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then the flaw is the equal sign, an equivalent sign should be used instead. .....?
Raf says:Anyone ever consider the weight of light? What do you think?
perhaps my rudimentary understanding of physics is not allowing me to see the "light"...... but is not mass and energy the same thing?
if supposed rock, whether it is falling or at rest, were to undergo total mass to energy conversion, would the energy output not justify the equation? like when two hydrogen atoms fuse to form helium. ..... 1 plus 1 does not quite equal 2, or am I misinformed that there is a small amount of mass that is ' lost ' and the only thing on other side of the equal sign are photons? surely a total conversion would have far more output.
if some mass is "lost" during a stars fusion process, does this mean that the universe is losing weight? would this "weight loss" explain why models of the early universe do not work correctly without the addition of more matter then we can account for?
how much volume is in a.....say 4.24 light year radius sphere? how much volume of photons is that? if they have even the most miniscule amount of mass. ........................
even at the surface of said sphere, and assuming light is massless, it can still impart inertia, giving everthing at said surface a gentle little push. .....
Light can power a solar sail so it can impart a force. Isn't that weigh by another name. In this case the energy would be the determining factor rather than mass.
Quote from: jeffreyH on 14/05/2018 15:43:42Light can power a solar sail so it can impart a force. Isn't that weigh by another name. In this case the energy would be the determining factor rather than mass.There's two definitions of weight. The one I use here is identical with the gravitational force. With light imparting force on something like a solar sail its due to the momentum of the photons and since photons have momentum they have mass since p = mv is how inertial mass is defined. Its basically how Newton defined it too.
As I said earlier and as @PmbPhy says, they dont have mass in the classical sense but have momentum .
I didn't say that. Photons do have mass in the classical sense since classically, m i.e. as Newton defined mass, m = p/v which is a classical expression.
...multiply that by the number of stars in our galaxy times the number of known galaxies, and this number might add up to a tremendous amount of "light weight" slowly pushing things apart.
Quote from: PmbPhy on 16/05/2018 11:00:44Quote from: jeffreyH on 14/05/2018 15:43:42Light can power a solar sail so it can impart a force. Isn't that weigh by another name. In this case the energy would be the determining factor rather than mass.There's two definitions of weight. The one I use here is identical with the gravitational force. With light imparting force on something like a solar sail its due to the momentum of the photons and since photons have momentum they have mass since p = mv is how inertial mass is defined. Its basically how Newton defined it too.And what is mass defined as ? Is it just a measurable quantity or does it have any different kind of definition?I am wondering whether all these "things" such as energy ,momentum ,mass (what have I missed?) are all self referential and define each other..I know the Higgs Field is supposed to give mass to a particular class of particles. Is that the best definition?Mass is defined as resistance to momentum change isn't it?
And what is mass defined as ? Is it just a measurable quantity or does it have any different kind of definition?
QuoteMass is defined as resistance to momentum change isn't it?Yes.Quote from: jeffreyHMass can be defined in terms of the Planck values. I worked this through a long time back. The equations are posted somewhere in new theories I think. This can ultimately lead to a mass number. This would be an integer value, and when used with the Planck action h, would lead to quantised mass.Please show me. Expressing one term in terms of another cannot be used as a definition. Please watch the train of thought here. Hoping from the classical domain of SR to quantum mechanics you just did can lead to nonsense talk, For example, I can speak of velocity and acceleration as well as a trajectory but when switching to QM all that is meaningless.
Mass is defined as resistance to momentum change isn't it?
Mass can be defined in terms of the Planck values. I worked this through a long time back. The equations are posted somewhere in new theories I think. This can ultimately lead to a mass number. This would be an integer value, and when used with the Planck action h, would lead to quantised mass.
as far as our sun being brighter then starlight, perhaps being caught in the suns gravity well can account for us not being pushed away. ....