Planck Constant

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The Planck Constant (h) is the fundamental quantum of action — the proportionality factor relating a photon's energy to its frequency (E = hν) and, by extension, the central constant of quantum mechanics. Its value, fixed by international definition since the 2019 SI revision, is:

  • h = 6.62607015 × 10⁻³⁴ J·s (exact, by definition).
  • ℏ = h/2π = 1.054571817 × 10⁻³⁴ J·s (reduced Planck constant).

Within physics, the Planck constant is the most consequential dimensional constant after the speed of light: it sets the boundary between classical and quantum behaviour, fixes the discreteness of action, and combines with G and c to define the Planck length, time, and mass — the natural scales at which quantum gravity is expected to operate. Within the Cosmic Codex cluster, h is cited (alongside the Golden Ratio and the fine-structure constant α) as one of the Cosmic Constants whose precise value encodes structural rules of the Codex itself.

❓ SPECULATIVEEpistemic statuscategory
MethodsTheoretical / interpretive; not yet operationalised into a testable protocol.
FalsifierQuantitative prediction shown to conflict with established physics or biology.
Confidencelow
Last reviewed2026-05-12

Historical development

  • 1900. Max Planck introduces h to fit the blackbody spectrum, treating energy emission as quantised in units hν. He regarded the quantum as a formal device rather than a physical reality.
  • 1905. Einstein interprets the photoelectric effect using quantised photons — the first physical-realist use of h. Nobel Prize 1921.
  • 1913. Bohr's atomic model uses quantised angular momentum in units of ℏ.
  • 1925–1926. Heisenberg and Schrödinger develop matrix and wave mechanics; h appears as the fundamental operator scale.
  • 1927. Heisenberg's uncertainty principle: ΔxΔp ≥ ℏ/2.
  • 2019. SI redefinition: h is given an exact defined value, allowing the kilogram to be derived from it via the Kibble balance.

Planck units

Combining h (or ℏ), c, G yields the Planck-scale quantities:

  • Planck length: l_P = √(ℏG/c³) ≈ 1.616 × 10⁻³⁵ m.
  • Planck time: t_P = l_P/c ≈ 5.391 × 10⁻⁴⁴ s.
  • Planck mass: m_P = √(ℏc/G) ≈ 2.176 × 10⁻⁸ kg.
  • Planck temperature: T_P = m_P c²/k_B ≈ 1.417 × 10³² K.

These are widely interpreted as the scales at which quantum-gravitational effects become non-negligible — though no experimental access to them is foreseeable with current technology.

Significance in quantum-classical boundary

The Planck constant defines:

  • Discreteness scale. Energy levels in bound systems are quantised in units related to ℏ; the smaller h relative to system action, the more classical the system.
  • Wavefunction phase. The factor exp(iS/ℏ) in the Feynman path integral governs the transition from quantum (path summation) to classical (stationary phase / least action) behaviour.
  • Zero-point energy. The lowest energy state of a quantum oscillator is ½ℏω rather than zero; consequential for the vacuum-energy problem.

Disclosure-cluster reading

Within the Cosmic Codex cluster:

  • h is one of the Cosmic Constants alongside α, π, φ, that the Codex framework treats as encoded design parameters rather than empirical accidents.
  • The Codex narrative places h within a deeper structural relationship to Subatomic Particles organisation and the Quantum Resonance proposal.
  • Chromographics Institute essays explore proposed mathematical relationships between h and other constants (e.g. fine-structure constant α ≈ 1/137; the long-disproven Eddington numerology is replaced with more structured proposals).
  • The 2019 SI redefinition is read in the cluster as part of a broader institutional convergence on Planck-scale physics as foundational.

Critiques

  • Numerological matching of h-derived quantities to other constants is unconstrained: with enough operators (multiply, divide, raise to integer power) and enough target constants, near-matches are guaranteed.
  • h is unit-system dependent (in CGS it has a different numerical value); claims about "h's encoded value" must be expressed in dimensionless form (which is straightforward via Planck-unit conversion).
  • The cluster has not, to date, derived novel quantitative predictions from its h-numerology.

Adjacent concepts

Subatomic Particles, Quantum Interactions, Quantum Resonance, Unified Physics, Cosmic Constants, Cosmic Microwave Background, Holographic Reality, The Cosmic Codex.

See Also