pixel01
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I've learned that photons have no mass, so why they are still influenced by black holes or other large celestial bodies?
pixel01 said:I've learned that photons have no mass, so why they are still influenced by black holes or other large celestial bodies?
tiny-tim said:Hi pixel01!
Two answers:
i] Photons have no rest-mass …
but they do have energy, and energy is mass.
ii] In general relativity, objects are not attracted by gravitation, they merely follow geodesics ("straight lines") in space-time.
So they don't need mass to be influenced by large bodies (though the amount of mass does affect which geodesic they follow).![]()
Which kind of mass do you mean by "true"?pixel01 said:Thank you tiny-tim,
So what is the true mass of a photon? Say a photon beam at 400nm wavelength.
DaleSpam said:Which kind of mass do you mean by "true"?
Invariant (aka rest or proper)
Relativistic (aka inertial or transverse)
Longitudinal
Komar
ADM
Bondi
I would say that the "true" mass is the invariant mass which is 0 for a photon.
pixel01 said:I mean the moving-induced mass. The rest mass of photon is 0 already.
That would only be the case for imaginary test objects. General relativity has no background, objects that have mass or energy do not have worldines in spacetime they are the curvature of spacetime. In other words spacetime curvature is mass and energy and how they are distributed. By the way the curvature of spacetime can cause both attraction and repulsion.tiny-tim said:ii] In general relativity, objects are not attracted by gravitation, they merely follow geodesics ("straight lines") in space-time.
This is of course correct, but (as you already know) if the mass of the object is much less than that of the star that deflects its path, a test particle's path is an excellent approximation of the actual path.MeJennifer said:That would only be the case for imaginary test objects. General relativity has no background, objects that have mass or energy do not have worldines in spacetime they are the curvature of spacetime. In other words spacetime curvature is mass and energy and how they are distributed. By the way the curvature of spacetime can cause both attraction and repulsion.
Let's take a spherical, non rotating not charged, homogeneous star: there is curvature outside of it; does it mean the stress-energy tensor T is non zero there because of the gravitational energy only? Or the tensor T is zero there?MeJennifer said:That would only be the case for imaginary test objects. General relativity has no background, objects that have mass or energy do not have worldines in spacetime they are the curvature of spacetime. In other words spacetime curvature is mass and energy and how they are distributed. By the way the curvature of spacetime can cause both attraction and repulsion.
MeJennifer said:General relativity has no background, objects that have mass or energy do not have worldines in spacetime they are the curvature of spacetime. In other words spacetime curvature is mass and energy and how they are distributed.
Antenna Guy said:That would be inertial mass.
Usaf Moji said:Wouldn't it also be gravitational mass?
Antenna Guy said:Only where the invariant/rest mass is zero. Otherwise, inertial mass is a component of gravitational/relativistic mass.
Regards,
Bill
cryptic said:Are inertial mass and gravitational mass not equal?
If You look at formula m=E/c² You can see that the kinetic energy of this mass is: E_kin=mc²/2=E/2.
Antenna Guy said:I think it is true that relativistic mass is generally equivalent to gravitational mass.
cryptic said:… If You look at formula m=E/c² You can see that the kinetic energy of this mass is: E_kin=mc²/2=E/2.
tiny-tim said:The Einsteinian definition of KE differs, at low speeds, by an additive constant, m0c2:
E = mc2 = m0c2/√(1 - v2/c2),
Antenna Guy said:I don't think there's anything "kinetic" about rest energy.
tiny-tim said:Hi cryptic! Welcome to PF!
ah … you're using the Newtonian definition of KE, E = m0v2/2.
...
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tiny-tim said:I'm just using "KE" as the opposite of "PE".![]()