In physics, Planck units are physical units of measurement defined exclusively in terms of the five universal physical constants shown in the table below in such a manner that all of these physical constants take on the numerical value of 1 when expressed in terms of these units. Planck units elegantly simplify many of the algebraic expressions appearing in physics. Originally proposed by Max Planck, these units are also known as natural units because the origin of their definition comes only from properties of nature and not from any human construct. Planck units are only one system of natural units among other systems, but might be considered unique in that these units are not based on properties of any prototype, object, or particle but are based only on properties of free space.
| Constant | Symbol | Dimension |
|---|---|---|
| speed of light in vacuum | L T-1 | |
| Gravitational constant | M-1L3T-2 | |
| Dirac's constant or "reduced Planck's constant" | where is Planck's constant | ML2T-1 |
| Coulomb force constant | where is the permittivity of free space | Q-2 M L3 T-2 |
| Boltzmann constant | ML2T-2Θ-1 |
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The Planck units are often semi-humorously referred to by physicists as "God's units". They eliminate anthropocentric arbitrariness from the system of units: some physicists believe that an extra-terrestrial intelligence might be expected to use the same system of units.
Natural units can help physicists reframe questions. Perhaps Frank Wilczek said it best:
...We see that the question is not, "Why is gravity so feeble?" but rather, "Why is the proton's mass so small?" For in Natural (Planck) Units, the strength of gravity simply is what it is, a primary quantity, while the proton's mass is the tiny number [1/(13 quintillion)...(June 2001 Physics Today)
The strength of gravity is simply what it is and the strength of the electromagnetic force simply is what it is. The electromagnetic force operates on a different physical quantity (electric charge) than gravity (mass) so it cannot be compared directly to gravity. To note that gravity is an extremely weak force is, from the point-of-view of natural units, like comparing apples to oranges. 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, and that is because the charge on the protons are approximately a natural unit of charge but the mass of the protons are far, far less than the natural unit of mass.
| Name | Quantity | Expressions | Approximate SI equivalent | Other equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Planck length | Length (L) | 1.61624 × 10-35 m | ||
| Planck mass | Mass (M) | 2.17645 × 10-8 kg | 1.311 × 1019 u | |
| Planck time | Time (T) | 5.39121 × 10-44 s | ||
| Planck charge | Electric charge (Q) | 1.8755459 × 10-18 C | 11.70624 e | |
| Planck temperature | Temperature (Θ) | 1.41679 × 1032 K |
| Name | Quantity | Expression | Approximate SI equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Planck momentum | Momentum (MLT-1) | 6.52485 kg m/s | |
| Planck energy | Energy (ML2T-2) | 1.9561 × 109 J | |
| Planck force | Force (MLT-2) | 1.21027 × 1044 N | |
| Planck power | Power (ML2T-3) | 3.62831 × 1052 W | |
| Planck density | Density (ML-3) | 5.15500 × 1096 kg/m3 | |
| Planck angular frequency | Frequency (T-1) | 1.85487 × 1043 s-1 | |
| Planck pressure | Pressure (ML-1T-2) | 4.63309 × 10113 Pa | |
| Planck current | Electric current (QT-1) | 3.4789 × 1025 A | |
| Planck voltage | Voltage (ML2T-2Q-1) | 1.04295 × 1027 V | |
| Planck impedance | Resistance (ML2T-1Q-2) | 29.9792458 Ω |
| Common form with dimensional conversion factor | Nondimensionalized form | |
|---|---|---|
| Newton's Law of universal gravitation | ||
| Schrödinger's equation | - \frac{\hbar^2}{2m} \nabla^2 \psi(\mathbf{r}, t) + V(\mathbf{r}) \psi(\mathbf{r}, t) = i \hbar \frac{\partial \psi}{\partial t} (\mathbf{r}, t) | - \frac{1}{2m} \nabla^2 \psi(\mathbf{r}, t) + V(\mathbf{r}) \psi(\mathbf{r}, t) = i \frac{\partial \psi}{\partial t} (\mathbf{r}, t) |
| Particle energy with the wave function's radian frequency | ||
| Einstein's mass/energy equation of Special relativity | ||
| Einstein's field equation for general relativity | ||
| Thermal energy per particle per degree of freedom | ||
| Coulomb's law | ||
| Maxwell's equations |
It should also be noted that, at present, the numerical value of the gravitational constant G cannot be determined experimentally to better than about 1 part in 7000. The uncertainty in G is far greater than that of any of the four other fundamental constants. In contrast, the speed of light in SI units is no longer subject to measurement error, because the meter is now defined in such a way that the speed of light is an exact quantity.
