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Light, Mass, and Black hole question |
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| Oct16-04, 01:30 PM | #1 |
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Light, Mass, and Black hole question
I heard from another thread that as u progress the speed of light, you'll eventually reach infinite mass. How come light itself dont reach infinite mass? And infinite mass means infinite gravitational force right? I heard there was a theory that the Black Hole has infinite mass, does that mean it is center of the universe? infinite gravational force means everytihng will eventually draw itself into it.
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| Oct16-04, 02:18 PM | #2 |
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Seeing how it is assumed that almost 90 (not sure but it's something like that) percent of the mass of the universe is comprised of dark matter from which presumably black holes are made up of, I would think that black holes have that kind of gravitatinal force.
Off-topic: I heard something about time running 'slower' as you approach a black hole (maybe due to the high gravitational pulses it produces) which made me a little confused. Can someone elaborate? |
| Oct16-04, 05:04 PM | #3 |
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Recognitions:
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So the situation is this: normal matter, with a non-zero rest mass, cannot achieve the speed of light. It's mass will remain constant with velocity, but its relativistic mass will increase as its velocity increases, approaching infinity at the speed of light. Light, with a zero rest mass, cannot travel at any speed other than the speed of light. Light has no mass (no rest mass), but it does have a relativistic mass. If you try to apply the mathematical formulas that apply to particles with a non-zero rest mass to light, you'd find that you multiply the inital zero rest mass of light by infinity to get light's "relativistic mass". This yields an undefined result. When you use the correct formulas, though, you find that light has a finite relativistic mass. You might also find the sci.physics.faq "Does mass change with velocity" helpful in understanding this point. http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physic...y/SR/mass.html |
| Oct16-04, 07:50 PM | #4 |
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Light, Mass, and Black hole questionHmm... I see. But can someone elaborate on relativistic mass, invariant mass, and mass? |
| Oct16-04, 09:50 PM | #5 |
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Recognitions:
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| Oct19-04, 09:34 AM | #6 |
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for particles with a non-zero rest mass...
[tex] m = \frac{m_0}{\sqrt{1 - \frac{v^2/c^2}}} [/tex] This equation gives you the mass of a particle relative to you, going at velocity v. particles with a zero rest mass, for example, photons, naturaly travel at the speed of light, they cannot travel slower or faster that lightspeed relative to any frame. You are not allowed to use the equation i gave you to calculate relativistic mass of light, because special relativity equations dont work for anything that travels at lightspeed. It's clearly seen because the equation would yield 0/0, which is undefined. But like the others said light DOES have relativistic mass, which you can calculate using the mass-energy equivelance, E = mc^2. The mass of light would be equal to E/c^2 or... [tex] m = \frac{h\nu}{c^2}[/tex] where h is planks constant and nu is frequency of the light. |
| Oct19-04, 09:46 AM | #7 |
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Welcome to Physics Forums, Demiwing.
The mass-relativistic mass idea can be a complex one. Check out the link pervect mentioned. Plus, there are several past discussions on it in this forum. |
| Oct19-04, 09:58 AM | #8 |
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However if you have a simply object like the Earth and you move relative to it then the gravitational force on an object will be a function of the speed of the Earth. Note: If an object is isolated and does not interact with anything else then the "inertial" energy E = Rest Energy + Kinetic Energy will be related to the mass m = p/v by E = mc2. However this relation does not hold in general. If there are external forces acting on the body, and thus giving it stress, then the mass will be a function of the stress in the body. In that situation p/v does not equal E/c2. This was shown by Einstein in a 1906 in fact, altough he addressed it in the form of the kinetic energy of the body. http://www.geocities.com/physics_wor...rtial_mass.htm http://www.geocities.com/physics_wor...riant_mass.htm Pete |
| Oct19-04, 03:12 PM | #9 |
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Light has no mass. It has energy and momentum, but no mass. It has an equivalent mass, but that is not its mass. |
| Oct21-04, 08:49 AM | #10 |
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Light has inertial mass mI (defined as that which gives matter a momentum) which, passive gravitational mass (that on which gravity acts) and active gravitational mass (that which generates a gravitational field). It has zero proper mass . What you've called "equivalent mass" is what many simply call "mass." All this was all discussed above. Was there something in particular that you think was incorrect? If so then what is your basis for such a position beyond the semantics of arguing how a term is defined? Thanks. Pete |
| Oct22-04, 11:23 AM | #11 |
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| Oct25-04, 11:02 AM | #12 |
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Re - " I heard there was a theory that the Black Hole has infinite mass, .." I see this alot. It appears that people think that a black hole must have a lot of mass. This probably comes from the notion that some stars will collapse into a black hole. But what the student is forgetting is that before the collapse the star is stable and not collapsing and yet, if nothing else, the star is actually loosing mass. So if one really paid attention to all this they'd realize that all objects which collapse to a black hole always had that amount of mass or greater and at those times the star was not a black hole. Pete |
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