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Quote from: Bill S on 08/12/2012 17:05:45Hi Cheryl J; having worked through this thread I find myself wondering if your original question was answered. I think it may have been, but that could be because I had my own pre-conceived idea as to what it should be.I would be fascinated to know your thoughts.I think I'm more confused than ever.
Hi Cheryl J; having worked through this thread I find myself wondering if your original question was answered. I think it may have been, but that could be because I had my own pre-conceived idea as to what it should be.I would be fascinated to know your thoughts.
okay, what about that weird meter stick thought experiment where different observers pass it going different relative speeds. Does the meter stick really become shorter as the observers approach the speed of light. Is there "less" of the meter stick? Because in this experiment it doesn't sound like the meter stick's mass, matter, or inertia has changed at all, the observers are different.
Let's take a example that gives us a totally new, and well earned, headache
Consider yourself heating up a gram of some, very, temperature resistant metal. You've weighted it before but after it gets heated you weight it again, finding it to weight more.
One way to describe it might be to consider the particles making the material accelerating inside the metal as they gain 'energy' from heat, moving agitatedly.
Can we then discuss those particles as gaining a relativistic mass, or not?
Do you remember when I showed that a system of 2 photons with opposite velocities has non zero invariant mass?
[quote = JP] If you understand mass as a measure of the "resistance" of something to being pushed faster, then it does increase as the speed increases.
Quote from: lightarrow on 12/12/2012 15:15:54Do you remember when I showed that a system of 2 photons with opposite velocities has non zero invariant mass? If the two photons are somehow bound together, the pair would act like a particle.
Since we're in the mainstream forum I'll refrain from speculating on what force or field could conceivable bind a pair of photons together.
A change in relative velocity, dv, of the center of the pair
(whether they're bound or not) is equivalent to looking at the pair from a different reference frame, having velocity dv relative to the center of the pair. SR gives the ratio of the pair's energy and momentum in the two reference frames. At non-relativistic speeds, the momentum ratio for a given velocity difference is the mass of the pair. That's what inertial mass is ... M = dp/dv. I don't accept the claim that a photon has no mass.
A bound pair of photons (if there is such a thing) would have a rest mass.
What type of mass does the "m" represent in the good old E=mc2?
How do you define the centre in a system of two photons?
Quote from: lightarrow on 13/12/2012 15:27:49How do you define the centre in a system of two photons? Tough question! [] Next, consider a reference frame moving in the +x direction at .866 c relative to the first reference frame. Gamma = 2; so in this reference frame, the photon moving in the +x direction has energy E'1= E/2, and the other photon has energy E'2 = 2E. Do I have that correct?
Quote from: Phractality on 14/12/2012 00:35:27Quote from: lightarrow on 13/12/2012 15:27:49How do you define the centre in a system of two photons? Tough question! Next, consider a reference frame moving in the +x direction at .866 c relative to the first reference frame. Gamma = 2; so in this reference frame, the photon moving in the +x direction has energy E'1= E/2, and the other photon has energy E'2 = 2E. Do I have that correct? No. In the first case: E' = sqrt[(1-beta)/(1+beta)] = sqrt[(1-sqrt(3)/2)/(1+sqrt(3)/2)] = 2 - sqrt(3) ~ 0.268E; in the second case: E' = sqrt[(1+beta)/(1-beta)] = sqrt[(1+sqrt(3)/2)/(1-sqrt(3)/2)] = 2 + sqrt(3) ~ 3.73E.
Quote from: lightarrow on 13/12/2012 15:27:49How do you define the centre in a system of two photons? Tough question! Next, consider a reference frame moving in the +x direction at .866 c relative to the first reference frame. Gamma = 2; so in this reference frame, the photon moving in the +x direction has energy E'1= E/2, and the other photon has energy E'2 = 2E. Do I have that correct?
Thanks for the correction. I had a feeling I got it wrong. I know how to do the math, but the math corner of my brain was in full revolt. I'm wondering, now, if I should consider the center of the two-photons to be the center of energy; equivalent to center of mass. Applying inverse square law to the energy of each photon to get a ratio of each photon's distance from the center. My brain hurts; maybe I'll just play solitaire, instead.
You can't localize a photon, so you can't do that.
I'm not a Higgs expert, but from what I understand it won't be too revolutionary to have found the standard Higgs. This is because it's been part of the Standard Model for a while (since the 1960s, I think) and people have spent a lot of time thinking about its implications. If we find the standard Higgs particle, it validates the model, but doesn't introduce new physics.