j2ba062 wrote

My level of physics is limited to what I understand on the side because of my math major, but I have a question:

If speed of causality changes, would we even be able to measure that? Or what the change in causality cancel in all of our measurement instruments to give the same result again?

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majorpickle01 t1_j2bvhwy wrote

from the very limited reading I've seen into the subject the idea is it would be detectable in the CMB - something along the lines is it would affect the distributions of bands or something like that.

If you do some digging for papers on it there's are suggestions on how to test for it / physical consequences

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Agreeable_Highway_26 t1_j2aaj2n wrote

If it did change for E=mc^2 to hold AND conservation of energy to hold would there not need to be a large change in the amount of mass in the universe?

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majorpickle01 t1_j2ab6qi wrote

Admittedly I wouldn't be the best person to ask as I haven't studied science in nearly a decade, but my uneducated educated guess would be a change in the value of c is balanced out by other factors, probably something to do with dark energy.

In a sense the changing rate of expansion of the universe due to dark energy is what is causing the change in c. But that's just 100% made up of the top of the bonce. Hopefully someone with a more advanced and recent education can give you a good answer.

Key point is things don't change just because. There's always a reason fundamentally

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cdstephens t1_j29blu3 wrote

As far as we know, the speed of light as measured in vacuum has always been constant. We have not come across any experimental evidence otherwise.

Furthermore, we assume that all physical laws are the same across time and space. This is important due to Noether’s theorem, which says that symmetries in the physical laws lead to conservation laws. In this case, if the laws of physics changed with time, then energy conservation would be false; you would need very, very good evidence to claim that energy conservation is false.

As a caveat, changing the speed of light on its own isn’t very meaningful, because it’s a constant with dimensions. In physics, you can reframe all the most fundamental formulas in terms of dimensionless constants, like the fine structure constant; really, it’s these that would you want to see have changed over time or not.

For instance, if the fine structure constant changed with time, then the type of light emitted from atomic transitions would change over time as well. Meaningfully changing the speed of light would affect lots of other seemingly unrelated physics like this.

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ChaoticSalvation t1_j2b53ws wrote

We do have very good evidence that energy conservation is false as it is widely accepted that we describe the universe roughly with a FRW metric that explicitly breaks time translational symmetry.

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cdstephens t1_j2b8s3d wrote

That’s fair, cosmology and general relativity is a notable exception to all of this.

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[deleted] t1_j27w4wg wrote

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SenorTron t1_j2835dh wrote

This doesn't seem quite correct:

"During inflation the speed of light (C for ease of conversation here) was obviously higher because C is the fastest anything can travel in the universe."

While no information can travel faster than C, inflation of the universe doesn't necessarily count for that because no information is being transferred faster than light. Indeed we're pretty sure that in the modern universe it is expanding at a rate such that some points are moving away from each other faster than light.

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[deleted] t1_j284dff wrote

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electric_ionland t1_j2884m8 wrote

> Again, my understanding is fairly limited and largely from popular press like a brief history of time and such. So any errors here are all me.

In that case please refrain from commenting, especially on very technical topic such as this one. A good rule of thumb is that if you can't provide peer reviewed sources if asked you probably do not have the required expertise to answer the question to the standards of r/askscience.

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mutandis57 t1_j286nw2 wrote

Wikipedia says variable speed of light hypothesis is an alternative to the cosmic inflation theory, not a feature of it! I agree with the other commenters, saying something like:

> in the first very very tiny fraction of a second at the birth of the universe, during which the universe expanded faster than the speed of light

makes you look very suspect, since the Hubble parameter is completely separate from the speed of light. It is measured in units of "per second" (though for convenience usually expressed as (km/s)/Mpc). If you check far enough in our present-time universe, you'll find parts of it that are moving away from us faster than the speed of light even now. The first 10^-32 seconds of the inflationary era is not special in that respect.

If the purpose of proposing cosmic inflation (not to be confused with cosmic expansion itself!) is to explain the smoothness of cosmic microwave background (matter could have reached thermal equilibrium before the inflation happened), then it makes sense that proposing a higher speed of light would be an alternative explanation to that!

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gravi-tea t1_j29811n wrote

Can you help me to understand a few points?

  1. The inflation in the first microseconds of universe that was faster than C refers only to space - not any of the matter or energy?

  2. The expandsion of space that continues is only faster than C when added up over large distances?

  3. Why do these theories assume the universe originating from a single tiny point? Would the math or evidence be much different if it had instead all originated from the size of a neutron or even a golf ball for example?

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forte2718 t1_j2apd17 wrote

>The inflation in the first microseconds of universe that was faster than C refers only to space - not any of the matter or energy?

