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Posted

Gravitational Potential Energy (GPE) ~ GM2/R

 

equivalent rest-mass energy = mc2

 

GM2/R = mc2

 

m/M ~ RS/R

 

(actually, 1/5 x RS/R)

 

So, order-of-magnitude, the rest-mass equivalent, of some self-gravitating body, is a similar fraction of the total actual mass, as that body's Schwarzschild radius is, to its actual physical radius.

Posted (edited)

Gravitational Potential Energy (GPE) ~ GM2/R

 

equivalent rest-mass energy = mc2

 

GM2/R = mc2

 

m/M ~ RS/R

 

(actually, 1/5 x RS/R)

 

So, order-of-magnitude, the rest-mass equivalent, of some self-gravitating body, is a similar fraction of the total actual mass, as that body's Schwarzschild radius is, to its actual physical radius.

I assume that in the above "M" is the gravitational mass while "m" is the inertial mass. If so, your conjecture is many orders of magnitude off since it is well known (google "Eotvos experiment", "Einstein equivalence principle") that the two are equal to a very high order of precision.

Edited by xyzt
  • 3 weeks later...
Posted (edited)

no -- the amount of anti-matter required to obliterate a gravity-bound ball-shaped world/planet

In this case you would have indeed:

 

[math]m=M \frac{r_s}{R}[/math]

 

For example, for Earth, the ratio [math]\frac{r_s}{R}=\frac{10^{-2}}{6.4*10^6} =\frac{1}{6.4*10^8}[/math]

 

Thus, [math]m=10^{16} kg[/math]

Edited by xyzt
Posted

very vaguely, about a billionth of an earth-mass of AM => "Aldebaran"

 

such seemed readily rememberable, "mass ratio (AM:M) ~ radius ratio (RS:R)", and seemingly works well(-est) for "classical" or "sub-relativistic" ball-shaped bodies

 

 

In this case you would have indeed:

 

[math]m=M \frac{r_s}{R}[/math]

 

For example, for Earth, the ratio [math]\frac{r_s}{R}=\frac{10^{-2}}{6.4*10^6} =\frac{1}{6.4*10^8}[/math]

 

Thus, [math]m=10^{16} kg[/math]

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