Chronos said:
Pete, I don't think there is any disagreement aside from semantics.
I wish I could have asked Einstein himself what he meant by that since I'm still not sure why he said it. This post was only to see what others think of why he said that. So I'm not looking for agreement/disagreement. I'm looking for your thoughts. I may post my thoughts too of course.
I would, however, say it is easy and no special circumstances are needed to define mass [rest or relativistic] as energy using SR transformations.
I would never defined mass in terms of energy. In my opionion that would be a serious mistake
Relativistic mass, for example is the sum of the mass-energy component and the momentum-energy component as given by the expression E^2 = m^2c^4 +p^2c^2.
I'm not sure what you mean by this. The "relativisitc mass" of a
particle is proportional to the time component of 4-momentum, i.e. it is the "m" in P = (mc,
p). Or defined in terms of a particular observer U it is m = P*U/c
2.
When you use the term "sum" a warning flag goes up in my mind. One has to be very careful when speaking about sums of things using 4-vectors. They can't always be added and give a physically meaningful quantity. Several authors I know of have made this point, e.g. Tolman and Ohanian.
Relativistic mass is only defined in the reference frame in which it is measured.
Yes. It is a relative quantity just like the lifetime of a free neutron. Or the length of a moving rod etc.
Rest mass is the same in all reference frames. I'm not familiar with Rindlers textbook. I grew up on Taylor & Wheeler:
For a single particle (or that which can be treated as a particle) that is true. But it ios not generally true. When you make that statement you are saying that
in any frame of reference you can determine the rest mass of a particle by finding E and p and calculating m. This process is not always meaningful in the most general of cases.
See this post for an example
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=435649#post435649
I gave other examples in the links above.
I want you to think of this and give me an answer if you don't mind? - How would you measure E and p of the particle?
I have Taylor and Wheeler too. There is one thing they never define in that text - and that's the mass of a non-closed system. They steared clear of that in that text.
Thanks
Pete