DonnieD
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i think E=mc^2
and E=hv so dynamic mass of photon is m=hv/c^2 ??
and E=hv so dynamic mass of photon is m=hv/c^2 ??
masudr said:E=m_0 c^2 does not apply to photons.
The general equation is
E^2 = m_0^2 c^4 + |\vec{p}|^2 c^2 .
Yes. That is quite correct so long as you understand that the "m" you're using is inertial mass (aka "relativistic mass").DonnieD said:i think E=mc^2
and E=hv so dynamic mass of photon is m=hv/c^2 ??
That is quite untrue. E = mc2 holds only in special circumstances such as isolated systems. IT wouldn't, say, work in a rod under stress. In such case the "relativistic mass" would have a different value than the energy would. For proof see the web page I constructed to prove this point and to give an example. Seecesiumfrog said:..., but it is also equivalent to trivially expressing energy in different units.
pmb_phy said:Such erroneous conclusions may come about due to the lack of application in special relativity to anything which can [?] be treated as a particle.
rbj said:but the equation E=m c^2 works perfectly well for photons when
m = \frac{m_0}{\sqrt{1 - v^2/c^2}}
is the relativistic mass or the inertial mass (m = p/v) as observed by someone in a frame that is moving at velocity v with respect to the mass that is m_0 in its own frame.
and that is compatible with
E=m c^2
m = \frac{m_0}{\sqrt{1 - |\vec{v}|^2/c^2}}
and
\vec{p} = m \vec{v}
but I'm glad you were clear using the m_0 notation instead of just the "m" for rest mass.
nakurusil said:The photon is a massless particle.
Relativistic mass is a frowned upon concept.
Therefore it is a bad idea to speculate about the relativistic mass of the photon
country boy said:Right. For photons, just stick to energy and momentum.
Relativistic mass is, indeed frowned upon by purists. But purists may not be the ones who come up with the new ideas. It's still good to kick the concept around a bit.
And that was the point. I maqde that quite clear. Not all systems are closed you know. In fact it is the same problem (worked a bit differently) that Einstein published in either 1906 or 1907.cesiumfrog said:Your example depends on external forces (and worse, ...
Now I'm curious; What exactly do you think a Lorentz tranasformation does??...on comparing those in different reference frames, ...
I already gave you the most concrete example that can be given, its in the URL I gave you.... can you provide something more concrete?
That's a good way to get into trouble when you calculate the mass-density of a gas of photons.country boy said:Right. For photons, just stick to energy and momentum.
What exactly is a "purist"? Is it someone who frowns on rel-mass? Please defined the term "purist". Thanks.Relativistic mass is, indeed frowned upon by purists. But purists may not be the ones who come up with the new ideas. It's still good to kick the concept around a bit.
No, it's from the linked webpage you keep referring to and said you constructed.pmb_phy said:I don't know where you got that comment that you quoted but I made no comment such as that in this thread.
pmb_phy said:And that was the point. I maqde [sic] that quite clear. Not all systems are closed you know. [..] What exactly do you think a Lorentz tranasformation does?? I already gave you the most concrete example that can be given, [..] Its not like I'm saying something different than you can found in, say, Rindlers 1982 intro to SR text.
What's with the attitude. I asked you where it came from. I wrote that web page years ago and I don't remember everything I wrote in all those web pagescesiumfrog;1249ite366 said:No, it's from the linked webpage you keep referring to and said you constructed.
Not at all. I appologize if my comments came off that way. I never post sarcastic comments intentionaly. I appologize if you thought of that as attitude.Sarcasm, eh?
I'm glad that reference was able to help you out. Here is the section of concern here. From page 150 in the section Relativistic Mechanics of ContinuaI really appreciate the more authorative reference since, ...
