Memento Mori
New member
f is frequency, h is Planck's constant. hf is just the product of h and f.
Oh yeah. Sorry, I don't see Planck's constant enough to remember it as being h. We need more letters!
f is frequency, h is Planck's constant. hf is just the product of h and f.
Strong work, Clete.The first thing that hit me is the implied contradiction.
If p=mv
and
If E2 = m2c4 + p2c2
then
E2 = m2c4 + (mv)2c2
then substituting M=0 yields...
E2 = 0c4 + 0c2
or
E2 = 0
or
E = 0
Then taking your math quoted above...
p = E/c
p = 0/c
p = 0
No matter how you slice it, the answer comes up zero. Zero mass = zero energy. Zero energy = no photon.
As far as I know, the mathematics is sound. This would be the first thing physicists would pick up on.Clete said:It seems Relativity, in spite of its usefulness in predicting certain things, is riddled with contradictions, both in common sense and mathematics.
I agree. Relativity, like the models before it, and like all scientific theories, is only an approximation of the truth. As our ability to precisely measure the universe continues to evolve, so will our models evolve towards ever increasing accuracy in explaining and predicting natural phenomena.Clete said:One might argue that Relativity is the best we've got but I think its way over stepping to hold to the idea that Relativity has been proven to be factual in every respect. The truth is not contradictory and thus, no matter how much one might like Einstein's theory, it can and almost certainly will be replaced with something far superior that not only explains the phenomena that Relativity accurately predicts but does so without all the obvious contradictions.
Who appointed you "the man who determines what translates into a physical reality"? When our models predict things we can wrap our heads around, you have no problem with it. Yet when they predict something counter-intuitive, suddenly we deem that part of the model a mathematical oddity? Physics equations are all-or-nothing. They either describe the real universe, or they don't. You don't get to pick and chose which part of them describes reality and which parts don't.Do we not measure photons by recording their impact on film media? If they leave impact markers then I would expect them to have mass. If they have mass then they can be affected by gravity. If there is a prediction that mrest = 0 then it seems like it's only another mathematical necessity that never translates into a physical reality.
That's what you would expect. But we already know they carry momentum because they carry energy, and energy has a mass equivalence. Photons have mass equivalence. In other words, imagine a box filled with photons bouncing off mirrors inside the box. In this case we say that the photons contribute to the mass of the system because of their energy contribution to the system -- though it is not technically correct to say that the photons have mass in and of themselves.Stripe said:If they leave impact markers then I would expect them to have mass.
Who appointed you "the man who determines what translates into a physical reality"? When our models predict things we can wrap our heads around, you have no problem with it. Yet when they predict something counter-intuitive, suddenly we deem that part of the model a mathematical oddity? Physics equations are all-or-nothing. They either describe the real universe, or they don't. You don't get to pick and chose which part of them describes reality and which parts don't.
Furthermore, remember that photons can either be measured in discrete particles or as electromagnetic radiation in the form of waves. Are you now going to argue that all electromagnetic radiation has mass?
That's what you would expect. But we already know they carry momentum because they carry energy, and energy has a mass equivalence. Photons have mass equivalence. In other words, imagine a box filled with photons bouncing off mirrors inside the box. In this case we say that the photons contribute to the mass of the system because of their energy contribution to the system -- though it is not technically correct to say that the photons have mass in and of themselves.
...
Also, if you had any logical and critical thinking skills you would recognize that mass doesn't change, not even from rest to motion.:dunce::duh:
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You're perfectly content accepting that photons have mass because they have momentum, and because classically momentum is defined in terms of mass and velocity. So you assume that the Newtonian version of momentum describes reality and you're actually using this Newtonian model as a basis for rejecting the relativistic model. You don't seem content to accept the relativistic definition of momentum as E/c, which implies that photons can have momentum without having a rest mass.Stripe said:Don't be dense, Johnny. I'm not picking and choosing anything. I am perfectly justified in rejecting the name given to a mathematical process as a description of physical reality. We can add and subtract numbers to describe simple economics, that does not mean we believe there are crates of negative amounts of certain goods on container ships somewhere.
