What is the Invariant Mass of Two Perpendicular Photons?

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SUMMARY

The invariant mass of two perpendicular photons is not zero; it is determined by the equation m² = (2/c²)(|\vec{q}_1| |\vec{q}_2| - \vec{q}_1 \cdot \vec{q}_2), where \(\vartheta\) is the angle between the two photon momenta. The discussion clarifies that only photons traveling in the same direction can yield a zero invariant mass. The correct approach involves using the invariant mass formula E² = (PsystemC)² + (MinvariantC²)², ensuring to include the energy term squared. The derivation provided confirms that the invariant mass is always well-defined and greater than zero for two photons moving at angles to each other.

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rashida564
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TL;DR
Two photons travels perpendicular to each other find their invariant mass
I think since Esystem=(PsystemC)^2 + (Minvariant C^2)^2. Then the invariant mass of the system should be zero, but I am hesitated with this is it always the case that photon that travels perpendicular to each other have zero invariant mass
 
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rashida564 said:
Summary:: Two photons travels perpendicular to each other find their invariant mass

I think since Esystem=(PsystemC)^2 + (Minvariant C^2)^2. Then the invariant mass of the system should be zero, but I am hesitated with this is it always the case that photon that travels perpendicular to each other have zero invariant mass
Only a system of photons that travel in the same direction has zero invariant mass. As soon as you add a single photon traveling in a different direction, the invariant mass will be non-zero.

Edit: Your equation should also contain E^2, not E.
 
The general recipe for finding the invariant mass of a system works here: Choose an inertial frame in which the total momentum is zero; the energy in that frame is the rest energy; invariant mass is then calculated from ##E=mc^2##.

If the two photons are moving in the same direction then there is no frame in which the momentum is zero and then this recipe cannot be used.
 
Nugatory said:
The general recipe for finding the invariant mass of a system works here: Choose an inertial frame in which the total momentum is zero; the energy in that frame is the rest energy; invariant mass is then calculated from ##E=mc^2##.

I disagree, since it is not applicable when the invariant mass is zero, it cannot be a general recipe. Instead, I would compute the invariant mass from the relation provided by the OP (apart from the missing square), ##E^2 = (\vec pc)^2 + m^2 c^4##. For the two-photon system, it is simple enough to compute the total energy and the momenta given the photons' directions and energies.
 
The total mass of a system is given by
$$m^2 c^2=P_{\mu} P^{\mu}=s,$$
where ##P_{\mu}## is the total momentum. For two photons you have
$$s=(q_1+q_2)^2=q_1^2 + q_2^2 + 2 q_1 \cdot q_2=2 q_1 \cdot q_2$$
From this you get
$$m^2=\frac{2}{c^2} q_1 \cdot q_2.$$
Now
$$q_1=(|\vec{q}_1|,\vec{q}_1), \quad q_2 = (\vec{q}_2,\vec{q}_2)$$
and thus [EDIT: Corrected in view of #6]
$$m^2 = \frac{2}{c^2} (|\vec{q}_1| |\vec{q}_2|-\vec{q}_1 \cdot \vec{q}_2)=\frac{2}{c^2} |\vec{q}_1| |\vec{q}_2| (1-\cos \vartheta),$$
where ##\vartheta \in [0,\pi]## is the angle between ##\vec{q}_1## and ##\vec{q}_2##. Thus you always get a well defined ##m^2>0## always.
 
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vanhees71 said:
The total mass of a system is given by
...
and thus
$$m^2 = \frac{2}{c^2} (|\vec{q}_1| |\vec{q}_2|-\vec{q}_1 \cdot \vec{q}_2)=\frac{2}{c^2} |\vec{q}_1| |\vec{q}_2| \sin^2 \vartheta,$$
where ##\vartheta \in [0,\pi]## is the angle between ##\vec{q}_1## and ##\vec{q}_2##. Thus you always get a well defined ##m^2>0## always.
Shouldn’t sin2 be (1 - cos ), i.e. not squared, in the last step? Note, with yours, parallel and anti parallel would be the same, which is incorrect.

Otherwise, love the derivation.
 
##\frac{4}{c^2}|\vec q_1||\vec q_2|\sin^2 \frac{\vartheta}{2}##?
 
SiennaTheGr8 said:
##\frac{4}{c^2}|\vec q_1||\vec q_2|\sin^2 \frac{\vartheta}{2}##?
That’s, of course, equivalent to what I wrote.
 
Yes, just guessing that that's what @vanhees71 meant to write.
 
  • #10
Of course you are right. It's a typo (I've corrected it also in the original posting).
 

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