That comment opened my eyes to the more difficult aspects of mass-energy. Through a long period of study I finally came to understand this. Its not that hard if you're skilled in the physics or if you have someone you trust walk you through it.The second relativistic effect to be discussed here concerns mass density \rho. It would seem at first sight that \rho and \rho0 should be related by
\rho = \gamma2\rho0,
where one \gamma is due to length contraction affecting what is a unit volume in the rest frame, and the other is due to mass increase according to formula (26.3). But that simple formula is valid only in special cases, e.g. for single particles and for systems of free particles [...]. It is not generally valid for constrained systems.
cesiumfrog! Please don't confuse cleverness with knowledge. There's no reason to assume that you're not very clever and simply lacking in the acquired skill required to understand the physics. This has been my experience throughout the last 25 years of my life. I doubt that you'd be posting in a physics forum if you weren't clever in the first place....as I'm not very clever, ...
The relativistic mass of what? Of just the spring? This is a subtle question and details are required. Thanks.If I gave you a spring (with known spring constant and unstressed rest mass) with an (ideal) mirror at each end, and a pair of lasers (to reflect a continuous stream of photons against the mirrors), could you demonstrate that relativistic mass is not equivalent to energy? If so then in what way would you measure the spring's energy versus relativistic mass?
pmb_phy said:The relativistic mass of what? Of just the spring? This is a subtle question and details are required. Thanks.
Pushing on the ends with your fingers is a good enough example, don't you agree? My fingers exert pressure as good as if not better than a stream of photons, but if a stream of photons is what you like as an example then who am I to second guess you on your iintuition?cesiumfrog said:What I'm trying to do is express your example from the website (which I find a bit too abstract-mathematical) in terms of a specific physical example (which assists my intuitive understanding).
Only under certain circumstances. If the force on a rod is such as to act towards pulling the rod apart then there is negative pressure present (called "tension") and a stream of photons can't do that. However in the case you stated the fact that the spring is compressed indicates that you're not asking about this situation but the situation in which the photons are acting to compress the spring.Do you agree your (unspecified) external forces can be replaced with streams of photons (of particular frequency and intensity, from a distant source, symmetric in the box's frame) reflecting off opposite sides of the box?
Sure. In any case the sitations leads to the same conclusion and yes I can demonstraight it. However you told me that you are unable to follow this kind of derivation. How do you want me to respond beyond this?And that the box can be replaced by a spring (of equal dimensions whilst compressed by the external forces), without compromising the example?
nakurusil said:Doesn't follow logically, why wouldn't the purists be the ones that come up with new ideas. Rigor and creativity go hand in hand, they aren't opposites.
OK, sorry you're finding this tedious. Now in this situation, it naively seems to me that the relativistic mass of the compressed spring, in any moving frame, will be simply the rest mass of the compressed spring (ie. the rest mass of the relaxed spring, plus the mechanical potential energy) multiplied by the usual lorentz factor (for the relative velocity of the frame). Is this incorrect?pmb_phy said:Sure. In any case the sitations leads to the same conclusion and yes I can demonstraight it. However you told me that you are unable to follow this kind of derivation. How do you want me to respond beyond this?
nakurusil said:The photon is a massless particle.
Relativistic mass is a frowned upon concept.
Therefore it is a bad idea to speculate about the relativistic mass of the photon
pmb_phy said:That's a good way to get into trouble when you calculate the mass-density of a gas of photons.
What exactly is a "purist"? Is it someone who frowns on rel-mass? Please defined the term "purist". Thanks.
Pete
rbj said:not in every sense of the word. they do not have rest mass, but they do have inertial mass of (h \nu)/c^2. Peter Mohr and Barry Taylor (at least at one time they were at NIST) have (along with others) proposed that the definition of kilogram be changed from the one regarding the standard prototype in Paris to
The kilogram is the mass of a body at rest whose equivalent energy corresponds to a frequency of exactly (2997924582/66260693×1043[) Hz.
another wording they have used is
The kilogram is the mass of a body at rest whose equivalent energy is equivalent to a collection of photons of frequencies that sum to exactly (2997924582/66260693×1043[) Hz.
now, if you put that collection of photons into a hypothetical massless and perfectly mirrored box and put the box on a scale and put the standard kg prototype on the other platter of the scale, which way would it tip?
depends on whose face. not everybody is frowning.
i'm not speculating, i am making reference to an oft and recent out-of-favor convention that defines momentum as inertial mass times velocity. then there needs to be a differentiation in concept between inertial mass and invariant mass.
when i look up "Gravitational Red Shift" in my old 3rd semester physics textbook, it says:
"Although a photon has no rest mass, it nevertheless behaves as though it possesses the inertial mass
m = \frac{h \nu}{c^2} ."
it's not such a bad idea. I'm still at a loss to understand why so many insist that it is. there are at least a couple ways that photons behave as if they have mass of some sort.
