I Nature of a photon

ginevradabenci
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How can photons be massless if they have energy?
Since E = mc^2, how can photons be massless? If a photon has no mass, then, according to Einstein's formula, its energy is given by E = 0 x c^2, which is 0. Yet, photons do have energy. This seems to be a complete contradiction. Please explain! Thank you.
 
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ginevradabenci said:
Since E = mc^2, how can photons be massless?
That formula is only correct for stationary massive objects. The general formula is ##m^2c^4=E^2-p^2c^2##, from which you can see that you can have zero mass objects with non-zero energy as long as their momentum, ##p##, satisfies ##E=|p|c##.
 
ginevradabenci said:
TL;DR Summary: How can photons be massless if they have energy?

Since E = mc^2, how can photons be massless? If a photon has no mass, then, according to Einstein's formula, its energy is given by E = 0 x c^2, which is 0. Yet, photons do have energy. This seems to be a complete contradiction. Please explain! Thank you.
The equation ##E = mc^2## only applies to a particle with mass. And, indeed, that's its energy only when it is at rest. The full equation is:
$$ E^2 = p^2c^2 + m^2c^4$$Where ##p## is the magnitide of the particle's momentum. This equation applies to all particles, whether they have mass or not, and whether they have kinetic energy or not. For a photon with zero mass, the equation reduces to ##E = pc##.
 

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