Clarification on 1st law of thermodynamics and e=mc^2

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the first law of thermodynamics and the relationship between energy and mass as expressed in the equation E=mc². Participants explore concepts of conservation of energy versus conservation of mass, the nature of photons, and the definitions of rest mass and relativistic mass. The scope includes theoretical interpretations and conceptual clarifications.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants assert that energy cannot be created or destroyed, leading to the law of conservation of energy, while others question the conservation of mass in light of photon interactions.
  • One participant expresses confusion about how photons can have energy without mass, referencing E=mc² and suggesting that if mass is zero, energy should also be zero.
  • Another participant clarifies that photons do not have rest mass but possess energy and momentum, and that E=mc² is not applicable to them.
  • Some participants argue that mass is not conserved in nuclear reactions, emphasizing that mass-energy is conserved instead.
  • There is a discussion about the definitions of rest mass and relativistic mass, with some participants asserting that they are synonymous while others maintain that there is a distinction.
  • Participants mention a more general formula, E² = m²c⁴ + p²c², which includes momentum and applies to particles in motion, including photons.
  • Confusion arises regarding the concept of acceleration in relation to photons, with one participant mistakenly linking it to the discussion.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express multiple competing views regarding the conservation of mass versus energy, the nature of photons, and the definitions of mass. The discussion remains unresolved with no consensus on these topics.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight limitations in understanding the nuances of mass definitions and the applicability of certain equations to different contexts, particularly regarding photons and their properties.

Null_
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I'm sure each of you is well-versed in the first law of thermodynamics: energy cannot be created or destroyed. Thus, there is the law conservation of energy.

E=mc^2 states that energy and mass are functions of each other, basically one and the same less a conversion factor. I take mass to be rest energy.

Matter can be created from photon collisions, and particles can be anhillated by collision as well, thus establishing that there is no law of conservation of mass. I have heard that photons do have energy but do not have mass. I don't see how this is possible based on E=mc^2. E would =0 if m=0, and m=0 if E=0.

I would greatly appreciate it if someone would clarify why there is a law of conservation of energy but not of mass if the two are one and the same. (Pardon my rudimentary knowledge..I'm in high school and have yet to take a physics class.) I have taken calculus, so mathematical explanations of a light degree will be understood.
 
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E=mc^2 ... rest energy.

Have you ever seen a photon at rest?

There are both laws of conservation of mass and energy, it just depends on the context to when they are applicable to a given system.
 
Last edited:
That's what I'm confused about. A photon is continually moving at a constant speed in a vacuum, so it has kinetic energy but no rest energy (m). So a positive#E= 0c^2.
 
Photons don't have rest mass, because there is no valid inertial reference frame where they are at rest, which is required to calculate the rest mass. Their energy is not 0 because the equation is not applicable to them.

You can't use the photon itself as a reference frame because you can't translate to and from a reference frame moving at c, and photons move at c in every other reference frame.

They do have relativistic mass. Their energy divided by c^2. Rest mass is constant across all inertial reference frames, while relativistic mass is not, however.
 
Null_ said:
I would greatly appreciate it if someone would clarify why there is a law of conservation of energy but not of mass if the two are one and the same. (Pardon my rudimentary knowledge..I'm in high school and have yet to take a physics class.) I have taken calculus, so mathematical explanations of a light degree will be understood.

Mass is not conserved, it's as simple as that. You don't even have to look at light, simply look at nuclear reactions; mass isn't conserved. What you will find is that mass-energy is conserved. If you have a particle that decays into such and such other particles, you'll see that if you add up all the masses, they won't add up to the original particle. However, if you add up all the masses and their kinetic energies, you'll find the energy was conserved. Consider the same idea except now a photon has flown out of the reaction; again, energy is still conserved using a different method of finding the energy of the photon. As stated before, the energy of a photon does not follow E = mc^2 as it is massless.
 
Pengwuino said:
Mass is not conserved, it's as simple as that. You don't even have to look at light, simply look at nuclear reactions; mass isn't conserved. What you will find is that mass-energy is conserved. If you have a particle that decays into such and such other particles, you'll see that if you add up all the masses, they won't add up to the original particle. However, if you add up all the masses and their kinetic energies, you'll find the energy was conserved. Consider the same idea except now a photon has flown out of the reaction; again, energy is still conserved using a different method of finding the energy of the photon. As stated before, the energy of a photon does not follow E = mc^2 as it is massless.

