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Yor_on, here's the same question, but in a slightly more extreme form: If you have a box made of perfect mirrors and you inject some light into it, the box's energy has now increased. If it's sitting still next to you, its mass increases (by E=mc2, which holds for stationary objects). So clearly its mass, measured at rest, went up. Since invariant mass is supposed to not change with reference frame, and the rest frame is a reference frame, its invariant mass also went up. Additionally, if you try to push it, you'll find its inertial mass went up. But photons individually have no mass? How did it gain mass?
To what I've learned from physics, photons dont have mass, but they do have impulse. Photons can 'push' things when something absorbs or reflects it. The mirrors reflect the photons. So when you push the box and accelerate it a bit, photons push harder against the side you push. So you feel resistance. Even so photons are following the spacetime curve of gravity, so they tend to move more down then up in the box. So more photons reflect to the bottom then to the top of the box. This way the box feels heavier.My question is, does this increased mass you feel, because of the 'impulse pressure' (or whatever you call it), also generate gravity?
But mass creates a gravitational field. Whereas inertia doesn't, in my opinion.
That's the distinction I'm referring to.
Mass also implies the amount of "stuff" …
So does that mean that things moving near the speed of light have a larger gravitational field than they would otherwise?
But that doesn't count for uniformly moving bodies Pete, right?
Or do you mean that it is strictly observer dependent, and so needs two bodies in relative motion versus each other?
But that way 'gravity' would 'fluctuate' with what observer we have in relative motion, relative what body's gravitational field he measures.
My thought has been, and still is, that uniform motion no matter its speed, as measured relative something else, has no effect on the gravitational field surrounding it?
Physicists like to find the smallest common nominator for things, and when we (they) talk about mass then that should be 'mass-energy'.
But photons individually have no mass? How did it gain mass?
Quote from: bizerl on 12/12/2012 23:52:34What type of mass does the "m" represent in the good old E=mc2?Invariant mass (the one sometimes also called "rest" mass or "proper" mass).
What type of mass does the "m" represent in the good old E=mc2?
I don't accept the claim that a photon has no mass.
You can't localize a photon, so you can't do that.
Maybe I am unclear?Are you telling me that gravity is observer dependent?
Quote from: lightarrow You can't localize a photon, so you can't do that.Everything I’ve seen in this thread speaks mostly about classical physics, e.g. relativity. In relativity one uses classical photons, which is basically a point particle having a classical trajectory but zero proper mass. Such a thing can be localized.
Classical photons? Which movie is it? []
Quote from: lightarrow linkClassical photons? Which movie is it? []I don't understand what you mean, "Which movie is it?"lightarrow - Have you ever heard of the terms "classical photon" and "classical electron"?