What's your justification, then?Stripe said:I am perfectly justified in rejecting the name given to a mathematical process as a description of physical reality.
Photons are both waves and particles -- depending on how you measure them. Do you accept, then, that all electromagnetic radiation, even in its wave form, has mass?Stripe said:I'm not entirely sure what you mean, why it's important or where this came from. I'm trying to follow the discussion as best I can, but you're going to have to explain this a bit more.
General relativity also says that what we call gravity is effecting photons. No one is disagreeing with that. General relativity goes a step further then your proposition and seeks to explain what gravity actually is. In the process it makes a number of testable predictions -- including but not limited to exactly how and to what extent gravity effects our experience of time. That's why its a vastly superior model to absolutely no explanation, which you seem to be supporting.Stripe said:It seems, whatever reality is, that photons are affected by gravity. Whether that is because they have mass or because they have something else is kinda irrelevant to my side of the discussion. Given ignorance, I would far prefer to assume something known (gravity) is affecting them than assume something unknown is.
No one is assuming it is something unknown.Stripe said:If you're going to assume it is something unknown then you could call it anything. You call it "curved space", but what would be the difference if it was named "cluttered space"?
Photons are both waves and particles -- depending on how you measure them. Do you accept, then, that all electromagnetic radiation, even in its wave form, has mass?
General relativity also says that what we call gravity is effecting photons. No one is disagreeing with that. General relativity goes a step further then your proposition and seeks to explain what gravity actually is. In the process it makes a number of testable predictions -- including but not limited to exactly how and to what extent gravity effects our experience of time. That's why its a vastly superior model to absolutely no explanation, which you seem to be supporting.
Then I must be misunderstanding what a frame is. There must a "different place" for each clock to reside so that one can age while the other doesn't.That is the answer, essentially. The clock's never leave each others "frame", though, as Bob suggests they should.
I'd like to test metabolism at the very least. A living quarters with many life forms would be even better. It is a way to test multiple "clocks" as it were.What would you like to test? Propose a test for us. We can accelerate particles to very close to the speed of light. If we count the stationary measuring device as one observer, and the particles whirling around at close to the speed of light as the other, then we've got two observers moving towards each other very, very fast.
Do we not measure photons by recording their impact on film media? If they leave impact markers then I would expect them to have mass. If they have mass then they can be affected by gravity. If there is a prediction that mrest = 0 then it seems like it's only another mathematical necessity that never translates into a physical reality.
Said simply, light is always moving and will thus always be affected by gravity.
Actually, I think they have succeeded in bringing a photon to a complete stop.
Don't ask me how. I just remember reading something about it.
More importantly, in my view, is the modern physicist's willingness to abandon common sense and the simple rules of rational thought in order to stay on the road they are currently on.
"Once you can accept the universe as matter expanding into nothing that is something, wearing stripes with plaid comes easy." - Albert Einstein (emphasis added)
The willingness to accept contradiction and to intentionally create one paradox after another makes for really cute quotes, not to mention questionable fashion choices, but it can hardly be considered true science, or any other sort of truth for that matter.
Photons have no mass but photons have momentum that requires mass (by definition).
Photons not only have momentum but angular momentum which means something has to be spinning. Well, what the hell is spinning if a photon is entirely energy, which is what the Relativistic solution for its momentum (i.e. E = pc) presumes?
"But wait!", the modern physicist protests. "Photons are both waves and particles -- depending on how you measure them."
Do you see the problem with this?
If you look at photons a particular way, they look exactly like particles. If you look at them another way, they look exactly like waves. This much is true but photons ARE NOT both waves and particles! And it is precisely this erroneous leap of logic that physicists make that has derailed the whole of science.
I understand the need to go with observation over theory but I do not understand the need to make irrational conclusions based on those observations. I will concede that having done so has lead to some amazing discoveries and that a very large portion of our modern society exists because of such "out of the box" thinking but getting good results from bad behavior does not turn the bad behavior into good behavior. Good science would be looking at the contradictions, prying at them, pounding away at them until they crack, not blithely accepting them as irrational facts of life as though there really were such a thing.
