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How does Mass measure Energy?
A system's mass is nothing else that the energy contained inside that system (divided by the constant c2)
It is incorrect to say that:QuoteA system's mass is nothing else that the energy contained inside that system (divided by the constant c2)for they are clearly different; if they were not, we would all be living in radiation and not matter.
This is very interesting and much appreciated. Now, Will you or anyone else work out a formula of E=mc2.
If you can not do that, will you, or anyone else, please give me a formula for Mass? There are two unknowns in the equation: E-mc2. I can see no way to get a number with the two unknowns. Thanks for comments. Joe L. Ogan
It is incorrect to say that:QuoteA system's mass is nothing else that the energy contained inside that system (divided by the constant c2)for they are clearly different; if they were not, we would all be living in radiation and not matter. However, matter and energy may be inter-converted and so may be considered equivalent in the same sense that a tank full of heating oil is equivalent to a warm home in winter. You only need to try living in a tank full of heating oil to spot the difference between them though.
Are you telling me that the equation E = mc2 is not workable?
I have found out that the constant for Mass is the Kilogram. I assume that matter must be converted to Kilograms in order to work the equation E = mc2. What would prevent that? Thanks for comments. Joe L. Ogan
Quote from: LeeE on 18/01/2010 18:13:03It is incorrect to say that:QuoteA system's mass is nothing else that the energy contained inside that system (divided by the constant c2)for they are clearly different; if they were not, we would all be living in radiation and not matter.It is correct Lee, no kidding. The trick to it is to look at electron-positron annihilation, and to understand that the electron is "a system". Einstein said a body loses mass through radiation. When annihilation occurs, the electron loses mass through radiation. It loses all of its mass. Then the system called the electron, the "matter", no longer exists. Check out The nature of the electron by Qiu-Hong Hu which appeared in Physics Essays, Vol. 17, No. 4, 2004. You can find it at http://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0512265. Most people haven't heard of this yet, it's a shame Nature turned it down. But it's good peer-reviewed science. Electrons really do have angular momentum and spin, and they really are made out of radiation using pair production. In a nutshell, when you employ pair production to split a photon and make it go round and round instead of moving laterally at c, we don't call it a photon any more. We call it an electron. (Or a positron, if it's the opposite chirality). Joe: see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_in_special_relativity#The_mass_of_composite_systems for a formula. If the momentum p is zero because you're talking about a particle rather than a system of moving particles, the expression reduces to m=E/c2.
Quote from: LeeE on 18/01/2010 18:13:03It is incorrect to say that:QuoteA system's mass is nothing else that the energy contained inside that system (divided by the constant c2)for they are clearly different; if they were not, we would all be living in radiation and not matter. However, matter and energy may be inter-converted and so may be considered equivalent in the same sense that a tank full of heating oil is equivalent to a warm home in winter. You only need to try living in a tank full of heating oil to spot the difference between them though.1. "Matter" is not "mass". The first means "particles with non zero rest mass", the second means E/c2.2. As I explained a lot of times, the system have to be still, or you cannot use E = mc2. A photon cannot be still, so you can never use E = mc2 so you cannot say that for a photon the mass is E/c2. Infact it's massless...3. Suppose you havea box with two holes and a laser light pulse enter one hole and exit the other. During the little interval of time in which the light pulse can be localized (or part of it) inside the box, the box acquires a mass m = E/c2 if E is the light pulse's energy.
Infact it's massless...