Does mass really increase with speed

In summary, the concept of relativistic mass is outdated and can cause confusion. The true physical significance lies in the invariant quantity of rest mass. In special relativity, it is not appropriate to discuss gravitational forces. In general relativity, the stress-energy tensor is the source of gravitation, and the amount of gravity produced by an object is frame-invariant. In comparing the gravitational effects of rapidly moving massive bodies, it is important to consider local measures rather than distant measures.
  • #1
lowemack
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If mass really increases with speed then if 2 rockets leave earth, traveling parallel and close together, at close to the speed of light, then from an Earth point of view, as their mass increases, so should their gravity and they should be drawn together. But from the spaceship point of view their gravitational attraction should be minimal.
 
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  • #2
Relativistic mass is an outdated concept. This is yet another example of where the concept of relativistic mass confuses rather than clarifies.
 
  • #3
lowemack said:
But from the spaceship point of view their gravitational attraction should be minimal.

That's true, from the spaceship's perspective gravity (and the mass of the ships) doesn't change.

From the point of view of Earth how is it determind the mass of the ships has increased?

I think it's only kinetic energy that increases, not the actual mass.
 
  • #4
Relativistic mass is just the historical name for the quantity:

[tex] \frac{m}{\sqrt{1-v^2/c^2}} [/tex]

but it is the so called rest-mass [itex]m[/itex] that really has a physical significance. Rest mass is the magnitude of the four-momentum vector:

[tex]m^2 c^2=\frac{E^2}{c^2}-p^2[/tex]

It is an invariant quantity, meaning it is the same in every inertial frame of reference (this is a different from conservation of four-momentum: conservation of four-momentum refers to the fact that four-momentum, as a vector, is conserved in any interaction, as viewed in a particular reference frame; here, we are saying that mass is an invariant quantity, i.e. it is the same when computed in all possible r.f.). I think there is even a frequently-asked-question post that addresses this topic, so check it out.

I am not sure it is legal to talk about gravitational forces in special relativity, so I believe it is not right to say that since the masses increase (they don't!), their gravitational interaction increases too.
 
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  • #5
QuArK21343 said:
I am not sure it is legal to talk about gravitational forces in special relativity, so I believe it is not the right to say that since the masses increase (they don't!), their gravitational interaction increases too.

It is not right even in the context of GR, which does deal with gravity. The "amount of gravity produced by an object" is frame-invariant; it doesn't matter what your state of motion is relative to the object.
 
  • #6
PeterDonis said:
It is not right even in the context of GR, which does deal with gravity. The "amount of gravity produced by an object" is frame-invariant; it doesn't matter what your state of motion is relative to the object.

In GR the stress–energy tensor is the source of gravitation and it is not frame-invariant.
 
  • #7
ELROCH:
Thanks for clearing that up. So its okay for electrons to orbit near the speed of light around a nucleus moving at the speed of light. Einstein would not approve.
 
  • #8
dtyarbrough said:
ELROCH:
Thanks for clearing that up. So its okay for electrons to orbit near the speed of light around a nucleus moving at the speed of light. Einstein would not approve.

What would Einstein not approve of? He was of course aware of the relativistic law of addition of velocities, so he would know that this does not lead to any violation of the speed of light limit. Or are you referring to something else?
 
  • #9
D H said:
Relativistic mass is an outdated concept. This is yet another example of where the concept of relativistic mass confuses rather than clarifies.

DrStupid said:
In GR the stress–energy tensor is the source of gravitation and it is not frame-invariant.

So could one instead say that this is a case where the relativistic mass (which is just another name for energy) clarifies, indicating that non-tidal gravity can be transformed away, consistent with the Principle of Equivalence?

The main problem seems not the coordinate variance of the description, rather the question seems to assume some sort of superposition, which may not hold in GR because it is a nonlinear theory.