Another problem with photons is how physicists will concede that they probably have some mass while moving (as Johnny said, the zero mass idea has to do with when a photon is at rest). Well if a moving photon has mass, how could it move at the speed of light? Wouldn't you have to multiply that mass by infinity once it reached the speed of light? Isn't that the reason the speed of light cannot be reached by anything else but light?
Anyway, I wish I could go more into that issue but, as usual, I'm out of time. I'll have to leave it that and let you guys hash it out for a while.
Resting in Him,
Clete
P.S. I'd hate for anyone to think I've plagarized anything so in the interest of full disclosure (which I think is rather silly in the context of such an informal internet chat), I found the article I was thinking of when I mentioned that I had read something about bringing a photon to a complete stop and it inspired much of this post. Here's a link to that web page.
Very well then. I would add "relativistic" in front of the word mass in your sentence, but otherwise I agree.Stripe said:I'm prepared to accept that photons have mass and the only time they may not have mass is when they are at rest. I'm also prepared to accept that photons are never at rest
Well, no, I couldn't. Curved space is the best way to describe what the models imply. Einsteins general relativity is actually a bunch of differential geometry which describes the relationship between mass and the shape of space. It doesn't just say "curved spacetime explains everything" and leave it at that. In other words, if you take a gravitational field, Einstein's general relativity explains exactly what the geometric configuration of space is that produces what we feel as the gravitational field. Then, it allows you to precisely predict the behavior of a photon passing through that geometric configuration of space, it allows you to predict what massive bodies would behave like passing through that geometry, it allows you to predict how clocks will run in that configuration, etc. It's like Newtons equations on steroids. Newton just observed relationships. Einstein provided a rationale, which explained the relationships to far greater accuracy. Again, no matter how counter-intuitive, it makes testable predictions.Stripe said:You call this explanation "curved space" and claim that it explains exactly what is happening. But you could just have easily called it anything and have claimed it explained what is going on.
I know. That's absurd and completely anti-science.Stripe said:I believe it is possible to arrive at relativistic accuracy by using a mathematical system called Adjusted Newtonian Mechanics based on the assumption that gravity affects the instruments we use to measure time and space.
Which is exactly what they should do if the road they're on continues to make ever more precise predictions.More importantly, in my view, is the modern physicist's willingness to abandon common sense and the simple rules of rational thought in order to stay on the road they are currently on.
Technically, according to our models, a massive body can move at the speed of light, it just can't be accelerated to the speed of light.Clete said:Well if a moving photon has mass, how could it move at the speed of light? Wouldn't you have to multiply that mass by infinity once it reached the speed of light? Isn't that the reason the speed of light cannot be reached by anything else but light?
I've read it several times, jackass.Too bad that you didn't read, or at least didn't understand, the answer posted in the source that you quoted.
Scientist did not come up with these theories in order to come up with "cute quotes".
If common sense were all they were bucking against I wouldn't have a problem, its the law of contradiction that they're ignoring that I have a problem with.They came up with these theories because the old theories, the ones that are more intuitive and fit with your (and most people's) idea of "common sense" don't work.
No kidding. But that isn't an excuse to leap off into irrationality. Indeed, simply stating "The old theories do not explain the observed experimental results." is itself a rationally unfounded conclusion. It would be more accurate to say that we have not yet figured out a way to reconcile the old theories with observed experimental results.The old theories do not explain the observed experimental results.
Actually they only account for them, they do not explain them. No one can explain how space, which is nothing, can be bent. The theories state that space is bent but do not explain HOW or WHY it is bent.The new theories explain them quite well, and make predictions that have been tested.
This begs the question. I am not going to expain to you why. Figure it out for yourself - or not.The new theories work. They are "true" in the sense that any scientific theory is true.
