jtbell said:
This holds only for a single non-composite particle. When you add energy to a system of particles, the rest mass (invariant mass) of the system does increase, even though the rest masses of the individual particles do not change.
The rest mass of a system does not equal the sum of the rest masses of its component particles, in general.
I want to question about how the "invariant" mass can increase with energy. I suppose we could use the transistor idea for this. We say that the invariant mass of a charged transistor is higher than the invariant mass for that same transistor when it is not charged. So, we say that the photons in the charged transistor add to the rest mass of the system, though they do not add any fermion particles.
When you take the total energy of the charged transistor and divide it by c
2, you get a larger mass than you would have from only the fermions in the system (the uncharged transistor's invariant mass).
My question is how the photons add rest mass to the system, when photons have no rest mass themselves? Can we assume that the photons have been absorbed into the fermions in the transistor, giving them more rest mass?
When we say that gravity gives a force on bodies towards the earth, it is easy to see that the uncharged transistor has the force of gravity on its fermions, giving the transistors weight on the ground. The photons flying around above the ground do not have gravitational force applied to them, and they do not have weight on the ground. This makes clear and simple sense. But things get stupid when you put these photons into the transistor.
Somehow, the photons which did not have weight outside the transistor, all of a sudden have weight, and contribute it to the transistor upon the ground, making it heavier. It seems to me like this is not correct as the law doesn't apply universally. The photons have no weight outside the transistor, but they have weight within the transistor? The photons do not add anything into the transistor for gravity to give force on. Might it be that the added weight with the photons is simply the addition of their radiation pressure? (This could account also for the increase in inertial mass.) In this way, the photons would not actually require rest mass, though they seem to add mass to the body. (They add energy, which has a mass equivalent by e=mc2, but they don't at any point really technically give mass to the transistor, only radiation pressure within it.)