Is kinetic energy included in the equation E = hν for a photon?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on whether the energy of a photon, expressed as E = hν, includes kinetic energy or rest energy. It is clarified that photons are massless and do not possess kinetic energy in the traditional sense, as their energy is solely electromagnetic. The equation E = mc² applies only to objects with mass at rest, while the total energy of a photon is described by E = pc, indicating it has momentum but no rest mass. Participants debate the implications of this on the de Broglie equation and the nature of energy transfer in moving systems. Ultimately, the consensus is that light's energy is not classified as kinetic energy in the conventional sense, but rather as electromagnetic energy.
Dexter Neutron
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For a photon the energy is given by
$$E = h\nu$$
Does this includes both kinetic energy and energy due to mass?
If so then de Broglie gave the equation λ = h/p by equating hν with mc2 but since E = mc2 just gives the energy due to relativistic mass at that speed it would not include kinetic energy of photon and thus deBroglie equation may be wrong.
 
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Dexter Neutron said:
Does this includes both kinetic energy and energy due to mass?

No, a photon has neither. Since photons are massless, that pretty much precludes them from having kinetic energy. Especially since photons with different wavelengths have different energies but travel at the same speed.
 
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Dexter Neutron said:
For a photon the energy is given by
$$E = h\nu$$
Does this includes both kinetic energy and energy due to mass?
If so then de Broglie gave the equation λ = h/p by equating hν with mc2 but since E = mc2 just gives the energy due to relativistic mass at that speed it would not include kinetic energy of photon and thus deBroglie equation may be wrong.
Fact 1: Planck's constant times frequency is the total energy of a photon.

Fact 2: Zero mass times speed of light squared is the total rest energy of a photon.

From fact 2 we can see that a photon only has energy that is not rest energy.

Now we replace "not rest energy" with another term "kinetic energy", so we get: Photon only has energy that is kinetic energy.
 
jartsa said:
Now we replace "not rest energy" with another term "kinetic energy", so we get: Photon only has energy that is kinetic energy.

That's not correct as far as I know. A photon does not have kinetic energy. At least, not kinetic energy like a ball or a bullet has. It certainly doesn't depend on velocity. A photon moving through a medium, such as glass or water, has the same energy as a photon of the same frequency moving through space, despite the former being slower than the latter.
 
jartsa said:
Fact 1: Planck's constant times frequency is the total energy of a photon.

Fact 2: Zero mass times speed of light squared is the total rest energy of a photon.

From fact 2 we can see that a photon only has energy that is not rest energy.

Now we replace "not rest energy" with another term "kinetic energy", so we get: Photon only has energy that is kinetic energy.
I class that as a GIGO argument. It presupposes that the only alternative to rest energy is Kinetic Energy and why would that necessarily be so. It's Electromagnetic Energy - if you want to classify it- and nothing to do with mass or mechanics.
 
sophiecentaur said:
I class that as a GIGO argument. It presupposes that the only alternative to rest energy is Kinetic Energy and why would that necessarily be so. It's Electromagnetic Energy - if you want to classify it- and nothing to do with mass or mechanics.

Does a sack filled with light have kinetic energy or electromagnetic energy, when the sack is moving very fast?
 
Neglecting the mass of the sack and any reflection loss, it has to be EM energy because there's no KE in the photons.
Why are you questioning this fundamental idea?
 
sophiecentaur said:
Neglecting the mass of the sack and any reflection loss, it has to be EM energy because there's no KE in the photons.
Why are you questioning this fundamental idea?

Because, maybe massless things never have kinetic energy, and all the other things have kinetic energy, when they are moving?

Light in a sack is a thing with a rest mass. m=E/c2, where E is measured in the sack's rest frame.
So maybe we can give some kinetic energy to this thing with a rest mass?
 
I shall have to disagree with Drakkith. Light has no rest mass in vacuum, but it does have kinetic energy. It is conventional to assign all of the energy of light to kinetic energy. It's neater this way, since you can change the kinetic energy by means of Lorentz boosts.
Dexter, you still made a mistake since ##E = mc^2## only applies to an object at rest. (Light is never at rest.)
The full equation is ##E^2 = m^2 c^4 + p^2 c^2##
Since ##m=0##, we have ##E= pc##
 
  • #10
Khashishi said:
I shall have to disagree with Drakkith. Light has no rest mass in vacuum, but it does have kinetic energy. It is conventional to assign all of the energy of light to kinetic energy.

