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If a photon has mass does it too increase when it travels at light speed?
I’m just trying to get my head round the idea of proper mass, inertia etc, in another thread; so I’m going to have a go at this, to see how I’m doing.I may be confusing “rest mass” with “proper mass” (possibly they are the same), but let’s start with rest mass.
This is the mass of an object as measured by an observer who sees that object as stationary. We can never observe a photon as being stationary, so we cannot assign it a rest mass.However, the photon has inertia, so it adds to the inertia of any system of which it is a part. Because of the relationship between inertia and mass, the photon must, therefore, contribute mass to that system.
Quote from: Harri on 04/12/2018 19:24:53If a photon has mass does it too increase when it travels at light speed?It doesn't increase with speed since it always moves at c. It increases with frequency, which makes the photon mass still frame dependent.
However, the photon has inertia, so it adds to the inertia of any system of which it is a part. Because of the relationship between inertia and mass, the photon must, therefore, contribute mass to that system.
They're the same, yes.