Can Photons Have Mass? Debate & Answer

In summary, the question of whether photons, the particles of light, have mass has been a topic of debate among physicists for many years. While some theories suggest that photons do have a small amount of mass, most evidence points to them being massless particles. This is supported by the fact that photons travel at the speed of light, which is only possible for particles with zero mass. Additionally, the Standard Model of particle physics does not include mass for photons. However, there are still ongoing experiments and discussions within the scientific community to further explore this question and potentially uncover new information about the nature of photons.
  • #1
medgalis
11
0
Me and my teacher have been arguing, whether photons have or don't have mass. I say that it's impossible for photons to have mass, but my teacher says that we can calculate the photons mass. So my question is, can photons have mass?
 
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  • #2
Not in a vacuum. I would be interested to know what your teacher says "the photon's mass" is, if it can be calculated.

In a superconductor, photons acquire mass, via the famous Higgs mechanism:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higgs_mechanism#Examples
... but it doesn't sound like this is what your teacher had in mind.
 
  • #3
Photons in some system with other stuff contribute to the total energy of that system in the center of energy frame, which can be translated into a mass. That does not mean that photons have mass (on their own).
Photons are massless in theory, and experiments were able to set http://pdglive.lbl.gov/Rsummary.brl?nodein=S000 (less than 10-23) times the electron mass) on any possible photon mass.
 
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  • #4
medgalis said:
Me and my teacher have been arguing, whether photons have or don't have mass. I say that it's impossible for photons to have mass, but my teacher says that we can calculate the photons mass. So my question is, can photons have mass?

Its impossible to have REST mass otherwise it could not move at the speed of light. By definition it can have relativistic mass but many people, myself included, believe its not really a concept that's particularly useful.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #5
psmt said:
Not in a vacuum. I would be interested to know what your teacher says "the photon's mass" is, if it can be calculated.
She says it can be calculated with E=mc^2.
 
  • #6
medgalis said:
She says it can be calculated with E=mc^2.
That would correspond to the concept of relativistic mass. This concept is not used any more in physics, it just remains in old textbooks and bad TV documentations.
 
  • #7
mfb said:
That would correspond to the concept of relativistic mass. This concept is not used any more in physics, it just remains in old textbooks and bad TV documentations.

But she still teaches this kind of a thing she believes it and i don't know how can she still believe it. And she says that a moving photon has mass.
 
  • #8
medgalis said:
But she still teaches this kind of a thing she believes it and i don't know how can she still believe it. And she says that a moving photon has mass.

Its true - by definition it has relativistic mass. Its just that these days its not a particularly useful concept. You might like to ask for relativistic mass with a particle that has a rest mass if it has the same effective mass regardless of what direction a force is applied (it doesn't) and if that is a property you normally associate with the concept of mass?

John Baez gives a nice explanation:
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/SR/mass.html

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #9
I'm strictly against the use of what has been known as "relativistic" mass in the early days of special relativity. Then it was even worse: They introduced also two kinds of relativstic mass, called transverse and longitudinal mass. All this makes a clear subject, namely the special relativity very confusing, and as soon as you go even further to general relativity it's impossible to get anything clear with such non-covariant concepts.

In modern language thus mass refers to the invariant mass of a system. This clarifies a lot of confusing issues of the early days, particularly when it comes to really non-trivial concepts like the renormalization of mass of charged bodies/particles in classical and quantum electrodynamics or even more complicated quantum field theories as the complete standard model, etc.

That said, the photon mass in free space is, within the standard model, 0. There is, however, no first principle telling us that it must be 0, because you can give even a "naive" mass to a renormalizable Abelian gauge-field theory without spoiling gauge invariance and renormalizability (Stückelberg formalism for Abelian massive gauge fields). Thus, we have to consider the masslessness of the photon a pretty precisely measured empirical input into the standard model.

Of course, there is not only free space but also macroscopic bodies, and there the whole issue becomes even more involved. There you also have contributions to the mass from the interaction of the photons with the medium. The funny thing in the context of the photon mass here are superconductors. Effectively superconductors can be described as a "Higgsed QED", i.e., the electromagnetic gauge symmetry is "spontaneously broken" in the sense of the Higgs mechanism. This has been deduced by Anderson some time before Higgs's famous paper on the Higgs mechanism in electroweak theory! Thus, in a superconductor photons acquire a mass through this Anderson-Higgs mechanism.
 
  • #10
As far as I understand it relativistic mass is just a synonym for energy. E = mc2 is just an equation for converting one unit of energy into another (i.e. kg to J).
In particle physics the mass of a particle is defined as the energy that particle possesses at rest. So if photons can never be at rest how can they have mass?
 
  • #11
medgalis said:
When an electron "jumps" from it's one of outer shells to the inner shell, he emits energy (photon).
To do that, you need an atom nearby, an isolated electron cannot do that. The whole atom is participating in that process, even if the change for the electron is the most interesting part.
The electron mass (="rest mass") of roughly 511 keV does not change, however. Not even a tiny bit. The total energy of the atom changes.
 
  • #12
mfb said:
To do that, you need an atom nearby, an isolated electron cannot do that. The whole atom is participating in that process, even if the change for the electron is the most interesting part.
The electron mass (="rest mass") of roughly 511 keV does not change, however. Not even a tiny bit. The total energy of the atom changes.

Oh. Well i didn't know that.
 

1. Can photons have mass?

This is a highly debated question among scientists. According to the Standard Model of particle physics, photons are considered to be massless particles. However, some theories suggest that photons may acquire mass through interactions with other particles or through the Higgs field.

2. What is the evidence for photons having mass?

Currently, there is no conclusive evidence that photons have mass. The most widely accepted evidence for their masslessness comes from experiments such as the Michelson-Morley experiment, which showed that the speed of light is independent of the observer's frame of reference.

3. How would the mass of photons affect our understanding of the universe?

If photons were found to have mass, it would have significant implications for our understanding of the universe. It could challenge the principles of special relativity and the Standard Model of particle physics, and potentially lead to the development of new theories and models.

4. Can we measure the mass of photons?

At this time, there is no experimental method to directly measure the mass of photons. The mass of a particle is typically measured by observing its effects on other particles or through its interactions with other particles. However, since photons are massless, this method cannot be applied to them.

5. What research is currently being done on the mass of photons?

Scientists are continually studying and researching the properties of photons, including their potential mass. Some experiments, such as the Large Hadron Collider, are designed to test the Standard Model and search for new particles, which could potentially provide insight into the mass of photons.

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