"To me" is irrelevant. The truth is NOT contradictory. Your so called science says otherwise. It is therefore false - by definition. That isn't my opinion, its a fact.It is unfortunate that they don't "make sense" to you.
More question begging B.S.That is largely a result of ignorance, and that can be cured by learning. Read. Take a course in modern physics.
Did you even read my post?And give science and scientists a little credit. They have managed to accomplish a thing or two over the past few centuries.
That isn't the claim I made.Sure, all of these things present serious problems for our brains. We are ill-equipped to comprehend them, let alone even imagine them. But to claim our inability to comprehend these ideas as a basis for rejecting them is, in my opinion, silly.
Experimentation could not be done without REASON! And modern physicists use the very experimentation that their reason says they should perform and evaluate the results of that experimentation with reason and then come up with a conclusion that states that they should throw out reason!Indeed our only guiding light is to experiment, the foundation of science.
I repent of having used the phrase "common sense". What I'm talking about is the very objective, absolutely undeniable, unflappable, irrefragable laws of reason.If a model is incomprehensible yet consistently yields strong experimental results, then who are we to claim the idea is wrong because it does not fit in with what we know from our common experience?
Once again, just to repeat for emphasis, I'm not talking about complete understanding. If that were the case then nothing could be considered science because there is very little, if anything, that we completely understand in every respect. I'm simply stating that we should not accept as fact that which is contradictory, like "a photon is both a particle and a wave", or "space is something that is nothing", for example.We are nothing in this universe. We inhabit but a tiny tiny fraction of a fraction of the scales on which this universe operates, yet we are attempting to model the whole universe. It's silly to expect that everything should make complete sense to us.
That isn't the claim I made.
Do you know what the law of contradiction is? I'm talking not about our ability to fully grasp every detail of some particular phenomena, I'm talking about our ability to know something - anything. I might not be able to understand and explain precisely what a photon is but what I do know is that it is what it is. That might sound like a silly, obvious thing to say, and indeed I hope that it does sound rather obvious because that is nothing more than one of the laws of reason. Its called the Law of Identity, which states that a thing is what it is and/or that a thing is not something other than what it is. In other words, we can KNOW that a claim which presents a contradiction is a false claim in some respect. But Quantum Mechanics and Relativity insist that contradiction is at the heart of the very nature of nature! And my point is that once we are willing to throw the simple laws of reason out the window we not only throw science out the window but all knowledge of any kind, whether scientific or otherwise!
Experimentation could not be done without REASON! And modern physicists use the very experimentation that their reason says they should perform and evaluate the results of that experimentation with reason and then come up with a conclusion that states that they should throw out reason!
Are you seriously telling me that you don't see a problem with that?
I repent of having used the phrase "common sense". What I'm talking about is the very objective, absolutely undeniable, unflappable, irrefragable laws of reason.
Once again, just to repeat for emphasis, I'm not talking about complete understanding. If that were the case then nothing could be considered science because there is very little, if anything, that we completely understand in every respect. I'm simply stating that we should not accept as fact that which is contradictory, like "a photon is both a particle and a wave", or "space is something that is nothing", for example.
Resting in Him,
Clete
Well, no, I couldn't. Curved space is the best way to describe what the models imply.
Einsteins general relativity is actually a bunch of differential geometry which describes the relationship between mass and the shape of space.
...[relativity] is like Newtons equations on steroids.
Why? It's exactly what happened (you just admitted as much above). The only difference is the name.I know. That's absurd and completely anti-science.
Really? Why?If that were the case, particle accelerators should be able to easily accelerate particles to far beyond light speed.
Then explain how something has energy without mass...That equation doesn't mean a particle must have mass to have energy. It only tells you how much energy a given relativistic mass is equal to.
How does a magnet work?If gravity didn't propagate through space, how could it affect anything?
And?In the following post from chair's Science, Intuition and "it doesn't make sense" you said you reject the theory of relativity not because you don't understand it, but because you do:
lain:
What is it?Space being nothing, for instance.
:dunce::duh:Do you need mass to have potential energy?
