I admit this sounds like a dumb question. I know very little about physics, but I've always wondered that given the fact that:
- A unit of measurement is a very specific constant value.
Then how can a formula like: $$E=mc^2$$
Be so precise and so clean when it has to use already pre-defined unit of measurements as values. I assume (I'm googling this and I know almost no physics, just what I remember from high-school) That this formula claims that $1 \text{joule} = 1 \text{kg} * (\text{speed of light}) ^ 2 \frac{m}{s}$
The meter, the kilogram, the second, the joule (composed of the base units) and so on are very very specific values defined by the International System of Units. How can one find a law, that just so happens to find a relationship between these exact values, without needing a custom made constant value or set of values to multiply or add by?
Edit: So I understand that my understanding of the equation itself was off. It does not claim that $1 \text{joule} = 1 \text{kg} * (\text{speed of light}) ^ 2 \frac{m}{s}$ but instead that a mass of $1 \text{kg} * (\text{speed of light}) ^ 2$ = A certain amount of energy expressed in joules.
My understanding of the equation itself improved, but my original question still stands. How is such a clean relationship found between the kg and the speed of light without multiplying or summing by a custom constant or set of constants?
If you were to change to a different system, wouldn't you be unable to neatly say that exactly 1 unit multiplied by the speed of light = a certain amount of energy? You would need to translate your metric for mass to 1 kg. In pounds for example I think you would have to say:
E = $2.20462pounds * c^2 m/s$
Is this off? And so on.. If you want to keep it clean with 1 unit you would have to change the constant from the speed of light to a different value (a smaller value in the case of pounds at least).