Ahmes
				
				
			 
			
	
	
	
		
	
	
			
		
		
			
			
				
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Hello, 
Two physics professors said two different things about the invariance of mass.
One said that "mass" is a quantity which is always measured in the object rest frame - and therefore invariant to the Lorentz transformation. In additions, laws of motion in "real life" (relativistic motion) aren't the same as in high school. For example, Newton's second law would be F=\gamma m a. Where "m" is what he called "mass" and \gamma is the velocity-related constant.
The other professor said that mass is not invariant, and is given by m'=\gamma m_0 (will always be bigger than the self-mass).
 
And now for the gravity thing:
An object at rest will produce a field of gravity given by Gm/r^2.
Now I'm at rest and some object (say a spaceship) is moving near me, and I want to measure its mass by the gravitational force it applies on me.
I know that my own mass, at my own frame, is m_{me} so the force between us (if the spaceship were at rest) would be F=Gm_{me} m/r^2. The mass of the spaceship, as I see it, would be m=F r^2/G m_{me}.
 
Which 'm' did I find? Is it the same mass I would measure if I took the spaceship and weighed it in my frame, or is it \gamma times that mass?
 
Thank you.
				
			Two physics professors said two different things about the invariance of mass.
One said that "mass" is a quantity which is always measured in the object rest frame - and therefore invariant to the Lorentz transformation. In additions, laws of motion in "real life" (relativistic motion) aren't the same as in high school. For example, Newton's second law would be F=\gamma m a. Where "m" is what he called "mass" and \gamma is the velocity-related constant.
The other professor said that mass is not invariant, and is given by m'=\gamma m_0 (will always be bigger than the self-mass).
And now for the gravity thing:
An object at rest will produce a field of gravity given by Gm/r^2.
Now I'm at rest and some object (say a spaceship) is moving near me, and I want to measure its mass by the gravitational force it applies on me.
I know that my own mass, at my own frame, is m_{me} so the force between us (if the spaceship were at rest) would be F=Gm_{me} m/r^2. The mass of the spaceship, as I see it, would be m=F r^2/G m_{me}.
Which 'm' did I find? Is it the same mass I would measure if I took the spaceship and weighed it in my frame, or is it \gamma times that mass?
Thank you.
 I am enthusiastic to the field  -this is sort of delicate warning so do not kill me straightaway.I am under influence of popular science books and I have some important for me questions.Typical illustration of the gravitation in these sort of books is acceleration of the lift or rockets where direction of the force is down on the object.I wonder why always the gravitation of the object is negligible.What I know in the close approach of the speed of the light the mass of the object can increase to infinity? Let's stop when reach the mass of the Jupiter ( the bag of 1 kg of sugar for instance) and do not accelerate any more.Is it existing real mowing mass with distorted symmetry of spacetime? Can be detectible?
 I am enthusiastic to the field  -this is sort of delicate warning so do not kill me straightaway.I am under influence of popular science books and I have some important for me questions.Typical illustration of the gravitation in these sort of books is acceleration of the lift or rockets where direction of the force is down on the object.I wonder why always the gravitation of the object is negligible.What I know in the close approach of the speed of the light the mass of the object can increase to infinity? Let's stop when reach the mass of the Jupiter ( the bag of 1 kg of sugar for instance) and do not accelerate any more.Is it existing real mowing mass with distorted symmetry of spacetime? Can be detectible? Google from some reason didn't find any impressive explanations. Mass is a scalar of course and I still didn't quite figure out what "longitudinal mass" means. I'll thank you if you can tell me where to find more informations about the subject (ie. website, books).
 Google from some reason didn't find any impressive explanations. Mass is a scalar of course and I still didn't quite figure out what "longitudinal mass" means. I'll thank you if you can tell me where to find more informations about the subject (ie. website, books). 
 
		 
 
		