Glad to see that you concur!country boy said:Sorry I haven't replied before. You are certainly correct about the gas of photons.
As the saying goes "That is intuitively obvious even to the most casual observer"But a system of photons can have a rest mass without the individual photons having rest masses.
Nobody would consider themselves as only thinking "inside the box". I most certainly don't.As for the definition, you might say that "purist" and "non-purist" are like thinking "inside" or "outside" the box.
nakurusil said:Not really, the "mirror box" is a misleading example. I can show you the calculations, the balance tips due to the force (see above), not due to the fact that the photons have mass.
country boy said:So what happens to the scale when the photons are all absorbed by the mirrors? The box will no longer be massless. This is the old energy-mass equivalence question.
nakurusil said:You certainly not talking about relativistic momentum. I corrected this same exact misconception in another thread.
the "mirror box" is a misleading example. I can show you the calculations, the balance tips due to the force (see above), not due to the fact that the photons have mass.
nakurusil said:The photon absorbtion by already existent matter increases the mass of said matter but this should not be misconstrued as the photons having mass. Because they don't.
nakurusil said:What sort of question is this? The whole gimmick (because this is what this problem is, a gimmick) is that the walls are "perfect" mirrors. Have you forgotten?
As to "photons turning into mass", this will NOT happen in your perfectly mirrored box. The photon absorbtion by already existent matter increases the mass of said matter but this should not be misconstrued as the photons having mass. Because they don't.
I shall be so bold as to say yes. Unless the context explicitly indicates that the notion of relativistic mass is being discussed, one should not need to use any qualification when talking about "mass", just like the physicist can use "metric" without qualification to refer to a symmetric bilinear form -- a metric tensor -- without worrying that someone might think they were talking about the distance function of a metric space.rbj said:is it too inconvenient to qualify sweeping statements? instead of the unqualified "photons are massless particles", is it not as simple to say, " photons have no rest mass (because they travel at speed c in any inertial reference frame)." ? it's inclusive and accurate.
rbj said:and by how much do they increase the mass of said matter? perhaps by (h \nu)/c^2?
still another example of mass-like properties of these "massless" particles.
So you're also unconvinced by Pete's contrary proof?Hurkyl said:We already have a word for energy: energy. We don't need another synonym for it...
Hurkyl said:especially when it induces silly mistakes like this. For a simple case, consider two photons of frequency \nu_1 and \nu_2 having a head-on collision. Conservation of energy-momentum tells us that the rest mass of the resulting particle is
m_0 = \frac{2 h}{c^2} \sqrt{\nu_1 \nu_2}
rbj said:sure i am. i am certainly talking about relativistic momentum:
\vec{p} = \frac{m_0 \vec{v}}{\sqrt{1 - \frac{|\vec{v}|^2}{c^2}}}
but we are constructing the concept of this momentum as the product of the same velocity \vec{v} and some other mass m:
\vec{p} = m \vec{v}
you can deny that it exists, but it has dimension of mass and comes out to be:
m = \frac{m_0}{\sqrt{1 - \frac{|\vec{v}|^2}{c^2}}}
now the energy a inertial particle has in its own reference frame is
E_0 = m_0 c^2
but if it is moving relative to me, the energy it has in my reference frame is
E = m c^2
sure, there are many ways of looking at it. but to say that photons are utterly "massless" without qualification is what is misleading.
while you are free to adopt whatever convention you want or is popular at the moment (that when "mass" is mentioned, it is only "invariant mass"), to say, without qualification, that photons are simply massless despite E = m c^2 = h \nu, itself is misleading.
is it too inconvenient to qualify sweeping statements? instead of the unqualified "photons are massless particles", is it not as simple to say, " photons have no rest mass (because they travel at speed c in any inertial reference frame)." ? it's inclusive and accurate.
country boy said:Yes, the problem as posed is a sleight of hand. But it does lead us back to the traditional photon-in-a-box insight into the relation between energy and mass.
