Impedance of free space madengr replied to the topic: Impedance of free space
Well if a 50 Ohm coaxial airline is measured to be 50 Ohms, and the dimensions are exact, then E0/u0 have the same ratio in the airline as in free space, so free space must be 377 Ohms/meter. I suppose the historical direct measurement is the speed of light c=1/sqrt(E0*u0), but that still leaves an unknown term. Some smart people obviously figured it out.
I suppose if you had a hypothetical sheet of material of 377 Ohms/sq. then it would have no reflection, but any material has Er>1 so you'd still get a reflection. Once, on paper, I came up with an tapered lossy line of sheet resistance, that if you made it infinitely long, would have zero reflection down to DC. Making it shorter should provide a good termination without needing a ground connection at the other end. Of course any infinitely long line would do that, but the taper let it use an arbitrary sheet resistance and start at a width of arbitrary Z0. I suppose something along those lines, but in 3D.