The speed of light was measured by Ole Christensen Romer. He watched the moons of Jupiter, and observed that their movement around Jupiter appeared slower when the earth was moving away from Jupiter than when earth was moving towards Jupiter. This was because the light from the moons took longer to reach earth. He concluded that the speed of light is 220,000 kilometers per second. It is in fact 300,000 km/s, so he wasn't too far off.
In 1849, Hippolyte Fizeau performed the first earth-bound measurement of the speed of light. A beam of light was reflected off a two-way mirror; it then went through the teeth of an opaque cogwheel rotating very fast, was reflected off a mirror, returned through the teeth of the cogwheel, and went through the two-way mirror to a detector. In the time it took for the light to get from the wheel to the mirror and back, the wheel rotated slightly, which meant that some of the light which had previously gone through was blocked by the cogs. So the finiteness of the speed of light made the light slightly dimmer. By measuring its brightness, he calculated that the speed of light in vacuum was 313,000 km/s.
Fizeau's experiment was important because it could be used to measure the speed of light in any medium, whereas Romer's observation only worked for the speed of light in vacuum. Fizeau discovered that the speed of light is faster in air than in other media. This helped to resolve the long-standing question of whether light consists of particles or waves - the particle theory supported by Isaac newton predicted that the speed of light would be slowest in a vacuum.
Someone observed that the speed of light was (up to experimental error) exactly equal to 1 / sqrt(epsilon * mu), where epsilon and mu are fundamental constants connected with electricity and magnetism, respectively. At the time, this observation just seemed weird. But when James Clerk Maxwell published his equations for electromagnetism, which predicted the possibility of waves travelling at this speed, it all made sense: light consists of electromagnetic waves. So if we want to measure its speed we only have to measure epsilon and mu. The values of epsilon and mu are different in different media, so this explains the differences in the speed of light.
Danish astronomer, Olaus Roemer, was the first person to successfully measure the speed of light in 1676. He based his observations on the eclipses of the moons of Jupiter. Many believe Galileo was the first to measure light, but this is false. Galileo tried, but his experiment failed to provide a correct calculation.
a mathematician and physicist named sir isaac newton thought there was a force
that kept everything down. like earths gravitational field. of course he used his
math and physics skill to find out what it was. he thought that another force
called velocity gave gravity support by having things fall down very fast. he tested
his hypothesis and found out that the heavier and more mass an object has, the
faster the object will fall down. this question is coming out of my science project
of how he discovered it. his hypothesis was rejected because he could not explain
why and how gravity is made.
-- Velocity is not a force.
-- The object's weight and mass have no effect on the speed with which it falls.
-- Newton's hypothesis regarding gravitation was not rejected, because it instantly
explained the motions of the moon and planets, that people had been observing with
their own eyes and measuring with their own instruments for centuries.
-- Nobody can yet explain why and how gravity is made.
-- None of this has anything to do with the speed of light.
Regarding the speed of light:
-- Thinkers and experimenters have been trying to measure it since at least
200 years before Newton lived. Since that speed is so unimaginably fast, early
attempts were unsuccessful. They kept getting better and better for 300 years
or so, until the middle-1800s.
Then the problem took an unexpected turn. The British Physicist/Mathematician
James Clerk-Maxwell worked with all the discoveries in electricity and magnetism
that had been made during the previous hundred years, and developed a set of
mathematical equations that predicted something called electromagnetic waves,
and he even suggested that light is one form of them.
His math predicted the speed of these waves, and from then on, everybody who
found better, more accurate ways to measure the speed of light, kept coming up
with numbers that kept getting closer and closer to Maxwell's prediction.
Finally, Maxwell's hypothesis of electromagnetic radiation was accepted, light was
accepted as one form of it, and his prediction of the speed was accepted as the
official speed of light.
James Clerk Maxwell, the English Physicist/Mathematician, collected the set of
equations that would describe the behavior of light and give its speed if light
turned out to be an electromagnetic wave, but in his time, it wasn't possible to
measure the speed yet. In later years, almost up to the present time, the speed
of light keeps being measured with more and more accuracy. Every time it's
measured, the number gets closer and closer to the speed that Maxwell
predicted, and we become more and more convinced that light must be an
electromagnetic wave.
Olaus Roemer discovered the speed light in 1676.
They say that a man named Lester Pelton first used water to generate electricity, but the first hydroelectric plant didn't come into play until 1882, and it could only light 250 light bulbs.
We generally consider that the force of an electric field moves at the speed of light. And electricity moves at the speed of light.
The limitation of science and technology is the ability to travel at the speed of light and in order to travel at the speed of light we would need to find a way to not interact with the higgs boson. Since we are interacting with the higgs boson we can not travel at the speed of light.
vikranth
it was MAxwell the dude who discovered electromagnetic waves
The second species in any environment.It was either a predator and wanted to move faster than the first to catch and eat it, or it was the prey and wanted to get away! So several millions of years before the first humanoid.
he discovered the speed of light
This is because nothing else in the entire discovered universe moves as fast as the speed of light!
Einstein
Olaus Roemer discovered the speed light in 1676.
Olaus Roemer discovered the finite speed of light in the late 17th century. He observed that the time it took for light to travel from Jupiter to Earth varied as the distance between the two planets changed, leading him to calculate a rough estimate of the speed of light. This discovery laid the foundation for later, more precise measurements of the speed of light.
Roemer was the first to measure the speed of light.
The discovery that electric current flows at the speed of light is attributed to a Scottish physicist named James Clerk Maxwell. In his equations known as Maxwell's equations, he determined that the speed of electromagnetic waves, which includes light and electricity, is constant and equal to the speed of light.
The theory that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light in a vacuum was first proposed by the famous physicist Albert Einstein in his Theory of Relativity in 1905. The concept of the speed of light being constant and a universal speed limit has since been confirmed through various experiments and observations.
The first successful attempt to measure the speed of light was in 1676 by Danish astronomer Ole RΓΈmer. He estimated the speed of light by observing the eclipses of Jupiter's moon Io.
probably all kinds of technology