Here is an interesting comment by http://www.tims.ntu.edu.tw/ntumath2009/pdf/Shing-Tung%20Yau.pdf in this spirit (bcrowell has I think made a similar point many times, not sure if it's the same, but he's who I learned it from, if I'm not misinterpreting him): The total energy in general relativity cannot be obtained by integrating any local density along a hypersurface. The reason is that the density would depend on the first order differentiation of the metric gij . But there is a coordinate system where such quantities are zero at that point."
 
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  • #10
Hi lowemack..

Instead of saying 'mass' increases'' let's instead say 'energy'...that is, their kinetic energy appears to increase as observed from earth...but that is illusory since neither spaceship observes such an increase. They see Earth's KE as increasing not their own.

So who is right...well, they all are because they have different reference frames. So that alone won't tell us what's going on. Such comparisons can be confusing.


Peter's comment is the key:

The "amount of gravity produced by an object" is frame-invariant; it doesn't matter what your state of motion is relative to the object.

That results from the mathematics of relativity...it is NOT obvious.

Another way to remember this:
Any situation where you ask about a rapidly moving massive body's gravitational effect and a 'stationary' observer can be transformed to an equivalent question about the interaction between a rapidly moving observer a 'stationary' massive body. So all observations relating to a rapidly moving massive body can be answered as if the body is stationary...as if all measures are local. Local measures trump distant measures.

I think this would also be accurate: (any experts??)

If the spaceships have accelerated at the same rate together for the same time as they travel, they remain stationary relative to each other, their gravitational attraction remains as if they were stationary...But if one temporarily rockets ahead faster, for example, and remains ahead, now there has been relative motion between them, kinetic energy is observed for this period, and so they would have somewhat different gravitational attractions...and their paths would now vary for future travel...gravitational curvature IS affected. And their recorded elapsed times would also differ were they to later come together and compare elapsed times.
 
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  • #11
But how does an Earth based observer explain it? To him, the spaceships have increased mass, so shouldn't they have increased gravitational attraction, and if not, why not?
 
  • #12
Would it help to think of this in terms of some exact solution in GR? How about the LCDM model, where we say other "galaxies (local groups)" are "moving" away from us with increasing "acceleration"? Is there any way to make sense of all those terms as well as assign them "energy" and "gravitational attraction"?
 
  • #13
chingel said:
But how does an Earth based observer explain it? To him, the spaceships have increased mass, so shouldn't they have increased gravitational attraction, and if not, why not?

You have to read the opening answer(s): the spaceships do not have increased mass, that notion is obsolete. They have increased total energy. Perhaps you are thinking E=mc2, and c is constant, and E is increasing (yes), therefore m must increasing.

The 'equals' sign does not indicate a 'same thing as' relationship, but an equivalence.

If the real masses did increase, it would entail an irresolvable paradox:

I have installed a nanogram-sensitive strain-balance between the two spaceships. I observe the readout through a powerful telescope and I see as they go faster, the readout increases. But the pilots radio back and say the readout does not change.

This is not the same sort of length/time 'paradox' that can be resolved on carefully reasoned relativistic grounds, it is just an impossibility. If the pilots don't measure a mass increase, there is none. It is constant.
 
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  • #14
danR said:
I have installed a nanogram-sensitive strain-balance between the two spaceships. I observe the readout through a powerful telescope and I see as they go faster, the readout increases. But the pilots radio back and say the readout does not change.
Suppose we charge the rockets with 2 opposite charges, so that in addition we also have an attractive Coulomb force.

In the past I have read arguments concluding that the force between the rockets will become smaller due to the 2 magnetic fields as observed from earth. The readout should decrease according to these arguments.

I’m stuck. An irresolvable paradox?
 
  • #15
Per Oni said:
Suppose we charge the rockets with 2 opposite charges, so that in addition we also have an attractive Coulomb force.

In the past I have read arguments concluding that the force between the rockets will become smaller due to the 2 magnetic fields as observed from earth. The readout should decrease according to these arguments.

I’m stuck. An irresolvable paradox?

Well, I'd have to look at the arguments a bit more fleshed-out than that. But do you mean the the pilots and the stationary observer see a different readout? I don't think so.

