What Differentiates Massive Objects from Photons in Terms of Speed of Light?

AI Thread Summary
Massive objects cannot reach the speed of light because they possess mass, while photons are massless particles that can travel at light speed. Energy and mass are related, but a massive object's energy derives from both its mass and motion, whereas a photon’s energy comes solely from its motion. The distinction lies in the properties of mass and the behavior of particles in relation to the Higgs field, which gives mass to particles. The discussion emphasizes that while mass has energy, energy does not equate to mass in all contexts. Understanding these differences is crucial in the study of physics and the behavior of light.
conner.ubert
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Hello friends:

My Question:
A massive object cannot move at the speed of light. Photons can move at the speed of light because they are massless. However, since energy and mass are equivalent, due to Einstein's famous equation E^2=(m(c^2))^2+(pc)^2, mass is energy by a conversion factor. And photons are just quanta of electromagnetic radiation and are therefore energy as well. Since both a massive object and a photon contain some amount of energy, what differentiates the two which allows a photon to move at the speed of light and while a massive object cannot? Is it in regards to the Higgs field?

Thank you for your time
 
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conner.ubert said:
mass is energy by a conversion factor.

I would not say "mass is energy". I would say that "mass has energy". But leaving that aside as a semantic quibble, the converse is not true in general. You cannot always say that "energy is mass." (I would rather say, you cannot always say that a particle's energy comes from its mass.)

In general, a particle's energy comes from both its mass and its motion.

For a massive particle in motion, its energy comes both from its mass and its motion, via Einstein's famous equation.

For a massive particle at rest, its energy comes from its mass alone. Take Einstein's equation and set p = 0.

For a massless particle (photon), the energy comes from its motion alone. Take Einstein's equation and set m = 0.
 
jtbell said:
You cannot always say that "energy is mass."

There was a time when you could. We used to painfully distinguish 'rest mass' from 'relativistic mass' carefully sprinkling m0 everywhere throughout the texts.
Nowadays mass (rest mass) is mass and that's it. A photon has zero mass by definition.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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