In that scenario the energy belongs to the charge.That's patently wrong. A particle can have potential energy because of its charge, for instance.
:blabla:
:thumb:Before posting what I said about photons having momentum I did a quick search just to make sure I hadn't gotten the idea confused with another and I came across the same information on Wikipedia. The first thing that hit me is the implied contradiction.
If p=mv
and
If E2 = m2c4 + p2c2
then
E2 = m2c4 + (mv)2c2
then substituting M=0 yields...
E2 = 0c4 + 0c2
or
E2 = 0
or
E = 0
Then taking your math quoted above...
p = E/c
p = 0/c
p = 0
No matter how you slice it, the answer comes up zero. Zero mass = zero energy. Zero energy = no photon.
How can a non photon with no energy have momentum?
It seems Relativity, in spite of its usefulness in predicting certain things, is riddled with contradictions, both in common sense and mathematics. In short, my position is that there is something about Relativity that gets things right but it seems like it does so in spite of itself. As though its getting to some aspect of the truth through the back door, if you will.
One might argue that Relativity is the best we've got but I think its way over stepping to hold to the idea that Relativity has been proven to be factual in every respect. The truth is not contradictory and thus, no matter how much one might like Einstein's theory, it can and almost certainly will be replaced with something far superior that not only explains the phenomena that Relativity accurately predicts but does so without all the obvious contradictions.
Resting in Him,
Clete
Care to explain how something with no mass can gain mass simply because it moves?Well, duh, you're using the formula for momentum of a particle with mass on a particle with no mass.
So, Newton was wrong and Einstein is correct?Strong work, Clete.
However, you've substituted a newtonian equation (p=mv) into a relativistic equation and noted the apparent contradiction. This is to be expected when using "outdated" Newtonian equations. In order to use the Newtonian equation to define the momentum of a photon, you have to use the photon's relativistic mass, mrel (m = E / c2). When physicists say that photons have no mass, they are referring to the photon's rest mass, or mrest.
This is something that is really tangential to the rest of this thread. Massless photons are not a direct prediction of relativity, so I think that you are misguided when (or if) you point out this as a contradiction of relativity. Massless photons are a prediction of our current models, and, as noted, we are able to put an upper limit on the mass of photons by indirectly measuring their effects. Currently this upper limit on photon rest mass is over ten orders of magnitude less massive than electrons.
Relativity actually explains how photons have momentum by defining them in terms of relativistic mass via the mass-energy equivalence principle. Without relativity, the momentum of photons would be unexplained. Again, relativity does not specifically predict that photons have no rest mass -- that's something born out of other models.
Perhaps one day we will discover that photons do, in fact, have a rest mass. This will require adjusting a lot of what we know about the universe to account for it, but I have no doubt that some young physicists would be up to the challenge.
As far as I know, the mathematics is sound. This would be the first thing physicists would pick up on.
I agree. Relativity, like the models before it, and like all scientific theories, is only an approximation of the truth. As our ability to precisely measure the universe continues to evolve, so will our models evolve towards ever increasing accuracy in explaining and predicting natural phenomena.
Relativity is almost certainly not the whole picture, as it has yet to be reconciled with some aspects of quantum mechanics. Quantum mechanics, like relativity, has volumes of evidence supporting the current models (and perhaps to a far greater precision). One of these theories needs to be modified, and I have little doubt that within our life time someone will figure out how to make these them compatible. But it will not come without adjusting our current views, even if only slightly.
You are willfully ignorant.Go read a book on the topic. You are woefully ignorant.
...Then explain how something has energy without mass...
...Care to explain how something with no mass can gain mass simply because it moves?...
So, Newton was wrong and Einstein is correct?
Not according to the tests I was given in second grade.To you, and in terms you can comprehend? My dear Lighthouse, such a feat is impossible.
Understanding and education are not the same thing.Wrong. They are both correct, however, one is more accurate than the other. If you had a basic junior college level understanding of the scientific method and science philosophy, you would have never asked such a question.