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ThoughtProces
Mar23-09, 12:51 AM
I was wondering if there is and what is the equations that show that as an object accelerates towards the speed of light its mass increase to infinite.

jtbell
Mar23-09, 02:49 AM
You're probably thinking of this equation:

m = \frac {m_0} {\sqrt{1 - v^2 / c^2}}

ThoughtProces
Mar23-09, 02:59 AM
i do believe this is the equation do you have a derivation of where it comes from or could you point me to a site for which it has the derivation.

thanks

jtbell
Mar23-09, 08:09 AM
There was an extensive discussion here a couple of years ago, about the derivation of the relativistic mass:

http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=153322

ThoughtProces
Mar23-09, 03:16 PM
thanks for the link, it should prove to be a good read

ThoughtProces
Mar24-09, 09:39 PM
I guess another question is how do we measure the initial mass of an object if we are all traveling at a changing velocity due to the constant acceleration of an expanding universe. Or is the initial mass relative to the expanding universe in its own frame of reference?