Is there greater attraction between the two? Consider two simplified spaceships: an electron and a positron traveling parallel down a linear accelerator at relativistic velocities. Do their charges change? Charge, like spin, is a fixed property. As far as I know, it doesn't change with velocity, which latter between the two is zero anyway: they have the same reference frame.
 
  • #16
DrStupid said:
In GR the stress–energy tensor is the source of gravitation and it is not frame-invariant.

If you mean "not frame-invariant" in the sense that it's not a scalar, true. But it is certainly "frame-invariant" in the sense that it's a tensor and transforms accordingly when you change coordinates, so contracting it with other tensors yields frame-invariant scalars. Any actual observable that tells you about the "amount of gravity produced" by an object will be such a scalar, so it will be frame-invariant, as I said.

atyy said:
So could one instead say that this is a case where the relativistic mass (which is just another name for energy) clarifies, indicating that non-tidal gravity can be transformed away, consistent with the Principle of Equivalence?

No. The "amount of gravity produced" by the object is not a function of its energy, it's a function of its stress-energy tensor, of which energy is only one component. In a frame in which the object is moving, there will be other non-zero components of the SET as well as the energy, and their effects will offset the apparent "effect" of the increase in energy, so the final result will be the same as it is for a frame in which the object is at rest.

atyy said:
The main problem seems not the coordinate variance of the description, rather the question seems to assume some sort of superposition, which may not hold in GR because it is a nonlinear theory.

This is true; so far I've only talked about a single object. Since GR is nonlinear, two solutions do not add up to another solution, so I can't just take the solution for each body in isolation and add them to get a solution for both bodies. That's why we don't have a closed form solution for, e.g., binary pulsars, but have to calculate their expected orbital changes due to the radiation of gravitational waves numerically.

However, we don't have to get into that to resolve the question of whether an object being in motion changes the gravity it produces. It doesn't.

Naty1 said:
Any situation where you ask about a rapidly moving massive body's gravitational effect and a 'stationary' observer can be transformed to an equivalent question about the interaction between a rapidly moving observer a 'stationary' massive body. So all observations relating to a rapidly moving massive body can be answered as if the body is stationary

This is key: this is almost always the quickest method of figuring out how much gravity an object produces. Transform to its rest frame, in which the stress-energy tensor will usually have its simplest form. Actually, in the case given in the OP, it's even simpler, since each object is isolated so the individual solution for the gravity produced by the object, in the vacuum region outside the object, is just the Schwarzschild solution with the object's mass M. Transforming that solution to a frame in which M is moving does not change any of its physical predictions, it just makes it look more complicated while still giving the same answers.
 
  • #17
PeterDonis said:
No. The "amount of gravity produced" by the object is not a function of its energy, it's a function of its stress-energy tensor, of which energy is only one component. In a frame in which the object is moving, there will be other non-zero components of the SET as well as the energy, and their effects will offset the apparent "effect" of the increase in energy, so the final result will be the same as it is for a frame in which the object is at rest.

Not for non-tidal gravity.
 
  • #18
atyy said:
Not for non-tidal gravity.

I may not have made myself clear. By "final result" I mean the calculated prediction for a scalar, i.e., an observable number. When you talk about being able to set up a local inertial frame in which "non-tidal gravity" vanishes, what makes that possible is the fact that a particular observable number, the acceleration felt by an observer moving on a geodesic worldline, is zero. Setting up a local inertial frame is simply setting up a frame in which the formulas that give you this observable number look as simple as possible.

The observable number is invariant. How it is interpreted may vary, but the number itself does not change. Nor does it change depending on whether we do the calculation in a frame where the source of gravity is at rest, or a frame in which the source is moving. Similar remarks apply to any other observable number.
 
  • #19
PeterDonis said:
I may not have made myself clear. By "final result" I mean the calculated prediction for a scalar, i.e., an observable number. When you talk about being able to set up a local inertial frame in which "non-tidal gravity" vanishes, what makes that possible is the fact that a particular observable number, the acceleration felt by an observer moving on a geodesic worldline, is zero. Setting up a local inertial frame is simply setting up a frame in which the formulas that give you this observable number look as simple as possible.

