Is light wave energy equivalent to mass?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the relationship between light, mass, and energy, questioning the validity of Einstein's mass-energy equivalence formula. It argues that light waves, while carrying curvature and kinetic energy, do not possess mass, challenging the conventional understanding of mass-energy equivalence. Some participants assert that light does have mass in terms of relativistic mass, linking it to momentum and speed. The conversation also touches on the broader implications of energy changes in relation to mass. Overall, the debate highlights differing interpretations of fundamental physics concepts.
424319
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Is mass equivalent to energy

Light wave is a effect of the vabration of atom's sphere time-space determined by the double-focus principle. Light wave is a serial time-space spherical wave. light wave carries curvature and kinetic energy, but not mass.Suppossition that light wave transfers a equivalent mass is wrong. So, the mass-energy formula created by Einstein is also wrong.

Energy is equivalent to the change in the curvature of time-space.

Reference: THING AND ITS LAW ( ISBN 1-58939-525-5), chapter 2,5, published by Virtualbookworm.com publishing.Inc.
 
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Huh? Well, the one part I understood clearly:
So, the mass-energy formula created by Einstein is also wrong.
It was unambiguously demonstrated to be correct in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1949.
 
M is E is moving net.
 
I'm wondering what "Thing" is and why we are even concerned about "It's Law".
 
It's just a person spamming someone's book. :smile:
 
I know, but it's a rather silly title!
 
umm what's more about light, what is it's mass?

just fields? of energy?
 
Originally posted by 424319
light wave carries curvature and kinetic energy, but not mass.

That is not true. Light does carry mass. And if one goes by the definition of mass where mass is the ratio of momentum to speed (aka "relativistic mass") then light has mass (although it has no proper mass).

You ask Is mass equivalent to energy? - Is mass equivalent to kinetic energy? Is height equivalent to gravitational potential energy?

I'd say they are related in that if you increase either the internal energy or the kinetic energy of a body then it's (relativistic) mass increases.
 
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