Raider Posted April 30, 2003 Posted April 30, 2003 Why is that? It seems like we'd just see their future as our past but otherwise normal.
Radical Edward Posted April 30, 2003 Posted April 30, 2003 Originally posted by MajinVegeta The most important point, Radical Edward, is that if electrons did travel at c+, then, we wouldn't be able to detect them in the first place. yes we would, they would emit Cherenkov radiation, unless there is some physical law forbidding superluminal particles from interacting with subluminal and luminal particles*. If there were some law, then superluminal particles would be empirically non existant to us. Furthermore, that point has nothing to do with anything much that I have seen in the topic so far. *yes yes, wave particle duality is important. I am referring to photons as particles purely for simplicity.
MajinVegeta Posted May 3, 2003 Author Posted May 3, 2003 Originally posted by Raider Why is that? Well, my reasoning (which excluded Chrenkov radiation) was on the premise that when a particle travels faster than light, it...well E=mc2; it turns into energy. What I was forgetting was that it looses energy and as it looses more energy, it goes faster. That's the key; the particle would emit Chrenkov radiation, which I believe is blue shifted(?). It seems like we'd just see their future as our past but otherwise normal. ??? no comprehendo.
fafalone Posted May 3, 2003 Posted May 3, 2003 why would it turn into energy above c? e^2=(pc)^2+m^2c^4 and p=mv.
JaKiri Posted May 3, 2003 Posted May 3, 2003 Originally posted by MajinVegeta Well, my reasoning (which excluded Chrenkov radiation) was on the premise that when a particle travels faster than light, it...well E=mc2; it turns into energy. Nah, that's just an equivilency with c^2 as the constant. What you want are the lorenz transforms, I think they're described in a sticky on this board.
MajinVegeta Posted May 4, 2003 Author Posted May 4, 2003 I read about the Lorenz trans. and I didn't quite study them as much as I would have liked. How do you apply it to particles and the sort? fafalone: I was discussing E=mc^2 on another forum, and my interpretation of mass turning into energy when traveling at c^2 was correct. Do you have a different answer?
fafalone Posted May 4, 2003 Posted May 4, 2003 If we're always wrong and the other forums are always right, why don't you just proceed to refrain from departing this forum with magical entities who are never wrong. That interpretation is NOT correct. It implies conventional acceleration to c^2, which is obviously impossible. Your idea comes from the fact that under the current set of laws, only massless particles can travel at c. By this logic, light that's travelling slower than c could have mass. Furthermore, mass increases as speed increases; it goes towards infinity, not zero. Second of all, it's not even e=mc^2, if you use only this equation to talk about anything like this, you're wrong. You have to use the complete equation, not the simplification for circumstances that cannot exist.
JaKiri Posted May 4, 2003 Posted May 4, 2003 Originally posted by MajinVegeta fafalone: I was discussing E=mc^2 on another forum, and my interpretation of mass turning into energy when traveling at c^2 was correct. Do you have a different answer? If that's right, then I'm wrong, and all the special relativity I was taught last term was wrong. Between the University of Cambridge, Richard P Feynman (who's lectures I referred to on occasion) et al, and the other forum, I think I'll go with the physicists.
Radical Edward Posted May 5, 2003 Posted May 5, 2003 Originally posted by MajinVegeta I was discussing E=mc^2 on another forum, and my interpretation of mass turning into energy when traveling at c^2 was correct. Do you have a different answer? the full equation is: E2=p2c2 + m2c4 so the E=mc2 equivalence only applies to a particle with mass, in it's rest frame.
Radical Edward Posted May 5, 2003 Posted May 5, 2003 yopu're right of course, but that is the E=pc equivalence (having set the rest mass to zero).... sorry If I didn't make myself clear on that. I was just trying to point out to him where the E=mc2 thing comes from.
MajinVegeta Posted May 6, 2003 Author Posted May 6, 2003 Originally posted by fafalone It applies to massless particles too, since p = hf/c Massless particles? Does that mean that a particle is just made up of energy?
Radical Edward Posted May 6, 2003 Posted May 6, 2003 like a photon, they are massless... though calling them particles is a bit flawed too as a result of wave-particle duality. saying they are "made of energy" is a bit of a grey area, since what is energy? Energy is always manifest in some form, in an excitation of some field, or electron, or momentum or something, but it never exists as an entity in itself. Energy is merely a conserved quantity which may take one of many different forms. Photons in particular being excitations of the electomagnetic field.
KHinfcube22 Posted May 8, 2003 Posted May 8, 2003 Originally posted by Radical Edward like a photon, they are massless... though calling them particles is a bit flawed too as a result of wave-particle duality. saying they are "made of energy" is a bit of a grey area, since what is energy? Energy is always manifest in some form, in an excitation of some field, or electron, or momentum or something, but it never exists as an entity in itself. Energy is merely a conserved quantity which may take one of many different forms. Photons in particular being excitations of the electomagnetic field. So couldn't this mean that energy is an illusion?
JaKiri Posted May 8, 2003 Posted May 8, 2003 Originally posted by KHinfcube22 So couldn't this mean that energy is an illusion? No. Energy is conserved through all measureable interactions. Mass is just a type of energy.
MajinVegeta Posted May 8, 2003 Author Posted May 8, 2003 I've finally got it! Tell me if this is right: energy is made up of massless particles!! What confused me (and the confusion is still lingering) was that energy could be made up of particles with mass. Now, I'm wondering about the subatomic particles inside the particles that have mass. Yes, what about them? don't they have mass?
JaKiri Posted May 8, 2003 Posted May 8, 2003 Nope. Mass is a form of energy. (Your E = mc^2 and the like.) Of the other forms of energy, there are two types. The first is potential energy in a field (be it from the strong nuclear force, weak nf, electromagnetic or gravitational), the interaction taking place by carrier particles (eg. the photon, or the graviton). The second is kinetic energy, which is from movement relative to the rest frame, and so is a bit more ambiguous. ps. I'm assuming the graviton exists.
MajinVegeta Posted May 9, 2003 Author Posted May 9, 2003 Lets go step by step: Energy is made up of massless particles. Right?
Radical Edward Posted May 9, 2003 Posted May 9, 2003 Originally posted by MajinVegeta Lets go step by step: Energy is made up of massless particles. Right? no, energy doesn't exist like that. I think you are talking about photons, which are an excitation of a field, which comes under the category potential as MrL described (in this case an oscillating potential) MrL was right in saying that the three forms of energz are: mass, kinetic and potential energy.
KHinfcube22 Posted May 9, 2003 Posted May 9, 2003 What type of energy is created when one turns an object of mass into energy?
JaKiri Posted May 9, 2003 Posted May 9, 2003 Originally posted by KHinfcube22 What type of energy is created when one turns an object of mass into energy? If we're talking Fission or Fusion, kinetic and photons. If we're talking matter/antimatter reactions, photons.
MajinVegeta Posted May 10, 2003 Author Posted May 10, 2003 Originally posted by Preston Taist If you talk strings than everything is energy. Yes, but in a sense, everything is energy. Forms of energy. Originally posted by Radical Edward no, energy doesn't exist like that. I think you are talking about photons, which are an excitation of a field, which comes under the category potential as MrL described (in this case an oscillating potential) MrL was right in saying that the three forms of energz are: mass, kinetic and potential energy. What is energy made up of?
JaKiri Posted May 10, 2003 Posted May 10, 2003 Originally posted by MajinVegeta What is energy made up of? Particles, of varying spins.
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