Accelerating Charges & Light: Massless Particles

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Accelerating charges emit light, leading to the question of whether massless particles can emit light since they cannot change speed. Massless particles, like photons, always travel at the speed of light but can still change direction, allowing for acceleration. Gravitational lensing exemplifies this, as photons bend around massive objects. Chargeless particles do not emit light without decaying, and massless particles are typically chargeless. However, if a massless particle were to possess charge, it could emit light, though the standard model suggests that electrically charged particles cannot be massless.
cragar
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If accelerating charges emit light. Then would this imply that mass less particle could not emit light because they cannot accelerate?
 
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Actually, massless particles must always travel at the speed of light, but they can still accelerate. Acceleration is speed plus direction. Thus if their speed can't change, their direction can still change, meaning they can still accelerate. Think of the massless photon bending around a star as it experiences gravitational lensing.

The more correct statement is that chargeless particles don't emit light without decaying and massless particles tend to be chargeless.
 
Interesting, forgot about that part of acceleration. but if a massless particle had charge it could emit light.
 
In fact, there are good reasons to assume that electrically charged particles cannot be massless. At least in the standard model, there aren't any.
 
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