In particle physics and physical cosmology, Planck units are a system of units of measurement defined exclusively in terms of four universal physical constants: c, G, ħ, and kB (described further below). Expressing one of these physical constants in terms of Planck units yields a numerical value of 1. They are a system of natural units, defined using fundamental properties of nature (specifically, properties of vacuum) rather than properties of a chosen prototype object. Originally proposed in 1899 by German physicist Max Planck, they are relevant in research on unified theories such as quantum gravity.
The term Planck scale refers to quantities of space, time, energy and other units that are similar in magnitude to corresponding Planck units. This region may be characterized by particle energy of around or , time intervals of around and of around (approximately the energy-equivalent of the Planck mass, the Planck time and the Planck length, respectively). At the Planck scale, the predictions of the Standard Model, quantum field theory and general relativity are not expected to apply, and Quantum Gravity are expected to dominate. One example is represented by the conditions in the first 10−43 seconds of our universe after the Big Bang, approximately 13.8 billion years ago.
The four universal constants that, by definition, have a numeric value 1 when expressed in these units are:
Variants of the basic idea of Planck units exist, such as alternate choices of normalization that give other numeric values to one or more of the four constants above.
All Planck units are derived from the dimensional universal physical constants that define the system, and in a convention in which these units are omitted (i.e. treated as having the dimensionless value 1), these constants are then eliminated from equations of physics in which they appear. For example, Newton's law of universal gravitation, can be expressed as: Both equations are dimensionally consistent and equally valid in any system of quantities, but the second equation, with absent, is relating only dimensionless quantities since any ratio of two like-dimensioned quantities is a dimensionless quantity. If, by a shorthand convention, it is understood that each physical quantity is the corresponding ratio with a coherent Planck unit (or "expressed in Planck units"), the ratios above may be expressed simply with the symbols of physical quantity, without being scaled explicitly by their corresponding unit: This last equation (without ) is valid with , , , and being the dimensionless ratio quantities corresponding to the standard quantities, written e.g. or , but not as a direct equality of quantities. This may seem to be "setting the constants , , etc., to 1" if the correspondence of the quantities is thought of as equality. For this reason, Planck or other natural units should be employed with care. Referring to "", Paul S. Wesson wrote that, "Mathematically it is an acceptable trick which saves labour. Physically it represents a loss of information and can lead to confusion."
Planck considered only the units based on the universal constants , , , and to arrive at natural units for length, time, mass, and temperature. His definitions differ from the modern ones by a factor of , because the modern definitions use rather than .
+Table 1: Modern values for Planck's original choice of quantities | |||
! Name ! Dimension ! Expression ! Value (SI units) | |||
>Planck length | [[length]] (L) | ||
>Planck mass | [[mass]] (M) | ||
>Planck time | [[time]] (T) | ||
>Planck temperature | [[temperature]] (Θ) |
Unlike the case with the International System of Units, there is no official entity that establishes a definition of a Planck unit system. Some authors define the base Planck units to be those of mass, length and time, regarding an additional unit for temperature to be redundant. Other tabulations add, in addition to a unit for temperature, a unit for electric charge, so that either the Coulomb constant
or the vacuum permittivity is normalized to 1. Thus, depending on the author's choice, this charge unit is given by for , or for . Some of these tabulations also replace mass with energy when doing so. In SI units, the values of c, h, e and kB are exact and the values of ε0 and G in SI units respectively have relative uncertainties of and Hence, the uncertainties in the SI values of the Planck units derive almost entirely from uncertainty in the SI value of G.Compared to Stoney units, Planck base units are all larger by a factor , where is the fine-structure constant.
+ Table 2: Coherent derived units of Planck units | ||
! Derived unit of ! Expression ! Approximate SI equivalent | ||
>[[area]] (L2) | ||
>[[volume]] (L3) | ||
>[[momentum]] (LMT−1) | ||
>[[energy]] (L2MT−2) | ||
>[[force]] (LMT−2) | ||
>[[density]] (L−3M) | ||
>[[acceleration]] (LT−2) |
Some Planck units, such as of time and length, are many orders of magnitude too large or too small to be of practical use, so that Planck units as a system are typically only relevant to theoretical physics. In some cases, a Planck unit may suggest a limit to a range of a physical quantity where present-day theories of physics apply.
For example, our understanding of the Big Bang does not extend to the Planck epoch, i.e., when the universe was less than one Planck time old. Describing the universe during the Planck epoch requires a theory of quantum gravity that would incorporate quantum effects into general relativity. Such a theory does not yet exist.Several quantities are not "extreme" in magnitude, such as the Planck mass, which is about 22 micrograms: very large in comparison with subatomic particles, and within the mass range of living organisms.
Similarly, the related units of energy and of momentum are in the range of some everyday phenomena.
While it is true that the electrostatic repulsive force between two protons (alone in free space) greatly exceeds the gravitational attractive force between the same two protons, this is not about the relative strengths of the two fundamental forces.
