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Physics, Astronomy & Cosmology / How can light have no mass if it cannot move faster than 300000 km/s?
« on: 17/03/2020 10:49:58 »
Peter asks:
If light is said to have no mass, then why can it not move faster than 300,000 kps. Is it that the higgs boson lends mass to the photon? If so then it truly does have mass?
What do you think?
If light is said to have no mass, then why can it not move faster than 300,000 kps. Is it that the higgs boson lends mass to the photon? If so then it truly does have mass?
What do you think?