Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
No Gravity From Photons
47 Answers
A photon has energy. Why does it not generate a gravitational field? Energy = mass.
Answers
"Energy = mass" is sadly misleading. Photons have energy, but an individual photon has no mass. This isn't a contradictio n. A more complete statement is something closer to "energy = mass + momentum" (although even this isn't strictly correct, but I don't see a need to be more precise in this conceptual discussion). Gravity is sourced really from energy,...
08:39 Wed 09th Nov 2022
well we have a particle physicist on the books so I will let him explain. Photons were once thought to be particles and were boingy
You know those spinning vanes in glass spheres? easy to explain
much more difficult with wave packets
Huyghens 1690 was a the great guy for waves, To explain wave splitting ( easy for waves) newton postulated easy reflection/easy transmission and even tried to measure the relative times !
easy now with particle - wave duality
and whilst youre at it - the energy doesnt dissipate in a vacuum as it travels along - sound for example gets softer and dies away
You know those spinning vanes in glass spheres? easy to explain
much more difficult with wave packets
Huyghens 1690 was a the great guy for waves, To explain wave splitting ( easy for waves) newton postulated easy reflection/easy transmission and even tried to measure the relative times !
easy now with particle - wave duality
and whilst youre at it - the energy doesnt dissipate in a vacuum as it travels along - sound for example gets softer and dies away
Not sure where your energy = mass comes from ... e = mc squared maybe....
Will attach a link
https:/ /wtamu. edu/~cb aird/sq /2014/0 4/01/li ght-has -no-mas s-so-it -also-h as-no-e nergy-a ccordin g-to-ei nstein- but-how -can-su nlight- warm-th e-earth -withou t-energ y/
Will attach a link
https:/
"Energy = mass" is sadly misleading. Photons have energy, but an individual photon has no mass. This isn't a contradiction. A more complete statement is something closer to "energy = mass + momentum" (although even this isn't strictly correct, but I don't see a need to be more precise in this conceptual discussion).
Gravity is sourced really from energy, rather than from just mass. So photons are perfectly capable of responding to, and (by symmetry) creating, gravitational fields.
They are, however, tiny in comparison to larger sources. Because the "G/c^4" in Zacs-master's equation is so tiny, you need a *lot* of energy/mass in a given place to have any notable effects.
If you wanted any more details I'd have to do more digging.
Gravity is sourced really from energy, rather than from just mass. So photons are perfectly capable of responding to, and (by symmetry) creating, gravitational fields.
They are, however, tiny in comparison to larger sources. Because the "G/c^4" in Zacs-master's equation is so tiny, you need a *lot* of energy/mass in a given place to have any notable effects.
If you wanted any more details I'd have to do more digging.
Here's a paper I recently wrote on the subject ☺
https:/ /tinyur l.com/5 fx6ukpw
https:/
Rev Green, my mistake, try this one:
https:/ /tinyur l.com/4 r7w3ary
I do so many it's hard to keep track ☻
https:/
I do so many it's hard to keep track ☻