The observable number is invariant. How it is interpreted may vary, but the number itself does not change. Nor does it change depending on whether we do the calculation in a frame where the source of gravity is at rest, or a frame in which the source is moving. Similar remarks apply to any other observable number.

No, you made yourself clear. I don't disagree with what you wrote, but the point of the post you replied to was that the ability to ask the question does not go away if one uses instead the energy or even the stress-energy tensor instead of the relativistic mass.

So certainly we can say that gravity (in an appropriate sense) can be made to disappear with an appropriate choice of coordinates. We can also say that gravity (in another appropriate sense) is the same regardless of choice of coordinates. Even with requiring scalars to define gravity, one can still say that it is observer dependent since the metric needs at least two vectors to make a scalar, and one of the vectors could be the observer's tangent vector.

Anyway, no physics disagreement. More seriously, the parts of the question that don't make sense to me - and I'd like to know whether it is possible to make sense of them - are:

Does GR have a notion of the "gravity" between distant objects?

Does GR have any solutions where massive objects can move parallel to each other?
 
  • #20
atyy said:
the ability to ask the question does not go away if one uses instead the energy or even the stress-energy tensor instead of the relativistic mass.

And the answer is still the same: if one is inferring from either the relativistic mass or the stress-energy tensor that an object's behavior as a source of gravity depends on its state of motion relative to you, one is inferring incorrectly.

atyy said:
So certainly we can say that gravity (in an appropriate sense) can be made to disappear with an appropriate choice of coordinates. We can also say that gravity (in another appropriate sense) is the same regardless of choice of coordinates.

Yes, no dispute here, although the first sense of "gravity" is not encouraged in GR for precisely this reason: that it is not a direct observable, because it can be made to vanish by a change of coordinates. (More precisely, it can be made to vanish *at a particular event* by a change of coordinates: you can't make it vanish over an extended patch of spacetime.)

atyy said:
Even with requiring scalars to define gravity, one can still say that it is observer dependent since the metric needs at least two vectors to make a scalar, and one of the vectors could be the observer's tangent vector.

But then you're talking about *different* scalars. If you compute the "effect of gravity" on observers with different tangent vectors, obviously you will get different answers (you're contracting the same "source" with different vectors). But that's not because the source of gravity changed; it's because the observer changed.

To put this another way, when we talk about an object as a "source" of gravity, we're talking about what kind of spacetime curvature it produces, and spacetime curvature is independent of the state of motion of observers that probe it. When we talk about the kind of "gravity" that can be made to vanish at an event by a change of coordinates, we're talking about a property of the observer's worldline: that its 4-acceleration (which is a direct observable, the reading of an accelerometer) is zero, i.e., it's moving on a geodesic. When we talk about the kind of "gravity" that is produced by an object's stress-energy tensor, we're talking about the spacetime as a whole, the geometric structure that determines which particular worldlines are geodesics. The two are related, but they are not the same.

atyy said:
Does GR have a notion of the "gravity" between distant objects?

I would say yes, but the question probably needs to be more specifically defined. I can think of at least two ways in which it does:

(1) There are numerical solutions for many-body systems (e.g., binary pulsars) which show the bodies orbiting each other, similar to the known Newtonian analytic solutions for the two-body problem. The difference is that GR includes the emission of gravitational waves, so the two bodies' orbits about each other are not constant; they slowly spiral inwards towards each other.

(2) For an extended system with nonzero stress-energy such as a perfect fluid, the stress-energy gravitates; e.g., an expanding FRW solution with zero cosmological constant has the expansion constantly slowing down, while a contracting FRW solution with zero cosmological constant has the contraction constantly speeding up. The expanding case corresponds to all the massive objects in the universe pulling on each other and slowing the expansion down.

atyy said:
Does GR have any solutions where massive objects can move parallel to each other?

Wouldn't this be equivalent to a solution where two massive objects are at rest relative to each other? Or do you mean moving on parallel worldlines but in opposite directions?