Perhaps. I'm not an expert in this area. Got a link or reference? I'd like to read more on this.
 
  • #11
I am not saying that light is not electromagnetic energy, because that sounds like something that might be wrong. I am saying that light has kinetic energy, because that sounds true.

Let's say a satellite sends out a 10 W beam of microwaves. A still standing satellite disk will receive 10 W of radio waves.

But a satellite disk moving at speed 0.9 c away from the satellite will receive 1 W of radio waves and 9 W of pushing work.
 
  • #12
jartsa said:
But a satellite disk moving at speed 0.9 c away from the satellite will receive 1 W of radio waves and 9 W of pushing work.
No, that's not right. Let's use the transformation laws. Let x be in the direction of motion.
The 4-force in the satellite frame is: F = (10W, 10W, 0, 0)
##F_1' = \gamma (F_1 - \beta F_2) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1-0.9^2}} (10W - 0.9*10W) = 2.29W##
##F_2' = \gamma (F_2 - \beta F_1) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1-0.9^2}} (10W - 0.9*10W) = 2.29W##
The satellite dish will receives 2.29W in its frame of reference. I don't know what you mean by pushing work, but the force is 10W/c in the satellite frame of reference.
 
  • #13
Drakkith said:
Perhaps. I'm not an expert in this area. Got a link or reference? I'd like to read more on this.
I don't have a reference, but I'm sure I've come across it several times. For massless particles, the rest energy is zero and the total energy is all kinetic energy.
 
  • #14
Khashishi said:
I don't have a reference, but I'm sure I've come across it several times. For massless particles, the rest energy is zero and the total energy is all kinetic energy.

Alright. I'll try to find some information on my own then. Thanks.
 
  • #15
Khashishi said:
No, that's not right. Let's use the transformation laws. Let x be in the direction of motion.
The 4-force in the satellite frame is: F = (10W, 10W, 0, 0)
##F_1' = \gamma (F_1 - \beta F_2) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1-0.9^2}} (10W - 0.9*10W) = 2.29W##
##F_2' = \gamma (F_2 - \beta F_1) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1-0.9^2}} (10W - 0.9*10W) = 2.29W##
The satellite dish will receives 2.29W in its frame of reference. I don't know what you mean by pushing work, but the force is 10W/c in the satellite frame of reference.

Yeah, for some reason I started talking about power, when energy is the thing we are discussing.

So I should have said this: Let's say a satellite sends out a 10 J pulse of microwaves. A still standing satellite disk will receive 10 J of radio waves.

But a satellite disk moving at speed 0.9 c away from the satellite will receive 1 J of radio waves and 9 J of other energy, this other energy is kinetic energy, the disk is being pushed to higher speed.
 
  • #16
That's still wrong. The radio waves have energy and momentum. The acceleration of the "disk" depends on whether it absorbs the microwaves or reflects them, but it is simple to calculate using conservation of momentum.
 
  • #17
Khashishi said:
I shall have to disagree with Drakkith. Light has no rest mass in vacuum, but it does have kinetic energy. It is conventional to assign all of the energy of light to kinetic energy. It's neater this way, since you can change the kinetic energy by means of Lorentz boosts.
Dexter, you still made a mistake since ##E = mc^2## only applies to an object at rest. (Light is never at rest.)
The full equation is ##E^2 = m^2 c^4 + p^2 c^2##
Since ##m=0##, we have ##E= pc##
Since total energy of a photon is given by ##E=pc## which is only the kinetic energy and kinetic energy is ##E=\frac{1}{2} (\gamma m)c^2## which would give us ##E = \frac{pc}{2}## where does the other half of the energy goes if pc/2 is the kinetic energy?
 
  • #18
Dexter Neutron said:
and kinetic energy is E=12(γm)c2E=\frac{1}{2} (\gamma m)c^2

Where did you get that equation?
 
  • #19
Khashishi said:
That's still wrong. The radio waves have energy and momentum. The acceleration of the "disk" depends on whether it absorbs the microwaves or reflects them, but it is simple to calculate using conservation of momentum.

The dish absorbed the waves, that's why it gained 10 J of energy from a 10 J pulse.

(kinetic energy increased by 9 J)
 
  • #20
Dexter Neutron said:
kinetic energy is ##E=\frac{1}{2} (\gamma m)c^2##
That's not right.
 
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