mezarashi said:
How do you explain the annihilation of an electron-positron pair?
Assumption: To make the derivationn easy we assum that all observations will be made from the zero momentum frame.
Since each of the two particles have the same proper mass then for momentum to be conserved the two photons produced in the resulting annihilation must have the same frequenecy,
f and therefore the same energy
E = hf and hence same momentum |
p| = E/c.
According to the mass = relativistic mass people: The mass of each photon is defined as the ratio of the magnitude of the photon's momentum to the speed of light. This equals the ratio of the energy over c
2, i.e. m = hf/c
2. Since energy is conserved then so too is the total (relativistic) mass. Actually the conservation of mass can be proven to be a consequence of two facts (1) that (mc,
p) is a 4-vector and (2) that
p is conserved.
If you question whether a photon has a non-zero mass recall the definition of mass; m = p/v (E.g.
Special Relativity, A.P. French, page 16 - See footnote #2 as well). Almost any text that uses rel-mass will explain that fact
According to the mass = magnitude of 4-momentum 4-vector - The magnitude of the 4-vector is simply proportional to the energy of the system. For the energy to remain constant then so too does the system mass.
For all the glorious details please see -
http://www.geocities.com/physics_world/sr/invariant_mass.htm
Ohanian has a nice discussion in his GR text.
Pete