I believe the Chazy-Curzon vacuum is a solution (an unphysical one) for a pair of masses held at fixed distance apart by a massless "strut" (it's unphysical because the strut has no mass but it still can exert force on the two masses). I don't know if there are any physically realistic solutions of this sort; it's hard to see how there could be since two masses without any other mass present should fall towards each other.
 
  • #21
Naty1 said:
Another way to remember this:
Any situation where you ask about a rapidly moving massive body's gravitational effect and a 'stationary' observer can be transformed to an equivalent question about the interaction between a rapidly moving observer a 'stationary' massive body.
This is wishful thinking. Try to produce any reference that gives that transformation.
 
  • #22
You'll find quite a lot on calculating the trajectories of a rapidly moving observer near a large mass. Which is the easy way to think about the problem, and most any basic textbook will cover it.

So Naty1's advice is quite sound, and he's pointing out that if you "shift gears" to calculating the problem from the POV of the massive body , the problem is quite a bit easier and within the grasp of a serious beginning student. A total layman might not be able to even calculate this much - it seems to be the case that they get weird ideas as a result of being unable to calculate things (which provides in the end a necessary cross-check on the concepts involve). Unforutnatley, unless/until such time as the layperson actually become at least a beginning students who can start to calculate things it's rather difficult to have a truly serious discussion :-(.

The basic tensor transformation laws do give you the tools you'd need to convert to ANY sort of coordinate system you want, in theory. Whether or not you get closed form solutions is another story.

As far as picking the "right" coordinate system goes, ones that have some sort of physical significance, it might not be obvious at all how to do th is at first. But if you' look, you'll also find the discussion of how to construct the Fermi-normal coordinates, and/or various extensions therof, and some discusssion here and there about the physical interpretation of said coordinates, why they are a "good choice", and some remarks about their physical interpretation.

See for instance MTW's "Gravitation", and online you'll find http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0901/0901.4465v2.pdf, which has some interpretational remarks as well.

This is a rather advanced topic, though, and unfortunately tends not to be particularly helpful to the beginning student. I tend to agree with Misner that the easisst solution is just to let go of the whole idea of "observers" for the beginning student, they turn out to require more advanced math to handle than is required to actually compute useful solutions. After one gets a handle on how to calculate really basic things without dragging in the idea of "observers", the concept can be re-introduced at a more advanced level.

I will remark, though, that to the second order, what an "observer" sees is describable in terms of tidal forces, something that most textooks introduce at a starting level. So, if one is not particularly argumentative, one can use some of this information to good effect for what an "observer" sees. If one is argumentative (this seems to happen a lot), well, one has to wade through the necessary math to achieve this understanding.
 
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  • #23
PeterDonis said:
Any actual observable that tells you about the "amount of gravity produced" by an object will be such a scalar, so it will be frame-invariant, as I said.

Please specify "amount of gravity produced".
 
  • #24
danR said:
Well, I'd have to look at the arguments a bit more fleshed-out than that. But do you mean the the pilots and the stationary observer see a different readout? I don't think so.

Is there greater attraction between the two? Consider two simplified spaceships: an electron and a positron traveling parallel down a linear accelerator at relativistic velocities. Do their charges change? Charge, like spin, is a fixed property. As far as I know, it doesn't change with velocity, which latter between the two is zero anyway: they have the same reference frame.
Charge is an invariant although the distribution of the field is modified when a charge is travelling.

This thread reminded me of a chapter in: “Special relativity A.P.French”
On page 244 there is an example of 2 charges traveling side by side in a rest frame, not unlike the OP.
The conclusion is that we need to take into account a force transformation with the result that indeed different forces are experienced, depending which frame we are in. For the case of charges this is explained away by introducing magnetic fields.

We should however be able to apply these same force transformations for the case stated in the OP, with the result that we have 2 different readouts on our balance.

But in the end I don’t know and I’m still stuck.
 
  • #25
DrStupid said:
Please specify "amount of gravity produced".

