Electron Mass: A Fundamental Property or a Complex Concept?

In summary: Millikan...) but to a lesser accuracy than the e/m ratio. Millikan's 1916 oil drop experiment was the first to measure the charge to high accuracy (to about 0.3%).Cyclotrons were first invented by Rutherford in 1935ish. The first measurement of the e/m ratio with a cyclotron was by Lawrence and Livingston (1936) to 1 part in 1000.So, for the record, it was Thomson's son, GP Thomson (who was also awarded the Nobel prize in physics), who measured the wave properties of the electron in 1927 (using electron diffraction from a crystal).All this is from memory, so I may have made a mistake or two
  • #1
Cosmo16
140
0
It was my understanding (however my understandings are wrong 99.9% of the time) that a electron was massless, and that it took the form of a wave that collapsed into a specfic point when it was "located"

however, I was told that I am my friends AP physics class, there are told to use the mass of an electron.

So, is an electron massless or not?
 
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  • #2
Cosmo16 said:
It was my understanding (however my understandings are wrong 99.9% of the time) that a electron was massless, and that it took the form of a wave that collapsed into a specfic point when it was "located"
however, I was told that I am my friends AP physics class, there are told to use the mass of an electron.
So, is an electron massless or not?

Where did you get the idea that electron is massless? Ernest Lawrence won the Nobel Prize in Physics for finding the e/m ratio of the electron. This ratio is not infinite.

Zz.
 
  • #3
Step 1: Go to Google.
Step 2: Type in "electron mass".
Step 3: Hit "Search".

At the tippy-top of the page it will say:

Google said:
electron mass = 9.10938188 × 10-31 kilograms
 
  • #4
An electron masses about 1/2000th of a proton.
 
  • #5
Yeah, but what if he also thinks the proton is massless!
 
  • #6
maybe I was thinking of somthing else.

right now my brain is on overload. For me overload usually equals insaness whcih usually equals stupid questions
 
  • #8
I bet he is talking about an electron. I know I didn't even know what a neutrino was before college and he hints at being in HS
 
  • #9
ZapperZ said:
Where did you get the idea that electron is massless? Ernest Lawrence won the Nobel Prize in Physics for finding the e/m ratio of the electron. This ratio is not infinite.
Zz.

I'm being overly pedantic, but Ernest Lawrence won the Nobel Prize for the cyclotron. Through the work of J.J. Thomson, Millikan, and others, the e/m ratio of the electron was already known (probably to at least 3 significant figures) when Lawrence built his first cyclotron, so if Lawrence added anything to this issue, it was just more digits.

At the risk of adding to the confusion, the Cosmo16 may have had the following misconceptions in mind. Light is wave a and light doesn't have mass, therefore when the electron is a wave it doesn't have mass. All particles have mass, so when the electron is a particle it has mass. Thus, an electron only has mass when it switches its character from that of a wave to that of a (massive) particle. How does the massless wave become a massive particle?

Finally, an interesting bit of trivia with respect to the "wave-particle duality" of the electron. In grossly over-simplified (enough to be quite misleading) terms, J.J. Thomson won the Nobel prize for showing that the electron is a particle, and his son, George Paget Thomson, won the Nobel prize (along with Davisson) for showing that the electron is a wave!

Regards,
George
 
  • #10
George Jones said:
I'm being overly pedantic, but Ernest Lawrence won the Nobel Prize for the cyclotron. Through the work of J.J. Thomson, Millikan, and others, the e/m ratio of the electron was already known (probably to at least 3 significant figures) when Lawrence built his first cyclotron, so if Lawrence added anything to this issue, it was just more digits.

You're right. I should have been more careful. Millikan had more to do with measuring e/m.

At the risk of adding to the confusion, the Cosmo16 may have had the following misconceptions in mind. Light is wave a and light doesn't have mass, therefore when the electron is a wave it doesn't have mass. All particles have mass, so when the electron is a particle it has mass. Thus, an electron only has mass when it switches its character from that of a wave to that of a (massive) particle. How does the massless wave become a massive particle?
Finally, an interesting bit of trivia with respect to the "wave-particle duality" of the electron. In grossly over-simplified (enough to be quite misleading) terms, J.J. Thomson won the Nobel prize for showing that the electron is a particle, and his son, George Paget Thomson, won the Nobel prize (along with Davisson) for showing that the electron is a wave!
Regards,
George

Unfortunately, now its my turn to be "pedantic".

