aleemudasir
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How did we come to the conclusion photon has no rest mass? Does photon have any mass(not talking about rest mass) while moving at usual c?
The photon is currently understood to be strictly massless, but this is an experimental question.
jnorman said:is the photon not at rest when it is absorbed by an atom? the mass increase of the atom should represent the rest mass of the photon... (i know this is wrong, but why?)
aleemudasir said:How did we come to the conclusion photon has no rest mass? Does photon have any mass(not talking about rest mass) while moving at usual c?
aleemudasir said:If the rest mass of photon is zero then what will happen when we will use the equation
m= m(0)/ sqrt(1-v^2/c^2), which comes upto 0/0. Please explain this situation. And what will happen in this situation when we will go further to use m=E/c^2.
Thanks!
aleemudasir said:If the rest mass of photon is zero then what will happen when we will use the equation
m= m(0)/ sqrt(1-v^2/c^2), which comes upto 0/0. Please explain this situation. And what will happen in this situation when we will go further to use m=E/c^2.
Thanks!
Drakkith said:You can't use 0 as the mass in those equations, as it comes out to nonsense. (Dividing zero by zero for instance) You must use the equations that apply to a photon, such as e=pc.
Nabeshin said:You cannot go around willy-nilly applying equations. These equations were derived under certain assumptions, among them being that the object is traveling below c (or equivalently, has mass).
aleemudasir said:Even after using E=pc, the momentum p is defined as, p=mv, so, what now? There still is m!
Correct me if I am wrong.
Thanks.
aleemudasir said:Which equation do we use to infer that speed of light is the limit?
aleemudasir said:]
Correct me if I am wrong.
Thanks.
pervect said:People have been trying to correct you all along - you don't give the apperance of actually listening to the corrections, however...
Drakkith said:I believe it is p=h/wavelength, where h is Plancks constant.
aleemudasir said:OK, but it is just the rearrangement of equation λ=h/p, where p=mv.
M Quack said:No, you are wrongly simplifying a general equation to a very special case.
p = \hbar k where k is the wave vector (\frac{2\pi}/\lambda) is used pretty much everywhere in QM, including massive particles such as electrons. Note that momentum is conserved, but not velocity, so momentum is a much more fundamental property than velocity.
In the non-relativistic limit for massive particles you get E = \frac{1}{2m}p^2.
For a photon, the non-relativisitc limit obviously does not make any sense. The most reasonalbe thing you can do is (as jtbell pointed out) use E^2 = (m_0 c^2)^2 + (pc)^2.
Now all experimental observations over a huge huge range of wavelengths/energies/wave numbers match E=pc = \hbar \omega = \frac{h}{\lambda}, i.e. they match the above equation with m_0 = 0. In other words, all available experimental data supports the hypothesis that the photon is massless.
But then again that is just a theory, just as evolution is just a theory.
bahamagreen said:Photons have non-zero rest mass inside superconductors...
phinds said:I agree w/ Dead Boss ... you'll need to provide a citation for that. It sounds like nonsense.
M Quack said:We know that E=pc, so they are proportional to each other. And that implies that the rest mass is zero. That is the whole point. There are several different ways at arriving at this conclusion, as several people have pointed out.
If there is a rest mass, then there has to be a rest energy (or equivalent energy) E_0=m_0 c^2 at rest, i.e. at p=0 or k=0. For the photon, all datapoints fall onto the line E=pc which give E=0 at p=0. Hence no energy at p=0, which in turn means no mass at p=0 (at rest).
E=\frac{h c}{\lambda} Sorry for the typo (and I see it is not the only one...)
k = \frac{2\pi}{\lambda}
Stricktly speaking, the non-relativistic limit should also be
E_{\mathrm{kinetic}} = \frac{1}{2m}p^2 = E - E_0 where E is the total energy and E_0=m_0 c^2 the energy-equivalent of the rest mass.
Paul Bauza said:Rest mass of Photon is 0.
My Q is: 1- why Photon speed is finite if does have no mass?
2- why light is curved passing Black Hole and if is curved because
warped space-time. (not it's mass) how Black Hole can warp Space-Time.
if Space-Time have no mass?
Paul Bauza said:how Black Hole can warp Space-Time.
if Space-Time have no mass?
=ozie: Michelson and Moreley's experiment proved that no matter how a mobile point with a speed v is directed to the light source or run away from it, the speed of light is always the same! But the experiment (as the later experiments did) was based on the interfence between an direct light beam and reflected one. In my opinion this experiment has a limit because too small shift of interferences it is possible to escape to power resolution of the device. Some books presented the ideea of an estimated rest mass of photon of 10 to minus 47 kg ( 10-47kg). So we can conclude that the speed of let say 299000 km/s to be not sufficent to have a relativistic mass infinite! To such value it is posible that the shift of interference to be unobservable, the shift to be under the threshold of resoluition of device!aleemudasir said:How did we come to the conclusion photon has no rest mass? Does photon have any mass(not talking about rest mass) while moving at usual c?