When Planck proposed his units, the goal was only that of establishing a universal ("natural") way of measuring objects, without giving any special meaning to quantities that measured one single unit. During the 1950s, multiple authors including Lev Landau and Oskar Klein argued that quantities on the order of the Planck scale indicated the limits of the validity of quantum field theory. John Archibald Wheeler proposed in 1955 that quantum fluctuations of spacetime become significant at the Planck scale, though at the time he was unaware of the Planck units.
While physicists have a fairly good understanding of the other fundamental interactions of forces on the quantum level, gravity is problematic, and cannot be integrated with quantum mechanics at very high energies using the usual framework of quantum field theory. At lesser energy levels it is usually ignored, while for energies approaching or exceeding the Planck scale, a new theory of quantum gravity is necessary. Approaches to this problem include string theory and M-theory, loop quantum gravity, noncommutative geometry, and causal sets.
Table 3 lists properties of the observable universe today expressed in Planck units.
+Table 3: Today's universe in Planck units
! Property of present-day observable universe ! Approximate number of Planck units ! Equivalents | ||
>Age | 8.08 × 1060 ''t''P | 4.35 × 1017 s or 1.38 × 1010 years |
>Diameter | 5.4 × 1061 ''l''P | 8.7 × 1026 m or 9.2 × 1010 [[light-years]] |
>Mass | approx. 1060 ''m''P | 3 × 1052 kg or 1.5 × 1022 [[solar mass]]es (only counting stars) 1080 protons (sometimes known as the [[Eddington number]]) |
>Density | 1.8 × 10−123 ''m''P⋅''l''P−3 | 9.9 × 10−27 kg⋅m−3 |
>Temperature | 1.9 × 10−32 ''T''P | 2.725 K temperature of the cosmic microwave background radiation |
>Cosmological constant | ≈ 10−122 ''l'' | ≈ 10−52 m−2 |
>[[Hubble constant]] | ≈ 10−61 ''t'' | −18 s−1 ≈ 102 (km/s)/[[Mpc>parsec]] |
After the measurement of the cosmological constant (Λ) in 1998, estimated at 10−122 in Planck units, it was noted that this is suggestively close to the reciprocal of the age of the universe ( T) squared. Barrow and Shaw proposed a modified theory in which Λ is a field evolving in such a way that its value remains throughout the history of the universe.
The Planck length is a distance scale of interest in speculations about quantum gravity. The Bekenstein–Hawking entropy of a black hole is one-fourth the area of its event horizon in units of Planck length squared. Since the 1950s, it has been conjectured that quantum fluctuations of the spacetime metric might make the familiar notion of distance inapplicable below the Planck length.
This is sometimes expressed by saying that "spacetime becomes a Quantum foam". It is possible that the Planck length is the shortest physically measurable distance, since any attempt to investigate the possible existence of shorter distances, by performing higher-energy collisions, would result in black hole production. Higher-energy collisions, rather than splitting matter into finer pieces, would simply produce bigger black holes.The strings of string theory are modeled to be on the order of the Planck length.
In theories with large extra dimensions, the Planck length calculated from the observed value of can be smaller than the true, fundamental Planck length.
Proposals for theories of doubly special relativity posit that, in addition to the speed of light, an energy scale is also invariant for all inertial observers. Typically, this energy scale is chosen to be the Planck energy.
Some authors have argued that the Planck force is on the order of the maximum force that can occur between two bodies. However, the validity of these conjectures has been disputed.
Examples include the energy–momentum relation (which becomes and the Dirac equation (which becomes ).
The factor 4 is ubiquitous in theoretical physics because in three-dimensional space, the surface area of a sphere of radius r is 4 r. This, along with the concept of flux, are the basis for the inverse-square law, Gauss's law, and the divergence operator applied to flux density. For example, gravitational and electrostatic fields produced by point objects have spherical symmetry, and so the electric flux through a sphere of radius r around a point charge will be distributed uniformly over that sphere. From this, it follows that a factor of 4 r will appear in the denominator of Coulomb's law in rationalized form. (Both the numerical factor and the power of the dependence on r would change if space were higher-dimensional; the correct expressions can be deduced from the geometry of N-sphere.) Likewise for Newton's law of universal gravitation: a factor of 4 naturally appears in Poisson's equation when relating the gravitational potential to the distribution of matter.
Hence a substantial body of physical theory developed since Planck's 1899 paper suggests normalizing not G but 4 G (or 8 G) to 1. Doing so would introduce a factor of (or ) into the nondimensionalized form of the law of universal gravitation, consistent with the modern rationalized formulation of Coulomb's law in terms of the vacuum permittivity. In fact, alternative normalizations frequently preserve the factor of in the nondimensionalized form of Coulomb's law as well, so that the nondimensionalized Maxwell's equations for electromagnetism and gravitoelectromagnetism both take the same form as those for electromagnetism in SI, which do not have any factors of 4. When this is applied to electromagnetic constants, ε0, this unit system is called " rationalized. When applied additionally to gravitation and Planck units, these are called rationalized Planck units and are seen in high-energy physics.
The rationalized Planck units are defined so that .
There are several possible alternative normalizations.
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