I want to know that light has mass or not.

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Light does not have mass in the traditional sense, as it consists of massless particles called photons. However, light does possess energy, which can be related to mass through the equation E=mc², leading to discussions about relativistic mass. The concept of invariant mass is crucial, as photons do not have a defined rest frame, making their invariant mass effectively zero. While light itself is massless, it does carry momentum and can exert gravitational effects under certain conditions. The consensus in the discussion is that light does not have "real" mass, but its energy allows it to interact with matter and gravity.
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I want to know that light has mass or not.

็ำHelp me ! Can you explain little? :smile:
 
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No light does not have mass.
 
Light consists of packets of energy called photons which are massless particles, so the short answer would be no. However, it really depends on what kind of mass we're talking about. According to E=mc^2 mass and energy are the same thing, and since light has energy, it should have a mass. But this mass isn't what we would call "normal" mass, rather, it's a relativistic mass (i.e. a measure of the energy of particle that changes with velocity). I think it's convention not to call this relativistic mass the same thing as a kilogram, gram, etc. because the kg type of mass is invariant.
 
Nope. But it does have momentum!
 
Concluded that no light mass. Yes/No ?
 
Yes.
 
I think light is a photon from the electron and the electron have mass is not.
Please explain...
 
Please start by reading the FAQ thread in the General Physics forum.

Zz.
 
ok I am very sorry.
 
  • #10
This will help the lazy ones:

https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=1285138&postcount=6
 
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  • #11
By the first definition, "invariant mass of a particle is defined as the total energy of the particle measured in the particle's rest frame divided by the speed of light squared", a reader of the FAQ would have to conclude that the question of whether a photon has invariant mass is undefined, since no rest frame is defined for a photon. Only by the second definition, expressed

m_0 = \sqrt{\frac{E^2}{c^4} - \frac{p^2}{c^2}}

can the reader conclude that a photon has no invariant mass. The second definition is called more general though, so I suppose it trumps the first. But still, the impression I get is that it's saying that whether a photon has invariant mass depends on which of two currently used definitions of invariant mass you use (even if you reject the terminology of "relativistic mass"), which contrasts with the more definite "no" that people are giving here.

The FAQ doesn't mention that a system of more than one photon, not all traveling in the same direction, can have an invariant mass, since we can define a frame in which the vector sum of their momenta is zero, and in this frame, its (nonzero) energy will equal its invariant mass.
 
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  • #12
Rasalhague said:
The FAQ doesn't mention that a system of more than one photon, not all traveling in the same direction, can have an invariant mass, since we can define a frame in which the vector sum of their momenta is zero, and in this frame, its (nonzero) energy will equal its invariant mass.

That's because, for the overwhelming majority of this type of question being asked in this forum, it is the simplistic and most naive version that keeps popping up. Including such more complex scenario will simply confuse the reason that presumably does not know (or even want to know) about such a thing. The FAQ aims to answer those questions within the context of what typically appears in this forum.

Zz.
 
  • #13
It's inevitable that, as a student learns more physics, they have to trade in some of the simplified definitions they're given at first for more refined and general definitions. It just gets a bit dizzying when that whole process is compacted into one paragraph! "Mass is defined thus," with no explicit statement that this is not a general definition, or what special case it's restricted to (a particle with mass), followed immediately by "or more generally..."
 
  • #14
Rasalhague said:
whether a photon has invariant mass depends on which of two currently used definitions of invariant mass you use
There is only one definition of invariant mass.
 
  • #15
DaleSpam said:
There is only one definition of invariant mass.

Then perhaps the FAQ could give that definition (i.e. the general one) first, adding that for a particle with mass this is equivalent to "the total energy of the particle measured in the particle’s rest frame divided by the speed of light squared".
 
  • #16
Rasalhague said:
It's inevitable that, as a student learns more physics, they have to trade in some of the simplified definitions they're given at first for more refined and general definitions. It just gets a bit dizzying when that whole process is compacted into one paragraph! "Mass is defined thus," with no explicit statement that this is not a general definition, or what special case it's restricted to (a particle with mass), followed immediately by "or more generally..."

