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A molecule is by definition electrically neutral and thus cannot be accelerated by a cyclotron.
While H2O is not an ion, ...
A molecule yes...
To do that one can measure the mass of a moving particle such as a molecule by ionizing it and using a cyclotron to measure its mass by determining it's deflection by a magnetic field and measuring its radius of orbit.
Quote from: lightarrow on 30/11/2014 15:44:29...|p| = q*|B|*r... I am so glad that you posted this. I don't think many will appreciate the subtleties.
...|p| = q*|B|*r...
A benchtop mass spectrometer running at a few keV probably won't show the relativistic change of mass to a detectable level ...but a hospital cyclotron certainly will,
Quote from: lightarrowNo need of relativistic mass.So what? Do you realized just how many concepts there are in physics that aren't "needed"? In fact Hertz wrote an entire mechanics text without using the concept of force. I could write an entire textbook on relativity without using the concept of energy either. Let me show you how easy it'd be to derive the cyclone formula by using relativistic mass. Let B = Bk where B is a constant. Let v start out in the xy-plane. ThenF = qvxBmeans that the force is perpendicular to the velocity which means the charge moves in a circle and the force is perpendicular to the velocity. As such F = ma. If you're not aware that this is true then seehttp://home.comcast.net/~peter.m.brown/sr/long_trans_mass.htmF = ma = mv2/r = qvBor mv = qrB = pwhich is the cyclotron relation, i.e.mv = qrBWhich requires a great deal less work that what you did.
No need of relativistic mass.
lightarrow - I don't know why you're trying so hard to make this a debate about relativistic mass but I'm really not interested and I won't discuss it.
Why didn't you write the equation:F = ma = mv2/r = qvBwith F, a, v, B in bold carachter?
... inertia and energy refer to conceptually different features of matter. On the one hand, inertia per se relates to the resistance to the change of state of motion of a body, as would be caused, in 'particle physics,' by an external force acting on the body (...). On the other hand, energy per se is defined in terms of the solutions of the conservation laws..... Thus we see that energy and mass are conceptually different (though complimentary) features of matter, according to relativity theory.
Quote from: PmbPhy on 01/12/2014 13:51:15lightarrow - I don't know why you're trying so hard to make this a debate about relativistic mass but I'm really not interested and I won't discuss it.In your first post of the thread "A poll on relativistic mass" you asked yourself why I believe relativistic mass is merely another name for energy, now you know [].--lightarrow
Quote from: lightarrow on 01/12/2014 14:34:28Quote from: PmbPhy on 01/12/2014 13:51:15lightarrow - I don't know why you're trying so hard to make this a debate about relativistic mass but I'm really not interested and I won't discuss it.In your first post of the thread "A poll on relativistic mass" you asked yourself why I believe relativistic mass is merely another name for energy, now you know [].--lightarrowFirst off you should have put that in the correct thread and not attempted to hijack this thread for that purpose. Second, I asked only who Who here believes that relativistic mass is merely another name for energy, and why?, not whether someone could derive something without appearing to use relativistic mass. So you took that question, took it to another thread and then posted an answer to a question that wasn't asked. I know everything there is about relativistic mass and how to derive just about everything anybody else can in sr so I'm not ignorant of your derivation and attempts to derive things without appearing to use relativistic mass.
Quote from: lightarrowWhy didn't you write the equation:F = ma = mv2/r = qvBwith F, a, v, B in bold carachter? Because I had no use for it. I wrote down the magnitudes involved rather than the vectors since it was much easier to do so and its exactly correct. One should always make things easier when one can. Didn't you know this about using the equivalent scalar equations from the associated vector equations when possible? If not then I find that surprising. You saw how easy it was doing so. It'd take more work not to. Besides, that's how most physicist derive it, i.e. using the scalar equation and not the vector equation. I take it that you didn't know that either?
Also, you didn't really say why you believe that relativistic mass is merely another name for energy. All you really did is make a baseless assertion that it is merely another name. However it is in fact not merely a different name for it. There are many reasons why but the real and most obvious reason is that explained in the journal article On The Meaning of E = mc2 by Mendel Sachs, Int. J. Theo. Phys., 8 (1973) who writesQuote... inertia and energy refer to conceptually different features of matter. On the one hand, inertia per se relates to the resistance to the change of state of motion of a body, as would be caused, in 'particle physics,' by an external force acting on the body (...). On the other hand, energy per se is defined in terms of the solutions of the conservation laws..... Thus we see that energy and mass are conceptually different (though complimentary) features of matter, according to relativity theory.Several relativists have made this argument, including me.
Just because two quantities are proportional it doesn't mean that they are the same thing. E.g. you can't legitimately claim that since the energy is related to the frequency of a photon by E = hf that energy and frequency are the same thing.
Besides, E = mc2 does not work under all situations. E.g. if you have a rod which is at rest lying along the x-axis in the inertial frame S and there is force on each end of the rod of equal magnitude but opposite directions so as to stress it then it will be no acceleration of the rod but it will have a finite energy. When you transform to S' which is in standard configuration with S and moving in the +x direction then E = mc2 will no longer be true.
Also, if you are in a non-inertial frame E = mc2 will also not be true. The energy will be proportional to the time component of the momentum 1-form. However relativistic mass will still be the time component of the 4-momentum.
I didn't want to talk about your mistakes on this subject but since you took this off the thread where I was only looking for opinion you changed the purpose of it.
What I got from wikipedia is:at 4°c the water molecules bond in a hexagonal form, which increases the volume per per molecule, thus lowering the density. If not for this property of water, as mentioned, bodies of water would freeze from the bottom up, eliminating life forms it supports.
Quote from: phyti39 on 02/12/2014 21:47:32What I got from wikipedia is:at 4°c the water molecules bond in a hexagonal form, which increases the volume per per molecule, thus lowering the density. If not for this property of water, as mentioned, bodies of water would freeze from the bottom up, eliminating life forms it supports. Ok, but the phrase you have quoted (by the way, which is the link to the wiki page?) could have been expressed better, e.g. something like: "from 4°C onwards the water molecules bond in a hexagonal form ...thus lowering the liquid density"otherwise it seems that at exactly 4°C water is less dense than at the other temperatures...--lightarrow
A molecule is not an ion. Which seems a good reason to me.
Molecule, the smallest identifiable unit into which a pure substance can be divided and still retain the composition and chemical properties of that substance.
Not all substances are made up of distinct molecular units. Sodium chloride (common table salt), for example, consists of sodium ions and chloride ions arranged in a lattice so that each sodium ion is surrounded by six equidistant chloride ions and each chloride ion is surrounded by six equidistant sodium ions. The forces acting between any sodium and any adjacent chloride ion are equal. Hence, no distinct aggregate identifiable as a molecule of sodium chloride exists. Consequently, in sodium chloride and in all solids of similar type—in general, all salts—the concept of the chemical molecule has no significance. The formula for such a compound, however, is given as the simplest ratio of the atoms—in the case of sodium chloride, NaCl.
ion, any atom or group of atoms that bears one or more positive or negative electrical charges. Positively charged ions are called cations; negatively charged ions, anions. Ions are formed by the addition of electrons to, or the removal of electrons from, neutral atoms or molecules or other ions; by combination of ions with other particles; or by rupture of a covalent bond between two atoms in such a way that both of the electrons of the bond are left in association with one of the formerly bonded atoms. Examples of these processes include the reaction of a sodium atom with a chlorine atom to form a sodium cation and a chloride anion; the addition of a hydrogen cation to an ammonia molecule to form an ammonium cation; and the dissociation of a water molecule to form a hydrogen cation and a hydroxide anion.