Mass increase from high velocity Q

In summary: Rindler case.So the situations are not really analogous.In summary, the conversation discusses the possibility of an observer reaching critical mass and forming a black hole by traveling at high speeds. It is explained that this is not possible due to the relativity of speed and the specific solutions to Einstein's field equations for black holes. It is also mentioned that choosing different frames of reference or coordinates cannot change this fact.
  • #1
TheTechNoir
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Hi folks, I'm brand new here... never been a part of a physics forum before and I'm just an amateur I have no professional or academic background hah most is a grade 10 "science" course (a unit on bio, unit on chem, unit on physics not even specified and barely touched physics).

Anyways that's my introduction
Out of nowhere today a light bulb went off and I was curious about something. If you were to go for example at 0.99999999c in a spacecraft I understand that your mass would increase largely relativistically. Now I am wondering, would it be possible to reach a sufficiently high percentage of the speed of light to reach critical mass with a finite mass and thus gravitationally collapse and form a black hole? Or would that require light speed (infinite mass) which is obviously impossible. Also, if it were possible (hypothetically - I know having the energy required to reach this potential speed would most likely be completely implausible) what would happen, I mean if to the Earth's perspective you collapsed into a black hole how would that work if you were a black hole from some perspectives and not others?

Thanks if anyone can help me, I am ASSUMING it would not be hypothetically possible but the thought still struck me as worth asking.
 
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  • #3
TheTechNoir said:
Hi folks, I'm brand new here... never been a part of a physics forum before and I'm just an amateur I have no professional or academic background hah most is a grade 10 "science" course (a unit on bio, unit on chem, unit on physics not even specified and barely touched physics).

Anyways that's my introduction
Out of nowhere today a light bulb went off and I was curious about something. If you were to go for example at 0.99999999c in a spacecraft I understand that your mass would increase largely relativistically. Now I am wondering, would it be possible to reach a sufficiently high percentage of the speed of light to reach critical mass with a finite mass and thus gravitationally collapse and form a black hole? Or would that require light speed (infinite mass) which is obviously impossible. Also, if it were possible (hypothetically - I know having the energy required to reach this potential speed would most likely be completely implausible) what would happen, I mean if to the Earth's perspective you collapsed into a black hole how would that work if you were a black hole from some perspectives and not others?

Thanks if anyone can help me, I am ASSUMING it would not be hypothetically possible but the thought still struck me as worth asking.

Look at it this way: your speed is relative so you can always find a frame where you are traveling at an arbitarily large proper fraction of c, but black holes are not relative they're a specific set of soltuions to Einstein's field equations. The gravitational singularity in a balck hole cannot be done away with by choosing a different frame of reference.

So simple arguments from consistency demand that a massive observer traveling at large fractions of c cannot turn into a black hole.
 
  • #4
jcsd said:
Look at it this way: your speed is relative so you can always find a frame where you are traveling at an arbitarily large proper fraction of c, but black holes are not relative they're a specific set of soltuions to Einstein's field equations. The gravitational singularity in a balck hole cannot be done away with by choosing a different frame of reference.

So simple arguments from consistency demand that a massive observer traveling at large fractions of c cannot turn into a black hole.

I read the previous link provided so I have an idea and I do know it cannot be so.

But in regards to your response (don't take this as me arguing against you or saying you're wrong) I realize that you can always find someone traveling very close to c from certain frames of reference but doesn't it make a difference whether they are traveling in force-free constant velocity motion or accelerating?
I don't mean this to dispute your post as I realize it is correct in relation to my original question as a reason for why the black hole is different and could not be created in that manner.
Thanks a lot btw both of you for the answers :)
I have a feeling if I look through this forum enough I can learn quite a lot to supplement my beginner reading (admittedly just reading things like the elegant universe or michio kaku's laymen intended books, etc. at the moment pretty new to this)
 
  • #5
TheTechNoir said:
I read the previous link provided so I have an idea and I do know it cannot be so.

But in regards to your response (don't take this as me arguing against you or saying you're wrong) I realize that you can always find someone traveling very close to c from certain frames of reference but doesn't it make a difference whether they are traveling in force-free constant velocity motion or accelerating?


I don't mean this to dispute your post as I realize it is correct in relation to my original question as a reason for why the black hole is different and could not be created in that manner.
Thanks a lot btw both of you for the answers :)
I have a feeling if I look through this forum enough I can learn quite a lot to supplement my beginner reading (admittedly just reading things like the elegant universe or michio kaku's laymen intended books, etc. at the moment pretty new to this)

Well you can pretty much always choose bad* cooridinates, for example Rindler coordinates in flat sapcetime, which create a horizon like the event horizon that occurs in Schwarzschild coordinates in Schwarzschild spacetime. But these two coordinate singularities (the Rindler horizon and the event horizon in Schwarzschild cooridnates) come from extending (the) coordinate systems a bit farther than you really oughta.

The gravitational singularity at the centre of a black hole is a property of the spacetime which it sits in rather than any property of a coordinate sysetm that you might choose to map that spacetime with so you cannot make one appear or disappear by changing your frame of reference. So a balck hole is not a frame effect so cannot be created by viewing an object in a different frame of reference.


*I use the term 'bad very loosely as what is bad for one purpose may be good for another.
 

1. What is the theory behind mass increase from high velocity?

The theory of relativity, proposed by Albert Einstein, states that as an object approaches the speed of light, its mass increases exponentially.

2. How does this concept relate to the famous equation, E=mc²?

The equation E=mc², also proposed by Einstein, shows that mass and energy are equivalent and interchangeable. As an object's velocity increases, its energy also increases, resulting in an increase in mass.

3. Is this concept observable in everyday life?

While we do not typically encounter objects moving at speeds close to the speed of light, this concept can be observed in particle accelerators, where subatomic particles are accelerated to nearly the speed of light, resulting in an increase in their mass.

4. Does this mean an object's physical weight increases with velocity?

No, this concept only applies to an object's relativistic mass, which is a measure of its energy and momentum. The object's physical weight, measured by its gravitational pull, remains the same.

5. What implications does this concept have for space travel?

This concept highlights the immense amount of energy required to accelerate an object to near the speed of light. It also suggests that as we approach the speed of light, the object's mass will become infinitely large, making it impossible to reach the speed of light.

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