It refers to space, but that expansion of space also impacts the matter/energy occupying that space. This does mean that said matter/energy would have had a higher relative velocity than the speed of light ... however that is not an issue because the speed of light limit is a local law, meaning that two objects which are essentially adjacent to each other and capable of communicating causally must never have a relative velocity higher than the speed of light, and that local law is still respected by inflation. For objects which are separated by some distance and not capable of directly communicating or affecting each other causally during the period of inflation, there would be no actual way to measure or compare their relative speeds — any signals emitted by one object during inflation wouldn't be able to reach the other object until the period of inflation is over, since the distance between the signal and the distant object would also be increasing faster than light. Quoting from Wikipedia here:

>>In non-inertial frames of reference (gravitationally curved spacetime or accelerated reference frames), the local speed of light is constant and equal to c, but the speed of light along a trajectory of finite length can differ from c, depending on how distances and times are defined.[32]

This is essentially similar to how the law of conservation of energy is also a local law, meaning that localized, pointlike interactions must always conserve energy, but the total energy of a large volume (such as a region of expanding space) can still yield a change in the total energy within that volume.

>The expandsion of space that continues is only faster than C when added up over large distances?

Yes, that's correct. It's technically a misnomer to say that the rate of expansion is "faster than the speed of light" because the rate of expansion is not even a speed to begin with: it is a rate. It doesn't have the correct dimensions/units to be a speed, so comparing it to the speed of light is comparing apples to oranges. Speeds have units of distance/time, while the rate of expansion of the universe has units of 1/time (like Hertz), which is often more convenient to express as units of distance/time/distance (or a "speed per distance"). The Hubble parameter has a value of about 70 (km/s)/Mpc, which means that a galaxy which is 1 Megaparsec away will have a relative speed of approximately 70 km/s. But a galaxy which is 2 Mpc away will have a relative speed that is twice that (140 km/s), and so on. So the relative speed of an object is proportional to its distance in an expanding spacetime. The more distance that is between the two objects, the greater their relative speed will be. With enough distance between them, the relative speed is greater than that of the speed of light ... but then going back to point #1 above, relative speeds greater than the speed of light is only possible for objects with some substantial distance between them. Regardless of the Hubble parameter's actual value, the relative speed of two objects that are close-by always tends toward zero.

>Why do these theories assume the universe originating from a single tiny point? Would the math or evidence be much different if it had instead all originated from the size of a neutron or even a golf ball for example?

General relativity doesn't assume that the universe originated from a single tiny point, rather it derives this conclusion as a consequence of taking the universe's current state and applying the known laws of gravitational physics backwards deterministically to figure out what its past states must have been. When you take our expanding universe and work backwards, it becomes clear that any two distant objects must have been much closer in the far past ... and that if you go far enough into the past, the distance between them becomes arbitrarily small, reaching zero distance in a finite amount of time (elapsed in reverse).

The math/evidence wouldn't be substantially different, because if you work backwards and ask "how would the universe look if you work backwards in time from when it was the size of a neutron or a golf ball" the answer you get from general relativity is unequivocably "it would have been even smaller in the past, and if you go back just a little further into the past, the distance between all objects becomes exactly zero."

Now, it's worth pointing out that using general relativity to work backwards does result in it becoming non-predictive and giving nonsensical, almost certainly unphysical properties as you get closer and closer to that zero point. As you get that much closer, the universe's energy density also grows without bound, asymptotically approaching infinite density ... and we have very good theoretical reasons to expect that there are undiscovered physical processes in play that would have been very important for the universe's earliest dynamics — for example, corrections to general relativity due to any undiscovered quantum nature of gravity, which might prevent reaching a state where the universe is actually singular, with zero size and infinite density. But until we discover said processes/corrections, understand them, and reconcile them with general relativity's naive classical predictions, we won't be able to properly model the universe's behavior in such a state. So the best we can say at the present time is that general relativity seems to work reliably back far enough in time to where the universe was in an extremely condensed state, but prior to that point, we can't truly be certain just what the earliest moments of the universe were like. All we can say is that the observable universe at one time was in an extremely condensed high-density state, and it expanded from there into what it is today.

Hope that makes sense!

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cowox93112 t1_j27xie7 wrote

This is a bunch of nonsense. You are conflating the speed of light with the speed of expansion (the Hubble 'constant').

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Brain_Hawk t1_j27zkxw wrote

There's nothing wrong with pointing out you think people made a mistake, but there is such a thing as being polite about it.

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Only_Philosopher7351 t1_j28hs0j wrote

The speed of light can be calculated using the vacuum permittivity ε0 and vacuum permeability μ0 established by Maxwell's theory: c2 = 1/(ε0μ0).

Einstein used this fact to show that the speed of light in a vacuum must be constant in every inertial frame, thus relative.

Because permittivity and permeability are constant in electromagnetic theory, c must have always been c.

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tranion10 t1_j28l9xt wrote

All this does is reframe the original question, not answer it. OP could ask if vacuum permeability and permittivity have always been constant. Simply saying that they are considered constant in EM theory is not a satisfying answer.

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