JohnH
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If velocity is energy divided by momentum it seems like the difference in scale between them is v and yet E=pc suggests the difference in scale is C not v. Why is this?
The discussion revolves around the relationship between energy, momentum, and velocity in the context of special relativity, specifically examining the equations E=pc and v=E/p. Participants explore the implications of these equations for massless and massive particles, questioning the differences in scale and dimensional consistency.
Participants do not reach a consensus on the correct formulation of velocity in terms of energy and momentum, with multiple competing views and interpretations presented throughout the discussion.
Some participants express uncertainty about the implications of switching the numerator and denominator in the equations, and there are unresolved questions regarding the dimensional consistency and physical validity of the proposed formulations.
Because ##E=pc## only applies to massless particles, and these always move with speed ##c##. The general relationship that you want is ##E^2=(mc^2)^2+(pc)^2##, which reduces to ##E=pc## for massless particles and to the famous ##E=mc^2## when ##p## is zero (massive particle at rest).JohnH said:If velocity is energy divided by momentum it seems like the difference in scale between them is v and yet E=pc suggests the difference in scale is C not v. Why is this?
I think that is backwards. I think it is ##\vec v=\vec p/E##JohnH said:If velocity is energy divided by momentum
The units don't match, do they?Dale said:I think that is backwards. I think it is ##\vec v=\vec p/E##
In units where c=1, they do.nasu said:The units don't match, do they?
jbriggs444 said:In units where c=1, they do.
A good sanity check is the fact that the left hand side is a vector quantity and the right hand side has a vector quantity in the numerator and a scalar in the denominator. The competing formula, ##\vec{v}=E/\vec{p}## fails that sanity check -- can't divide a scalar by a vector.
Have you seen this formula with vectors in some book? I never said it should be written this way (with vectors, and vector p in the denominator).jbriggs444 said:In units where c=1, they do.
A good sanity check is the fact that the left hand side is a vector quantity and the right hand side has a vector quantity in the numerator and a scalar in the denominator. The competing formula, ##\vec{v}=E/\vec{p}## fails that sanity check -- can't divide a scalar by a vector.
I saw it in this thread.nasu said:Have you seen this formula with vectors in some book? I never said it should be written this way (with vectors, and vector p in the denominator).
Velocity is a vector. Energy is a scalar. Momentum is a vector. It is worthwhile emphasizing that fact ifJohnH said:If velocity is energy divided by momentum
You are right, but you can always throw in factors of c to fix that. In units where c=1 it is fine.nasu said:The units don't match, do they?
Actually, I just worked it out for massive particles and you can make it right by switching the numerator and denominator. For a massive object in units where c=1 we have:$$m^2=E^2-p^2$$ $$p= \frac{m v}{\sqrt{1-v^2}}$$ Which you can solve for ##v## and eliminate ##m## to getnasu said:Nugatory already showed the OP that his equation is not right for massive particles. You cannot make it right by just switching the numerator and denominator.
nasu said:With c=1 we have ## E=\sqrt{m^2 + p^2} ## so ## \frac{\vec{p}}{E}=\frac{\vec{p}}{\sqrt{m^2 + p^2}} ##. Can you manipulate this to give the velocity in the end?
Dale said:I am not sure ##\vec v = \vec p/E## is right