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Now that I have a little more time here is why this is not valid for photons. If E = wfp then since for the photon p = h/w then the equation becomes E = wfh/w = fh. So that we end up with fh = h/w. This then gives fw = h/h meaning that fw = 1. This cannot be true.Scrub that it should be fh = hc/w. Which gives fw/c = h/h which is valid. Not the direction I was going in but interesting. I think I need a holiday!
Ok so here is a conundrum. We can say that w = E/pf. If we want to define dw = ? for a remote frame in a far lower potential then what changes on the right hand side in order for us to calculate the change in wavelength? Is it everything in proportion? Just frequency? Energy or momentum? Will wf still equal c? Is this due to time dilation?
Quote from: jeffreyH on 24/02/2017 20:33:59Ok so here is a conundrum. We can say that w = E/pf. If we want to define dw = ? for a remote frame in a far lower potential then what changes on the right hand side in order for us to calculate the change in wavelength? Is it everything in proportion? Just frequency? Energy or momentum? Will wf still equal c? Is this due to time dilation?SC metric says that the perceived value of c at a remote location is different than the local one, but the product wf is always equal to whatever you perceive c to be. However, E=hf so perceived energy is smaller than local energy if you're looking down a gravity well and larger if you're lookup up.
So what if we state E = m(wf)2? At the event horizon we then have no rest energy. How can we have rest mass without rest energy. The perception from a remote frame is that all particles lose rest energy at the horizon.In which case gamma is of no consequence at that point so the infinity disappears.
Entropy is a state of function, therefore mass does not become entropy.To calculate entropy one must divide by T = temperature.