Any direct observable that tells you about gravity. For example, suppose I am "hovering" at a constant height above a gravitating body, and I want to know how much I have to accelerate--how hard I have to fire my rocket engines--to do so. The answer is simple: it's the 4-acceleration of my worldline, which is a scalar invariant. The formula I use to calculate that number will look different in different coordinate systems: for example, it will look different in coordinates in which the source of gravity is moving, than it will in coordinates in which the source of gravity is at rest. But the final answer will be the same either way.

The above case may be too simple, though, because I don't need to know the stress-energy tensor inside the source to calculate it; I only need to know the source's total mass. But even in this case, it's the source's *rest* mass, *not* its relativistic mass, that comes into play.

Let's take a more complicated case: the expansion of the universe. Here there is a non-zero stress-energy tensor throughout the spacetime. Suppose I want to know how the expansion of the universe is changing with time; this depends on how much gravity the stress-energy in the universe is producing. We'll take the simpler case with zero cosmological constant (which does not seem to be true in the actual universe, but it's simpler to understand). In this case, the expansion of the universe is decelerating, and the rate at which it decelerates depends on the amount of stress-energy present. We can directly observe the deceleration by observing the Hubble constant and seeing that it decreases with time; equivalently, we can watch the observed redshift of a particular galaxy, which indicates how fast it is moving away from us (provided we take a galaxy that is far enough away that it is not part of our local galaxy cluster, so its motion relative to us is solely due to the expansion of the universe), and see that the redshift decreases with time.

So we have a direct observable that tells us "how much gravity" the universe is producing. And we will arrive at the same prediction for this observable regardless of what system of coordinates we do the calculation in; normally we would do it in the standard FRW coordinates, but the Earth is not at rest in those coordinates, so we could, if we wanted to, transform to the Earth's rest frame and re-do the calculation, and we would get the same answer.
 
  • #26
Per Oni said:
The conclusion is that we need to take into account a force transformation with the result that indeed different forces are experienced, depending which frame we are in. For the case of charges this is explained away by introducing magnetic fields.

The *total* force experienced is the same; how it is taken to be split into "electric" and "magnetic" force is frame-dependent.

Per Oni said:
We should however be able to apply these same force transformations for the case stated in the OP, with the result that we have 2 different readouts on our balance.

No, the balance readout doesn't change. But different observers will want to explain it differently: one will say it's purely due to electric force; another will say it's partly electric and partly magnetic.
 
  • #27
PeterDonis said:
Any direct observable that tells you about gravity. For example, suppose I am "hovering" at a constant height above a gravitating body, and I want to know how much I have to accelerate--how hard I have to fire my rocket engines--to do so. The answer is simple: it's the 4-acceleration of my worldline, which is a scalar invariant.

That means this 4-acceleration is independent from the velocity of the body - even if it is so fast that we are inside our common Schwarzschild radius?
 
  • #28
DrStupid said:
That means this 4-acceleration is independent from the velocity of the body - even if it is so fast that we are inside our common Schwarzschild radius?

What does "velocity so fast that we are inside our common Schwarzschild radius" mean? The Schwarzschild radius of a body does not depend on velocity.
 
  • #29
PeterDonis said:
(1) There are numerical solutions for many-body systems (e.g., binary pulsars) which show the bodies orbiting each other, similar to the known Newtonian analytic solutions for the two-body problem. The difference is that GR includes the emission of gravitational waves, so the two bodies' orbits about each other are not constant; they slowly spiral inwards towards each other.

(2) For an extended system with nonzero stress-energy such as a perfect fluid, the stress-energy gravitates; e.g., an expanding FRW solution with zero cosmological constant has the expansion constantly slowing down, while a contracting FRW solution with zero cosmological constant has the contraction constantly speeding up. The expanding case corresponds to all the massive objects in the universe pulling on each other and slowing the expansion down.

Let's take the FRW case. Why doesn't one say the expansion is due to the gravity of stress-energy?

Also, this gravity is defined via a preferred set of observers, which is ok. But then would a possible answer to the OP be that "the attraction of gravity between distant objects" isn't defined for arbitrary observers?