Your opinion is a common mistake.The so-called mass defect is the defect of rest mass,while the total mass,as well as energy,is always conserved.
As for the photon thing,it doesn't have rest mass,but it DO have mass and momentum

The key is to understand what is rest mass and what is mass
 
Arnt you just defining total mass and energy to be the same there?
 
Null_ said:
I'm sure each of you is well-versed in the first law of thermodynamics: energy cannot be created or destroyed. Thus, there is the law conservation of energy.

E=mc^2 states that energy and mass are functions of each other, basically one and the same less a conversion factor. I take mass to be rest energy.

Matter can be created from photon collisions, and particles can be anhillated by collision as well, thus establishing that there is no law of conservation of mass. I have heard that photons do have energy but do not have mass. I don't see how this is possible based on E=mc^2. E would =0 if m=0, and m=0 if E=0.

I would greatly appreciate it if someone would clarify why there is a law of conservation of energy but not of mass if the two are one and the same. (Pardon my rudimentary knowledge..I'm in high school and have yet to take a physics class.) I have taken calculus, so mathematical explanations of a light degree will be understood.
The real formula is
E^2 = m^2c^4 + p^2c^2
where p is momentum. Photons have zero mass, but they do have momentum, and that's where their energy comes from.

E=mc^2 is merely a special case of the above formula, which applies only to objects at rest.
 
diazona said:
The real formula is
E^2 = m^2c^4 + p^2c^2
where p is momentum. Photons have zero mass, but they do have momentum, and that's where their energy comes from.

E=mc^2 is merely a special case of the above formula, which applies only to objects at rest.

Another one who doesn't understand what is the difference between rest mass and mass
 
  • #10
netheril96 said:
Another one who doesn't understand what is the difference between rest mass and mass
There is no difference. The terms are synonymous in modern usage.
 
  • #11
diazona said:
There is no difference. The terms are synonymous in modern usage.

Well,you may have a different definition for mass.Then I emphasize that there is a difference between rest mass and so-called relativistic mass.
 
  • #12
netheril96 said:
Well,you may have a different definition for mass.Then I emphasize that there is a difference between rest mass and so-called relativistic mass.
Agreed... rest mass = m, relativistic mass = E/c2 (that's what you mean, right?)

The modern convention (at least, among a large majority of the references I look at and the people I talk to) is that mass = m, and the terms "rest mass" and "relativistic mass" are deprecated.
 
  • #13
In my book,m0 denotes the rest mass while m denotes mass or relativistic mass.

So the two formula should be
\begin{array}{l}<br /> {E^2} = m_0^2{c^4} + {p^2}{c^2} \\ <br /> E = m{c^2} \\ <br /> \end{array}
 
  • #14
There are two schools of thought

Old school

E/c2 is called "mass"
m0 is called "rest mass"

Preferred modern view

E/c2 is called "energy divided by c2"
m0 is called "mass"

The majority of professional physicists seem to subscribe to the modern view but you will find the old-school view in some older textbooks or coffee-table books aimed at the general public. When you read any book or website, you'll need to work out which school the author is in, because unfortunately there is no Physics Police to enforce one terminology over the other.
 
  • #15
Ah, I have never seen the real formula before LaTeX Code: E^2 = m^2c^4 + p^2c^2 .

So, basically I had a misunderstanding due to the commonly used formula...is acceleration only applicable when referring to protons? And now that I think about it, why do photons have acceleration at all? If they are always in continuous motion, isn't the acceleration a constant 0?
 
  • #16
Why are you talking about acceleration?
 
  • #17
Haha, I saw the p=momentum post then came back after doing a problem dealing with acceleration. My mistake.
 
  • #18
DrGreg said:
There are two schools of thought

Old school

E/c2 is called "mass"
m0 is called "rest mass"

Preferred modern view

E/c2 is called "energy divided by c2"
m0 is called "mass"

To elaborate on DrGreg's post, in the first view people interpret the mass of an object to change with speed, according to the formula m = \gamma m_0. For a photon the RHS is an indeterminate form which turns out to be p/c.

The modern interpretation is that mass is mass and it's momentum itself that has this strange behaviour as speed increasing.

i.e., the first view interprets the non-relativistic formula p = mv to be the correct relativistic formula, except that now mass changes with speed. The second view interprets the momentum formula to be incorrect, which the correct formula being p = \gamma m v, where m is the rest mass, which does not change with speed. So, really it's mathematically all the same and up to one's interpretational preference, grouping the gamma with the mass or the momentum, but the first interpretation sure seems to give people lots of conceptual difficulties.
 

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