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The Massless Photon |
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| Nov3-06, 11:32 AM | #1 |
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The Massless Photon
(I hope I've chosen the right sub-forum for this question...)
Hi folks - I've recently joined here to see if people who are more knowledgeable than me can help me understand some physics issues I have struggled with for a long time. My current question is a pretty basic one about how it is possible for a photon to have no mass. We have the famous equation, "E = mc squared" My math knowledge is very limited, but from what I know - if I assign the value "0" to m, and multiply 0 by c squared, the answer for E should be zero. Yet a photon possesses energy, and is said to have no mass. I can see 3 possibilities: - "E = mc squared" is not a standard algebra equation, and assigning the value "0" to m doesn't result in E being zero. - "E = mc squared" does not apply to photons - something that seems very unlikely to me. - photons do, in fact, have mass, or conversely, have no energy. Can someone help me understand this? I would be very grateful. Thanks! |
| Nov3-06, 11:35 AM | #2 |
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You need quantum mechanics too... E=h f
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| Nov3-06, 11:41 AM | #3 |
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It's usually a good idea to start out on wikipedia before asking here.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E%3Dmc%C2%B2 |
| Nov3-06, 12:06 PM | #4 |
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The Massless PhotonThanks for the link - it answers my question. That was easy, wasn't it? Carry on, carry on...
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| Nov3-06, 01:45 PM | #5 |
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Don't thing of a photon as "possessing" energy --- thing of a photon AS energy. Now when an atom absorbs a photon and moves one its electrons into a higher energy ‘obit’ it gains mass. When it drops to a lower energy level the atom loses mass as a photon is emitted in some random direction. Where was the mass? in the electron; or in the atom as whole – I’ll let you speculate. But that mass cannot just appear and disappear; shouldn’t mass be “conserved”? No conservation of mass and conservation of energy is “Old School” In modern physics it is the net of Mass and Energy that is conserved. So when a bit of mass disappears from an atom we can find it in the energy that escapes from it – we call it a photon. When a lot of mass disappears very quickly we can describe it as a lot photons (aka energy) escaping – or more easily described as a nuclear explosion. |
| Nov3-06, 03:01 PM | #6 |
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Mentor
Blog Entries: 1
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[tex]E = \sqrt{p^2c^2 + m^2c^4}[/tex] Where p is the momentum. Note that for massive particles at rest (momentum = 0) that equation becomes the more familiar [itex]E = mc^2[/itex]. For a photon: the mass is zero, but the momentum and energy are non-zero. E = pc = hf. |
| Nov3-06, 03:54 PM | #7 |
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https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/2517/ |
| Nov4-06, 08:33 AM | #8 |
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Thanks agains to all. The most fundamental answer to my question is that E=mc squared is not as universally applied as I assumed it was, at least not in its familiar simple form.
There is something that still confuses me a bit, and that's the concept of "rest mass". I was under the impression that the only time mass could be at rest was at a temperature of absolute zero, which doesn't really exist in nature (like a perfect vacuum). The photon is also never at rest - is the difference that the photon can't conceptually be at rest? I've also come across references to the "virtual mass" of a photon. Can anyone shed more light on that? The larger question might be - is the massless photon massless by definition? In other words, "mass is a quality of matter, the photon isn't defined as matter despite being a particle, and therefore the photon can't have a quality of matter - mass"? Or is it something more concrete - that the photon doesn't exhibit inertia, acceleration and deceleration, and other properties of mass? Thanks again. |
| Nov4-06, 10:00 AM | #9 |
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Sidebar. I am one of the ones who do not use "rest mass" because that implies there is some kind of distinguished non-rest mass, which I deny. There are are other posters on this forum who vehemently disagree, and in order to get maximal use out of your experience here you have to be clear in your mind so the disagreement (which is a tempest in a teacup as far as physics is concerned) doesn't confuse you. In my view a particle has one mass, no matter how it is moving in relation to you, and this mass is a "scalar", that is to say the same in every frame. Of course no experiment can ever proves that the mass is exactly zero; every experiment has error bounds, but the error bounds on these tests have gotten really tiny, off the top of my head I want to say + or - 10-20 electron volts. Thanks again.[/QUOTE] |
| Nov4-06, 10:11 AM | #10 |
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| Nov4-06, 10:55 AM | #11 |
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| Nov5-06, 02:29 AM | #12 |
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[tex] m = \frac{E}{c^2} = \frac{h \nu}{c^2} [/tex] but here [itex]m[/itex] is not the "rest mass" or "invariant mass". for particles that move more slowly that [itex]c[/itex], special relativity says their momentum is [tex] p = m v = \frac{m_0 v}{\sqrt{1 - \frac{v^2}{c^2}}} [/tex] where [itex]m_0[/itex] is the rest mass (and [itex]E_0 = m_0 c^2[/itex] is the rest energy and the total energy [itex]E_0 = m_0 c^2[/itex] is the rest energy plus kinetic energy). so the relationship between rest mass and relativistic mass is [tex] m = \frac{m_0}{\sqrt{1 - \frac{v^2}{c^2}}} [/tex] or turned around is [tex] m_0 = m \sqrt{1 - \frac{v^2}{c^2}} [/tex] or [tex] m_0 = \frac{E}{c^2} \sqrt{1 - \frac{v^2}{c^2}} [/tex] . now, no matter what finite energy that particle has, if it moves at the speed of light, that equation says that the rest mass of the particle has to be zero. the equation [tex] E = m c^2 [/tex] is just as general as [tex] E^2 = m_0^2 c^4 + p^2 c^2 [/tex] if the rest mass [itex]m_0[/itex] is related to relativistic mass [itex]m[/itex] as per the equation above and momentum is stiil the same [itex]p = m v[/itex]. [tex] m = \frac{h \nu}{c^2} [/tex] of if it means that the jury might be out as to whether photons, the particle manifestation of light, travels as fast as the wavespeed of light. some have posted is upper bound for the rest masses of photons (if i recall this upper bound was somewhere around 10-52 kg which is virtually nothing. so the difference in speeds are not measureable if there is such a difference at all. if it turns out that photons are known to travel at precisely the speed of light (waves), then the rest mass of the photons would have to be zero. [tex] p = m v = \frac{h \nu}{c^2} v [/tex] which, if they move at speed [itex]v = c[/itex], then the momentum is [tex] p = \frac{h \nu}{c} [/tex] they have non-zero momentum if that is what you mean by "inertia". i know that i am presenting this from a POV that is discouraged in modern physic pedagogy (i don't think that Doc Al will like it), but it's correct given the definition of relativistic mass. |
| Nov6-06, 08:42 AM | #13 |
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Thank you, folks.
I wish I could tell you where I saw the "virtual mass" for a photon mentioned. Most of my physics reading is books for laymen, but once I did try to wade through articles by physicsts themselves in the library - I think it might have be in an article by Bohr where I saw it. Here's a related question - if a photon has no mass, what pushes a solar sail? Is it other forms of radiation, as opposed to photons? |
| Nov6-06, 10:11 AM | #14 |
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| Nov6-06, 10:45 AM | #15 |
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http://www.geocities.com/physics_world/mass_paper.pdf Best wishes Pete |
| Nov6-06, 01:07 PM | #16 |
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Recognitions:
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Note that Pete's paper, with the URL given above, while mostly correct, has not been peer reviewed, and that some of us (like me) have disagreements with him on certain technical points and usages. Most of these are rather "fine" points, though.
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| Nov6-06, 01:46 PM | #17 |
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Pervect - given what you said above, my question would be - do you agree with Pete that photons have inertial mass?
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