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Interesting Coincidence with Classical/Modern View of Mass and Energy |
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| Jun12-12, 02:54 AM | #1 |
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Interesting Coincidence with Classical/Modern View of Mass and Energy
Has anyone ever noticed that, even in classical physics, energy is shown as a scalar multiple of mass?
For example, consider the joule; 1 J = 1 kg*(m/s)^2 If you consider the units of motion (m/s) to be a vector quantity, then squaring such a vector would be interpreted as a dot product that produces a scalar. 1 J (energy) = [mass in kg]*[scalar speed] Which is eerily similar to E=MC^2. Thus, whether anyone in the past realized it or not, did they inadvertently stumble on the mass-energy equivalence just by dealing with these units? |
| Jun12-12, 04:39 AM | #2 |
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The units in a physical formula actually do work out? What a coincidence!
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| Jun12-12, 09:58 AM | #4 |
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Mentor
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Interesting Coincidence with Classical/Modern View of Mass and Energy
If you set the speed of light to 1, mass and energy have the same units. This is not a coincidence, and shows that the concepts are related in relativity.
If, for some strange reason, nonrelativistic kinetic energy would be something like mv^3, the rest energy of objects should be something like mc^3. But I do not think this would give meaningful physics. |
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