PhysicsUnited said:
Then the "mass" that's gained as the velocity approaches c is high frequency photon emissions??
No. There is radiation from accelerated charged particles, but that energy is simply lost.
There are two related but different things that can be meant by the word "mass". There is rest (or invariant) mass, and there is inertial (or relativistic) mass.
Rest mass of a particle is always the same. Rest mass of photon is zero.
Relativistic mass of a particle increases when particle travels close to speed of light. Photons do have relativistic mass, and so they do carry momentum.
E^2 = p^2c^2 + m_{rest}^2c^4 = m_{rel}^2c^4
For a photon, which has m
rest=0, that tells you that m
rel=p/c.
In terms of notation, it a bit depends on the source. Some old texts used to reserve symbol m for relativistic mass. Hence, "E=mc²". These texts would denote rest mass as m
0. However, modern convention is to use symbol m to denote rest mass. Relativistic mass doesn't come up nearly as often in equations. Instead, you'd deal with energy or momentum directly.
If the latter is true it would never reach c.
Yes. A particle that has non-zero rest mass can never reach speed of light. For a particle with non-zero rest mass, total energy can be written in terms of Lorentz factor.
E = \gamma mc^2
Where gamma is the aforementioned Lorentz factor.
\gamma = \sqrt{\frac{1}{1-v^2/c^2}}
In this equation, v cannot be equal to or greater than c, as that would result in division by zero or a negative under radical. Furthermore, Lorentz factor diverges to infinity as v gets closer and closer to c. So you can keep putting more and more energy into the particle, and that will get it closer and closer to c, but it will never get there.