Planck energy

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The Planck energy is the unit of energy, denoted by EP, in the system of natural units known as Planck units.

E_p = \sqrt{\frac{\hbar c^5}{G}} \approx 1.956 × 109 J \approx 1.22 × 1019 GeV \approx 0.5433 MWh

where

c is the speed of light in a vacuum

\hbar is the reduced Planck's constant

G is the gravitational constant

The Planck energy is equivalent with the Planck mass according to E=mc². The Planck energy equals approximately the electricity consumed by an average person in 12 weeks, or by an average US citizen in two weeks (2001 figures). The Oh-My-God particle observed in 1991 with some 50 joules contained about 25 billionths of the Planck energy.

While the Planck energy equals an already macroscopic amount of energy, it is nevertheless thought to be an important quantity in particle physics - as soon as gravitation is taken into account. The Planck energy is not only the energy (in principle) necessary to probe the Planck length, but it is probably also the maximum energy that can fit into a region of that scale - which in this case will immediately collapse to a (very hot) Black Hole.

Particle physicists and cosmologists often use the reduced Planck energy, which is

\sqrt{\frac{\hbar{}c^5}{8\pi G}} ≈ 0.390 × 109 J ≈ 2.43 × 1018 GeV

Including the additional factor of 8π simplifies several equations in gravity.

[edit] See also

Planck's natural units
Base Planck units: Planck time  | Planck length  | Planck mass  | Planck charge  | Planck temperature
Derived Planck units: Planck energy  | Planck force  | Planck power  | Planck density  | Planck angular frequency  | Planck pressure  | Planck current  | Planck voltage  | Planck impedance
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