Planck neither defined nor proposed the Planck charge. Rather, its definition is a natural extension of the definitions of the other Planck units *. Note that the elementary charge e, measured in terms of the Planck charge, is
where α is the fine-structure constant
The dimensionless fine-structure constant can be thought of as taking on the numerical value that it does because of the amount of charge, measured in Planck units, that nature has happened to have assigned to electrons, protons, and other charged particles. Because the electromagnetic force between two charged particles is proportional to the product of the charges of each particle (which would, in Planck units, be proportional to ), the strength of the electromagnetic force relative to other fundamental forces is proportional to α.
Planck units normalize the Coulomb force constant (4πε0)-1 to 1, as does the cgs system of units. Consequently, the Planck impedance, ZP, equals Z0/4π, where Z0 is the characteristic impedance of free space. If Planck units normalized the permittivity of free space ε0 instead, the 4π factors in Maxwell's equations would vanish and the Planck impedance, ZP, would be identical to Z0.
Planck units normalize the gravitational constant G in Newton's law of universal gravitation to 1. In general relativity and cosmology, G is nearly always preceded by 4π or an integer multiple thereof. This fact suggests other normalizations for G, such as:
Referring to Michael Duff Comment on time-variation of fundamental constants and Duff, Okun, and Veneziano Trialogue on the number of fundamental constants (The operationally indistinguishable world of Mr. Tompkins), if all physical quantities (masses and other properties of particles) were expressed in terms of Planck units, those quantities would be dimensionless numbers (mass divided by the Planck mass, length divided by the Planck length, etc.) and the only quantities that we ultimately measure in physical experiments or in our perception of reality are dimensionless numbers. When one commonly measures a length with a ruler or tape-measure, that person is actually counting tick marks on a given standard or is measuring the length relative to that given standard, which is a dimensionless value. It is no different for physical experiments, as all physical quantities are measured relative to some other like dimensioned values.
We can notice a difference if some dimensionless physical quantity such as α or the proton/electron mass ratio changes (atomic structures would change) but if all dimensionless physical quantities remained constant (this includes all possible ratios of identically dimensioned physical quantity), we could not tell if a dimensionful quantity, such as the speed of light, c, has changed. And, indeed, the Tompkins concept becomes meaningless in our existence if a dimensional quantity such as c has changed, even drastically.
If the speed of light c, were somehow suddenly cut in half and changed to c/2, (but with all dimensionless physical quantities continuing to remain constant), then the Planck Length would increase by a factor of from the point-of-view of some unaffected "god-like" observer on the outside. But then the size of atoms (approximately the Bohr radius) are related to the Planck length by an unchanging dimensionless constant:
Then atoms would be bigger (in one dimension) by , each of us would be taller by , and so would our meter sticks be taller (and wider and thicker) by a factor of and we would not know the difference. Our perception of distance and lengths relative to the Planck length is, by axiom, an unchanging dimensionless constant.
Our clocks would tick slower by a factor of (from the point-of-view of this unaffected "god-like" observer) because the Planck time has increased by but we would not know the difference (our perception of durations of time relative to the Planck time is, by axiom, an unchanging dimensionless constant). This hypothetical god-like observer on the outside might observe that light now travels at half the speed that it used to (as well as all other observed velocities) but it would still travel 299792458 of our new meters in the time elapsed by one of our new seconds. We would not notice any difference.
This in one sense contradicts George Gamow in Mr. Tompkins who suggests that if a dimensionful universal constant such as c changed, we would easily notice the difference; however, as noted, the disagreement is better thought of as the ambiguity in the phrase "changing a physical constant", when one does not specify whether one does so keeping all other dimensionless constants the same, or does so keeping all other dimensionful constants the same. The latter is a somewhat confusing possibility since most of our unit definitions are related to the outcomes of physical experiments which themselves depend on the constants, the only exception being the kilogram. Gamow does not address this subtlety; the thought experiments he conducts in his popular works assume the latter.
At the time he presented the units, quantum mechanics had not been invented. He had not yet discovered the theory of black-body radiation (first published December 1900) in which the Planck's Constant h made its first appearance and for which Planck was later awarded the Nobel prize. The relevant parts of Planck's 1899 paper leave some confusion as to how he managed to come up with the units of time, length, mass, temperature etc. which today we define using Dirac's Constant and motivate by references to quantum physics before things like and quantum physics were known. Here's a quote from the 1899 paper that gives an idea of how Planck thought about the set of units.
...ihre Bedeutung für alle Zeiten und für alle, auch außerirdische und außermenschliche Kulturen notwendig behalten und welche daher als »natürliche Maßeinheiten« bezeichnet werden können...
...These necessarily retain their meaning for all times and for all civilizations, even extraterrestrial and non-human ones, and can therefore be designated as "natural units"...
George Stoney introduced a different set of natural units in 1881, based on G, c, and the electron charge e.
Unitats de Planck | Planckovy jednotky | Planck-Einheiten | Unidades Planck | Unités de Planck | Planck-egységek | 自然単位系 | Planckdeeltje | Jednostki naturalne | Planckenheter | Hệ thống đo lường Planck
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