When you solve the Schrodinger equation for electrons, the MASS of the electrons is in there. The kinetic energy term explicitly contains the mass. Thus, even when you get a "wave" solution for the electrons, the mass of the electron is explicitly in the solution. So it is not correct to say that when it can be described via the wavefunction, it is massless.

Also, the "wave" of light is NOT the same "wave" as for electrons. We must not confuse the two simply because the name "wave" is being used for both. The wavefunction is not a physical wave like water waves. The QM wavefunction exists in a "configuration space" that can be complex. Physical wave, such as water waves and the solution to Maxwell equation, exists in real space. So those two are not the same beast and shouldn't be used as an analogy of one another.

Zz.
 
  • #11
ZapperZ said:
Unfortunately, now its my turn to be "pedantic".

Why is this unfortunate?

I said that these points were all misconceptions that Cosmo16 might have had in mind.

I was that hoping that my wording would provoke you into pendantry mode, so that you would explain to Cosmo16 why these points are misconceptions. :smile:

Regards,
George
 
  • #12
Oh, sorry. Now I see your point.

I blame it on lack of sleep. That's my story and I'm sticking to it!

:)

Zz.
 
  • #13
For the sake of pedantry (or historical correctness, if you will)...

The e/m ratio was first measured by JJT at about 1.3*1011C/kg (correct value about 1.76...) using a modified Crookes' tube (the precursor to the modern electron gun). This was in 1897. The charge itself (from which the mass would be deduced) was also first measured by JJT and colleagues (Wilson & Townsend) using ionized water droplets which were collected in an acid and changed its pH. They got an approximate value of 1*10-19C by 1901. Millikan used ionized oil drops instead of water droplets and was able to make a much more accurate measurement of e (getting about 1.6 ...) using a tunable E-field to suspend the droplet against gravity. His work culminated in 1913 (he started in 1906, and spent roughly 7 years on just this one experiment !).
 
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  • #14
Electron mass has a series of very important consequences: starting with cyclotronic frequency that is inverselly proportional to m... (Lawrence example retains its mean) ...so it got a certain inertia... passing through another question like antimatter interaction (if e- meets e+ you got a photonlike energy of twice electron mass in c squared units as it occurs on LEP facility at CERN).
Nevertheless... back to atomic level... it is basical reminding that fundamental magnetic behaviour is provided, yes, by spin of the electron, but it just becomes a powerless subject in massless hypothesis: Bohr magneton formula keeps mass, too (i.e. no mass no magnetic momentum).
It appears also in Bohr radius: realizing a mu-mesic atom you can think of electrons and muons as equals but their masses are different.
In beta decay, relativistical approch says electron mass is meant to grow up... but this is not a trouble (on this way you find starting point for Compton effect).
In crystals effective mass is a theorethical concept that is furnished with a dynamical meaning. But this is another story, because it depends on system complexity.
More generally in matter wave theory overall, hamiltonian operator, that straightforward leads to energy eigenvalues, has a mass-including kinetic term... so: no mass, no meaning.
If matter is a wave, that wave is to be a material one. We can't get away without that mass!
 

1. Is an electron truly massless?

No, electrons do have a small amount of mass. The current accepted value for the mass of an electron is 9.10938356 × 10^-31 kilograms.

2. Why is there confusion about the mass of an electron?

There is confusion because electrons have a very small mass compared to other particles, and their behavior sometimes appears to be massless. Additionally, in certain theories, such as the Standard Model of particle physics, the mass of an electron is treated as a "bare" mass, which can be modified by interactions with other particles.

3. How was it originally determined that electrons have mass?

The mass of an electron was first determined through experiments measuring the deflection of electrons in a magnetic field, known as the Thomson experiment. Later, more precise measurements using the Millikan oil drop experiment confirmed the mass of an electron to be very small.

4. Can the mass of an electron change?

Yes, the mass of an electron can change depending on the environment or interactions it experiences. In particle accelerators, for example, electrons can be accelerated to high energies, which increases their effective mass. In addition, certain theories propose that electrons can gain mass through interactions with the Higgs field.

5. How does the mass of an electron affect its behavior?

The mass of an electron affects its behavior in many ways. For example, the more massive an electron is, the less it will be affected by electric and magnetic fields. Additionally, the mass of an electron plays a crucial role in determining the stability and energy levels of atoms, which ultimately affects the chemical and physical properties of matter.

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