Please pause to realize that your understanding of the "photon in a box example" is incorrect. Are you suggesting that a system of particles can generate a net force on itself? Of course not. (Or at least I really hope you aren't suggesting that.)nakurusil said:This is an old problem, the reason the scale will tip is the vertical component of force exerted by the photons colliding with the walls of the box.
Since you brought up QED I'd like to point out that no, there is more than one concept of mass. There are "intrinsic masses" for the particles, and in QED you often integrate over the momentum of particles with invarient mass not equal to their intrinsic mass. So QED doesn't predict that the photon has zero invariant mass, and in fact actually requires that it can have non-zero invarient mass to allow correct calculations.nakurusil said:There is only one type of mass, invariant mass . QED predicts that the photon has zero invariant mass...
rbj said:The kilogram is the mass of a body at rest whose equivalent energy corresponds to a frequency of exactly (2997924582/66260693 ×1043) Hz.
another wording they have used is
The kilogram is the mass of a body at rest whose equivalent energy is equivalent to a collection of photons of frequencies that sum to exactly (2997924582/66260693 ×1043) Hz.
now, if you put that collection of photons into a hypothetical massless and perfectly mirrored box and put the box on a scale and put the standard kg prototype on the other platter of the scale, which way would it tip?
nakurusil said:I do not need sleigh of hand problems to clarify my understanding of the relation between mass and energy. There are many realistic issues that provide this clarification a lot better than the "photon in a box"
country boy said:Mass is a mysterious concept anyway, and we all know what velocity is, right?
That goes the same for some of us who are well versed in vector and tensor analysis since the general idea of mass in that context is far more complex that that of a single particle.country boy said:So please be patient with the rest of us who still see some usefulness in the idea of relativistic mass.
JustinLevy said:Please pause to realize that your understanding of the "photon in a box example" is incorrect. Are you suggesting that a system of particles can generate a net force on itself? Of course not. (Or at least I really hope you aren't suggesting that.)
Also, as mentioned before, the invarient mass of the box will increase when the photon is in it. So claiming the effect is just an illusion due to collision with the walls is missing the point.
But do I feel it is a particularly useful concept? No.
JustinLevy said:Since you brought up QED I'd like to point out that no, there is more than one concept of mass. There are "intrinsic masses" for the particles, and in QED you often integrate over the momentum of particles with invarient mass not equal to their intrinsic mass. So QED doesn't predict that the photon has zero invariant mass, and in fact actually requires that it can have non-zero invarient mass to allow correct calculations.
Totally agreed.masudr said:I prefer to think of physical variables as being components of tensors defined on spacetime. In this sense, m_0 is a scalar, and m=\gamma m_0 is something else. I think this approach is vindicated as relativistic mass only appears useful in a handful of problems, whereas invariant mass is a useful concept in most cases.
JustinLevy said:There are "intrinsic masses" for the particles, and in QED you often integrate over the momentum of particles with invarient mass not equal to their intrinsic mass. So QED doesn't predict that the photon has zero invariant mass, and in fact actually requires that it can have non-zero invarient mass to allow correct calculations.
nakurusil said:
So you ARE claiming a system can create a net force on itself. This is ludicrous. A system cannot create a net force on itself, as that would violate momentum conservation. You are having the photon + box system push itself down with a net force.nakurusil said:I think you are juming to conclusions: the box on the balance is in a gravitational field (we are weighing things, right? ). Therefore, will the photon move in a straight line between the vertical walls? Or will it have a curved path? So, if it has a curved path, will its momentum have a downwards component? And if it has a momentum with a downwards component what happens when it hits the vertical wall? You can continue from here on your own.JustinLevy said:Please pause to realize that your understanding of the "photon in a box example" is incorrect. Are you suggesting that a system of particles can generate a net force on itself? Of course not. (Or at least I really hope you aren't suggesting that.)
nakurusil said:Not the mass, the energy. Using a thought experiment to "prove" that the "photon has mass" is a stretch , would you agree?JustinLevy said:Also, as mentioned before, the invarient mass of the box will increase when the photon is in it. So claiming the effect is just an illusion due to collision with the walls is missing the point.