Another idea for a possible answer is that the relative motion of distant objects is not defined. Only objects at the same event can "move" relative to each other. But we surely don't expect objects at the same event to have a gravitational attraction between themselves.

PeterDonis said:
Wouldn't this be equivalent to a solution where two massive objects are at rest relative to each other? Or do you mean moving on parallel worldlines but in opposite directions?

Yes. What are these like? A charged black hole of some sort?
 
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  • #30
PeterDonis said:
The *total* force experienced is the same; how it is taken to be split into "electric" and "magnetic" force is frame-dependent.
I quote here from the above mentioned book:
Fy=Fy’/γ
In this example the 2 forces are not the same. Have you got a copy of that book?
No, the balance readout doesn't change. But different observers will want to explain it differently: one will say it's purely due to electric force; another will say it's partly electric and partly magnetic.
The second part of my previous post referred back to the OP where we just got 2 uncharged rockets. Therefore there’s no need to mention em fields. Nevertheless we should still apply the force transformations. (Or so I believe).
 
  • #31
PeterDonis said:
What does "velocity so fast that we are inside our common Schwarzschild radius" mean?

[itex]r < \frac{{2 \cdot \gamma }}{{c^2 }}\sqrt {\left( {\frac{{m_1 \cdot c}}{{\sqrt {c^2 - v_1^2 } }} + \frac{{m_2 \cdot c}}{{\sqrt {c^2 - v_2^2 } }}} \right)^2 - \left( {\frac{{m_1 \cdot v_1 }}{{\sqrt {c^2 - v_1^2 } }} + \frac{{m_2 \cdot v_2 }}{{\sqrt {c^2 - v_2^2 } }}} \right)^2 }[/itex]

PeterDonis said:
The Schwarzschild radius of a body does not depend on velocity.

The common Schwarzschild radius of two bodies does (see above). In the rest frame of the center of mass it is proportional to the sum of the relativistic masses.
 
  • #32
PeterDonis said:
Per Oni said:
The conclusion is that we need to take into account a force transformation with the result that indeed different forces are experienced, depending which frame we are in. For the case of charges this is explained away by introducing magnetic fields.
The *total* force experienced is the same; how it is taken to be split into "electric" and "magnetic" force is frame-dependent.

I suspect that the cause of this disagreement is that PeterDonis is using the four-force, the rate of change of 4-momentum with respect to proper time. Because this transforms as a tensor via the Lorentz transformations, it can be and is be considered to be independent of the frame of reference in the context of special relativity.

I believe Per Oni is using the traditional concept of force, the "three-force", which is the rate of change of 3-momentum with coordinate time rather than proper time. This is not frame independent, because coordinate time isn't frame independent, so it does not transform as a tensor in special relativity and ca not be considered to be independent of the frame of reference.
 
  • #33
DrStupid said:
[itex]r < \frac{{2 \cdot \gamma }}{{c^2 }}\sqrt {\left( {\frac{{m_1 \cdot c}}{{\sqrt {c^2 - v_1^2 } }} + \frac{{m_2 \cdot c}}{{\sqrt {c^2 - v_2^2 } }}} \right)^2 - \left( {\frac{{m_1 \cdot v_1 }}{{\sqrt {c^2 - v_1^2 } }} + \frac{{m_2 \cdot v_2 }}{{\sqrt {c^2 - v_2^2 } }}} \right)^2 }[/itex]

The common Schwarzschild radius of two bodies does (see above). In the rest frame of the center of mass it is proportional to the sum of the relativistic masses.

Do you have a reference for this formula?
 
  • #34
pervect said:
I suspect that the cause of this disagreement is that PeterDonis is using the four-force, the rate of change of 4-momentum with respect to proper time. Because this transforms as a tensor via the Lorentz transformations, it can be and is be considered to be independent of the frame of reference in the context of special relativity.

I believe Per Oni is using the traditional concept of force, the "three-force", which is the rate of change of 3-momentum with coordinate time rather than proper time. This is not frame independent, because coordinate time isn't frame independent, so it does not transform as a tensor in special relativity and ca not be considered to be independent of the frame of reference.

