The Planck length, denoted by
ValueThe Planck length equals [1][2] where:
The two digits between the parentheses denote the uncertainty in the last two digits of the value. In SI units, the Planck length is approximately 1.6 × 10−35 metres. The estimated radius of the observable universe (4.4 × 1026 m or 46 billion light-years) is 2.7 × 1061 Planck lengths. Physical significanceThe physical significance of the Planck length is somewhat abstract. Because it is the only length (up to a constant factor) obtainable from the constants c, G, and The Planck mass is the mass for which the Schwarzschild radius is equal to the Compton length divided by π. The radius of such a black hole would be, roughly, the Planck length. The following thought experiment illuminates this fact. The task is to measure an object's position by bouncing electromagnetic radiation, namely photons, off it. The shorter the wavelength of the photons, and hence the higher their energy, the more accurate the measurement. If the photons are sufficiently energetic to make possible a measurement more precise than a Planck length, their collision with the object would, in theory, create a minuscule black hole. This black hole would "swallow" the photon and thereby make it impossible to obtain a measurement. A simple calculation using dimensional analysis suggests that this problem arises if we attempt to measure an object's position with a precision to within a Planck length. This thought experiment draws on both general relativity and the Heisenberg uncertainty principle of quantum mechanics. Combined, these two theories imply that it is impossible to measure position to a precision shorter than the Planck length, or duration to a precision to a shorter time interval than a Planck time. These limits may apply to a theory of quantum gravity as well.[3][4] HistoryMax Planck was the first to propose the Planck length, a base unit in a system of measurement he called natural units. By design, the Planck length, Planck time, and Planck mass are such that the physical constants c, G, and References in science fiction
See alsoNotes
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