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If it would be possible to completely eliminate an object's - say a spaceship's - mass, would that spaceship immediatly accelerate to c (let us assume the spaceship operates within a perfect vacuum)?
well, the headline is "Gedankenexperiment" - let us just assume it is possible...
If you change a objects mass to zero in a vacuum it's inertia will remain unchanged.A object with no mass could accelerate to C very quickly it would also stop very quickly, but to accelerate it to C would need something capable of moving at C which could affect this object with zero mass.A space ship can only accelerate to the speed of the mass it's ejecting after all.Sorry incapable of imagining there are ghosts that just defys all logic!!
A space ship can only accelerate to the speed of the mass it's ejecting after all.
Quote from: Turveyd on 26/08/2009 23:46:47A space ship can only accelerate to the speed of the mass it's ejecting after all.But it doesn't need to eject mass because it can eject photons (for example).
Every massless object which has non-zero energy must move at c.
Quote from: lightarrow on 26/08/2009 19:14:45Every massless object which has non-zero energy must move at c.I think this holds true only for particles.
In interstellar and even interplanetary space particle concentration is low enough as to leave huge "gaps" to photons
Can't follow you here, lightarrow. Photons "slow down" in media like air because they intertact with particles, isn't that true? I'm not a physicist, so please excuse any stupid questions.
PS: Cosa significa "alt"? Is it coz I is German ("Halt!") [?] [O8)]
I'm not sure that it makes sense to consider a macroscopic, massless, rigid object traveling at the speed of light. The internal forces that make objects rigid propagate at the speed of light: i.e. bits of the object "talk to" each other at the speed of light and "tell" each other to stay rigid. If the entire object is already moving at the speed of light, this would be a problem.
It's definitely a clever question to ask, and its not immediately obvious that it won't work. Since the site is about science education, it certainly wasn't stupid to ask it.