What Are the Effects of Mass and Energy on the Universe's Future?

DMuitW
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Hi,

I've been wondering about some things;
(sorry, introduction is about astronomy, but rest is physics)

The future of the universe is determined by the quantity of mass.
Lets take the example of the big crunch, in which gravity will essentially get the upperhand.

Now, One pointed out to me that if mass is equivalent to energy through the famous E=mc² theory, then when we assume that if everything changes into the form of energy (all mass into energy), what will this have as implications to that big crunch?

I did some research and i found that essentially, in Einsteins theory of general relativity, mass is needed to form gravitational fields (or the distortion of space-time).

Apart from other terms as quantum gravity, which implies gravitons and possibly gravity waves, I thus wonder whether pure energy (like photons, with mass 0) has an implication on gravity (can it make gravitational fields equivalent to those of mass) without the need of the pure energy to convert into solid mass

Thanks!
 
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DMuitW said:
I thus wonder whether pure energy (like photons, with mass 0) has an implication on gravity (can it make gravitational fields equivalent to those of mass) without the need of the pure energy to convert into solid mass

special relativity says that intertia of a system taking energy of E increases by \frac{E}{c^2}. considering a a single photon, this inertia seems to be \frac{hf}{c^2}, which can cause a distortion in space-time grid, albeit it can usually be ignored.
 
DMuitW said:
I thus wonder whether pure energy (like photons, with mass 0) has an implication on gravity (can it make gravitational fields equivalent to those of mass) without the need of the pure energy to convert into solid mass

Check these threads:

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=66116&highlight=photons+mass
Two
 
Thread 'Can this experiment break Lorentz symmetry?'
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Insights auto threads is broken atm, so I'm manually creating these for new Insight articles. The Relativator was sold by (as printed) Atomic Laboratories, Inc. 3086 Claremont Ave, Berkeley 5, California , which seems to be a division of Cenco Instruments (Central Scientific Company)... Source: https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/relativator-circular-slide-rule-simulated-with-desmos/ by @robphy
In Philippe G. Ciarlet's book 'An introduction to differential geometry', He gives the integrability conditions of the differential equations like this: $$ \partial_{i} F_{lj}=L^p_{ij} F_{lp},\,\,\,F_{ij}(x_0)=F^0_{ij}. $$ The integrability conditions for the existence of a global solution ##F_{lj}## is: $$ R^i_{jkl}\equiv\partial_k L^i_{jl}-\partial_l L^i_{jk}+L^h_{jl} L^i_{hk}-L^h_{jk} L^i_{hl}=0 $$ Then from the equation: $$\nabla_b e_a= \Gamma^c_{ab} e_c$$ Using cartesian basis ## e_I...
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