Natsirt
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Since E=mc2, that means that mass is energy and energy is mass right?
In units where c=1 they do have the same units. But the full equation is m^2=E^2-p^2, so they are not generally the same. The simplified equation only applies for p=0.Natsirt said:Since E=mc2, that means that mass is energy and energy is mass right?
ModusPwnd said:This is a complicated question and I look forward to reading others responses. In short, I think the answer is no. That equality states an equivalence/equality in a context. Four quarters equals a dollar bill. That does not mean that four quarters is a dollar bill. It means that they are equal/equivalent in a context.
ttreker said:Nicely put doesn't make it true. Wherever you find four quarters, you don't find a dollar.
If x is conserved then any f(x) is also conserved. Mass is a function of E and p and since E and p are conserved then m is conserved also.ModusPwnd said:From what I remember, noether's theorem states that a symmetry implies one and only one conserved quantity.
That equation is wrong, in general, as it's been wrote to you.Natsirt said:Since E=mc2
No. But a system's mass could be defined as "the energy of that system in a frame of reference where its momentum p is zero".that means that mass is energy and energy is mass right?
Natsirt said:So this is what I think all this means. When calculating the energy of rest mass you times the mass by C, but you also have to times mass by P and the P would be the same as C so squaring C in e=mc2 doesn't make the final calc higher than it should be. Or mc^2 times mp^2
DaleSpam said:Yes, it is the invariant mass: ##m^2 c^2 = E^2/c^2 - p^2##
E and p are components of the four-momentum, and m is its norm (neglecting factors of c). Conservation of the four-momentum implies conservation of E, p, and m, but only m is invariant. The other terms are conserved but not invariant. Conservation of the four-momentum is due to space-time translational symmetry (translation in space and time) per Noether's theorem.
DaleSpam said:Yes, it is the invariant mass: ##m^2 c^2 = E^2/c^2 - p^2##
E and p are components of the four-momentum, and m is its norm (neglecting factors of c). Conservation of the four-momentum implies conservation of E, p, and m, but only m is invariant. The other terms are conserved but not invariant. Conservation of the four-momentum is due to space-time translational symmetry (translation in space and time) per Noether's theorem.
Natsirt said:What do you mean: four-momentum?
lightarrow said:That equation is wrong, in general, as it's been wrote to you.
No. But a system's mass could be defined as "the energy of that system in a frame of reference where its momentum p is zero".
As you see, they are not exactly the same thing, even if there is a relationship between them.
Note that the difference is not only "formal": a photon has zero mass but has non-zero energy, for example.
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lightarrow
Natsirt said:What do you mean by non-zero energy? And how are thinking of momentum in your description, I know p=MV but are you thinking of it differently to make the explanation clearer in you head? Thanks for your help I think I'm close to understanding.
SciKim said:Yes they are the same. Mass and energy are equivalent, and you can look up plenty of articles online about mass-energy equivalency.