Originally posted by Rockazella
would you be able to detect a mass increase in a wire if you sent a current through it?
Probably not.
But there is an easy relativistic explanation of forces between parallel wires:
Let's assume that positive charges are at rest, and negative charges flowing (OK, OK,...)
Imagine how one electron in wire A 'sees' wire B.
- If the currents have the same direction, then the electron will see the positive charges length-contracted, i.e. condensed. No change on negative charges. So wire B appears net positive, so attraction.
- If the currents have opposite directions, then the positive charges appear condensed, but the negative charges
more condensed. So net negative charge, so repulsion.
I know that drift velocities are only some cm/s, but on the other hand you have a very large number of electrons. When doing the math, you arrive at the correct force, believe me.
And of course, this doesn't 'prove' anything about relativity.