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Can I vote for myself or it was already taken for granted? []--lightarrow
Nothing to do with belief. I'm an experimental physicst, and when my photon beams in air or tissue exceed 1.022 MeV we get pair production, signalled by the appearance of two 511 keV photons, exactly as predicted by E = mc2 and the known mass of the electron (another experimental value).Whether you believe it or not, it happens every damn time, which is how we diagnose tumors on the one hand, and calibrate small accelerators on the other.
e=mc^2 is just energy.
Relativistic mass is energy with momentum.
e=mc^2 cannot be used to determine the mass of a photon as it has zero rest mass.
According to Einstein, a photon with frequency n has energy hf /c2, and thus (as he only came to realize several years later) a finite mass and a finite momentum hf/c.
Photons alone can never generate a couple e+ e-: simultaneous conservation of system momentum and energy would be violated. You have to collide the light beam with another massive particle (an atom's nucleus for ex.) in order to do that.
Quote from: lightarrow on 16/11/2014 18:27:54Photons alone can never generate a couple e+ e-: simultaneous conservation of system momentum and energy would be violated. You have to collide the light beam with another massive particle (an atom's nucleus for ex.) in order to do that.Which is why the "evidence" I cited was the annihilation photons, not the initial interaction with air or tissue. I might get my hands dirty doing physics instead of talking about it, but dumb I ain't.
Maybe you would like this one Lightarrow?Quasi-Local Mass in General Relativity. Found it while trying to see what those 'quasi-local masses' you mentioned referred too. It's amazingly readable, considering its subject, and mathematics
Question: Who here believes that relativistic mass is merely another name for energy, and why?
For the OP: I know almost nothing about GR so I can't say if relativistic mass can have a meaning there; according to Pervect in the Physics forum thread you linked (post 18), other concepts of mass are used:"Relativistic and invariant mass are just the tip of the iceberg, and wind up having little to do with gravity in the end. Concepts such as Komar mass, ADM mass, Bondi mass, and quasi-local mass wind up as being more directly related to gravity than either relativistic or invariant mass."
For the OP: I know almost nothing about GR so I can't say if relativistic mass can have a meaning there; according to Pervect in the Physics forum thread you linked (post 18), other concepts of mass are used:..
Quote from: PmbPhy on 16/11/2014 14:24:38Question: Who here believes that relativistic mass is merely another name for energy, and why?I'm no expert but here is how I understand the answer to this question.Relativistic mass is the increase in mass that an object acquires from the energy of acceleration. The energy of acceleration is thus applied to the invariant mass of the original object. Invariant mass remains the same whether in motion or not. So yes, relativistic mass is just energy transferred thru acceleration to the original invariant mass.
Which is why the "evidence" I cited was the annihilation photons, not the initial interaction with air or tissue. I might get my hands dirty doing physics instead of talking about it, but dumb I ain't.
...and when my photon beams in air or tissue exceed 1.022 MeV we get pair production..