I agree this may well be why we are saying different things, but the reason I think about this in terms of the 4-force is that the 4-force is what is directly observable as, for example, the "readout on a balance". The 3-force is *not*. So the fact that the 3-force is frame dependent does *not* mean the actual observable, such as a balance readout, is frame dependent.

It could also be that the two "forces" Per Oni is referring to are different because they refer to different observables: for example, the actual force felt by observers moving on different worldlines. If you change the conditions of the scenario, obviously you can change the predicted observations.
 
  • #35
atyy said:
Let's take the FRW case. Why doesn't one say the expansion is due to the gravity of stress-energy?

Do you mean why *does* one say this? I am saying the (rate of change of the) expansion *is* due to the gravity of stress-energy.

atyy said:
Also, this gravity is defined via a preferred set of observers

No, it isn't. The redshift of Galaxy X observed at Earth is a physical observable; anyone who calculates it will calculate the same answer. And the Earth is not at rest in the "comoving" frame, so it's not a preferred observer anyway. The point is that the *change with time* of a particular galaxy's redshift, if it is far enough away not to be gravitationally bound to our local cluster of galaxies, is an observable that tells us about the gravity of the universe as a whole, i.e., the combined gravity of all the objects in it.

atyy said:
Another idea for a possible answer is that the relative motion of distant objects is not defined.

I don't have to define this to make the argument I'm making. I don't have to interpret the redshift as actual "relative motion"; I only have to interpret its change over time as "deceleration".

atyy said:
Yes. What are these like? A charged black hole of some sort?

Not sure which of my "what ifs" you were responding to here. I am not aware of any particular solutions for masses moving on parallel worldlines but in opposite directions. If you mean the Chazy-Curzon vacuum, no, the two massive objects in it are not charged. I was hoping to find a good quick reference about it online, but I haven't.
 
<h2>1. Does mass really increase with speed?</h2><p>According to Einstein's theory of relativity, mass does indeed increase with speed. This is known as relativistic mass or effective mass.</p><h2>2. How does mass increase with speed?</h2><p>The increase in mass with speed is due to the relationship between energy and mass described by Einstein's famous equation, E=mc². As an object's speed increases, its kinetic energy also increases, leading to an increase in mass.</p><h2>3. Is the increase in mass significant?</h2><p>The increase in mass with speed is only significant for objects traveling at speeds close to the speed of light. For everyday objects, the increase in mass is negligible and cannot be measured.</p><h2>4. Does the increase in mass affect the object's weight?</h2><p>No, the increase in mass does not affect the object's weight. Weight is a measure of the force of gravity on an object, which is dependent on its mass and the strength of the gravitational field. The increase in mass does not change the strength of the gravitational field, so the weight remains the same.</p><h2>5. Can mass exceed the speed of light?</h2><p>No, according to the theory of relativity, nothing can travel faster than the speed of light. As an object's speed approaches the speed of light, its mass approaches infinity, making it impossible for an object to reach or exceed the speed of light.</p>

1. Does mass really increase with speed?

According to Einstein's theory of relativity, mass does indeed increase with speed. This is known as relativistic mass or effective mass.

2. How does mass increase with speed?

The increase in mass with speed is due to the relationship between energy and mass described by Einstein's famous equation, E=mc². As an object's speed increases, its kinetic energy also increases, leading to an increase in mass.

3. Is the increase in mass significant?

The increase in mass with speed is only significant for objects traveling at speeds close to the speed of light. For everyday objects, the increase in mass is negligible and cannot be measured.

4. Does the increase in mass affect the object's weight?

No, the increase in mass does not affect the object's weight. Weight is a measure of the force of gravity on an object, which is dependent on its mass and the strength of the gravitational field. The increase in mass does not change the strength of the gravitational field, so the weight remains the same.

5. Can mass exceed the speed of light?

No, according to the theory of relativity, nothing can travel faster than the speed of light. As an object's speed approaches the speed of light, its mass approaches infinity, making it impossible for an object to reach or exceed the speed of light.

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