What do you consider hotly debated? There is no debate that photons with E^2 - p^2 != 0 are necessary in QED calculations.nakurusil said:This is a very good point, stlill hotly debated.JustinLevy said:Since you brought up QED I'd like to point out that no, there is more than one concept of mass. There are "intrinsic masses" for the particles, and in QED you often integrate over the momentum of particles with invarient mass not equal to their intrinsic mass. So QED doesn't predict that the photon has zero invariant mass, and in fact actually requires that it can have non-zero invarient mass to allow correct calculations.
While I know what you mean, please remember that there is no physical difference between internal and external lines in a Feynman diagram. If those particles are to be detected they must interact with more particles (and hence everything in the end is an "internal line"). How close to "on-shell" does it have to be before it is "real" verse "virtual" ... this is a continuous transformation.George Jones said:You guys are talking about the difference between internal and external lines in a Feynman diagram.
Yes.George Jones said:"Virtual" particles (internal lines) do not have to be on-shell,
Well, one comment on this...George Jones said:i.e., don't have to satisfy E^2 - p^2 = m^2.
JustinLevy said:So you ARE claiming a system can create a net force on itself. This is ludicrous. A system cannot create a net force on itself, as that would violate momentum conservation. You are having the photon + box system push itself down with a net force.
What do you consider hotly debated? There is no debate that photons with E^2 - p^2 != 0 are necessary in QED calculations.
What happens to the balance? We agree that the box will now weigh more.nakurusil said:You seem to create one strawman after another and succed in beating them down. The statement of the "photon in the box problem" is that : "there is a box that is balanced pefectly on a balance. A photon is injected in the box (i.e. a photopn is added to the system . What happens to the balance?"
You are the only one disagreeing here. Greg Jones and I both agree that photons with E^2 - p^2 != 0 are necessary in QED calculations.nakurusil said:Greg Jones set you straight on this, see above.JustinLevy said:There is no debate that photons with E^2 - p^2 != 0 are necessary in QED calculations.
JustinLevy said:What happens to the balance? We agree that the box will now weigh more.
But your reason for why it weighs more is absurd. I don't understand. I know you are smart enough to know that a system cannot produce a net force on itself. So what is the problem here?
You are saying that the box + photon system still has the same mass M as before,
JustinLevy said:You are the only one disagreeing here. Greg Jones and I both agree that photons with E^2 - p^2 != 0 are necessary in QED calculations.
Injected? Now who's coming up with straw men?nakurusil said:You seem to create one strawman after another and succed in beating them down. The statement of the "photon in the box problem" is that : "there is a box that is balanced pefectly on a balance. A photon is injected in the box (i.e. a photopn is added to the system
nakurusil said:Totally agreed.
We can relegate "relativistic mass" to the expression m=\gamma m_0 that occurs in the relativistic energy / momentum:
E=\gamma m_0c^2
p=\gamma m_0v
cesiumfrog said:Injected? Now who's coming up with straw men?
JL, the box of photons has weight for the same reason a box of gas has weight (the particles do strike the bottom more than the top, per nakurasil's explanation).
It's not an isolated system: they do so because of the Earth's gravitational field
Maybe you should print E=\gamma m_0c^2 on t-shirts,
It's a bit more than that but rarely, if ever, do I see a person devle into the general cases of objects with mass including continuous media, stressed bodies, etc. Griffith and Owens have a paper in Am. J. Phys. which illustrates some of the problems one encounters under certain situations.cesiumfrog said:Maybe you should print E=\gamma m_0c^2 on t-shirts, it seems to capure the heart of the debate. It's not a dispute of physics, just a question of which choice of variables each individual thinks make the equations prettier. Next we'll be telling others how to interpret QM.