Don't you think this gets very confusing for someone JUST trying to learn something simple, especially if we have to do this for every single thing we talk about? Do you see constant qualifier for the Photoelectric effect that this is strictly applicable ONLY for single-photon photoemission without any appreciable Schottky effect? Which is more "dizzying"?

Zz.
 
  • #17
ZapperZ said:
Don't you think this gets very confusing for someone JUST trying to learn something simple, especially if we have to do this for every single thing we talk about? Do you see constant qualifier for the Photoelectric effect that this is strictly applicable ONLY for single-photon photoemission without any appreciable Schottky effect? Which is more "dizzying"?

I think it'd be less confusing after "the invariant mass is defined as" to give the one, general definition that's applicable to a photon, and therefore doesn't need any qualification.

If it's felt necessary to give another, less general definition as well, I think I'd find it less confusing if this wasn't introduced first as "the definition", and if the limits of where that subdefinition applies were made explicit. That said, I appreciate that there's a tricky balance between saying something generally true and saying something that's comprehensible to a lay reader and doesn't have too many distracting detours.

In the section on E = mc^2, it seems to me ambiguous whether you're saying that, in the case of a photon, the m should be interpreted as what you call "inertial mass" (= \frac{E}{c^2} = \frac{p}{c}?), so that "there's nothing inconsistent" with applying the famous equation to a photon because m means something other than rest mass here, or whether you mean that m in the famous equation should be interpreted as "relativistic mass", which by the definition that follows would be undefined for a photon, so that "there's nothing inconsistent" because it's undefined for a photon, and so E = mc^2 can't be applied to a photon, or whether you're reading E = mc^2 as E_0 = m_0 \, c^2, in which case the famous equation does apply to a photon and "there's nothing inconsistent" because a photon has neither rest mass nor rest energy, although it does have kinetic energy. (The latter two interpretations both being widespread, the third--I gather--the current favorite.)

The statement that the famous equation is "derived from" E^2 = (pc)^2 + (m_0 c^2)^2 might suggest that you're treating m in E = mc^2 as equivalent to m_0. But "All of the photon's energy is in the term pc. Some people would say that this is the photon's 'inertial mass'" make it sound like m in the famous equation isn't m_0, but related somehow to the pc term, at least for a photon. On the other hand, the only explicit definition of m without a subscript, in this section, is m = \gamma m_0.

Sorry, I must be in a quibblesome mood today ;-) I should say that I'm fairly new to relativity myself, with fresh memories of the things that have confused me over recent months. I appreciate that you have far more understanding of physics than I do, and more experience of how to present these ideas.
 
  • #18
It depends on how you define mass.
Nowadays mass in physics usually means "invariant mass", also called "rest mass".
And since light can never be at rest it can not have rest mass.
However in reality light does of course have mass because it has energy. Light even possesses a gravitational field. An incredibly strong laser puls can attract matter and light due to gravity.
 
  • #19
No, light has does not have real mass. The medium of which is emitting the light has mass, but not the light itslef. I can shine a flashlight at you and the falshlight has mass, but not the light that is shining from it.
 
  • #20
thecritic said:
Nope. But it does have momentum!

lmao. Are all of you simply compelled to confuse this lad? Just curious. =]
 
  • #21
Only one answer is acceptible here so if your looking to find people who say it does not have mass this isn't the place.
 
  • #22
magpies said:
Only one answer is acceptible here

Only one answer is correct here.
 
  • #23
Rasalhague said:
Re E^2 = (pc)^2 + (m_0 c^2)^2
"All of the photon's energy is in the term pc.

What would the momentum of a photon be in a resonant cavity or on the interference side of a double slit experiment?
 
  • #24
Vanadium 50 said:
Only one answer is correct here.

Of course that is what I ment. The answer to the question is known so asking a question about something that is against what is known is not allowed. And sense it is known now to be right it is forever right forever and ever. No amount of incressed understanding of how the universe works will ever change the answer. Even if god came down from the clouds and explained it in every detail we would still not change the answer because it is THE ANSWER to the question.
 
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