Maybe this should have gone in the "ask a physicist anything" thread, but I was afraid it would get lost there.
Does a hot object have more mass than a cold object? I think the answer is yes, but thought I would check.
Suppose we have two equal quantities of steel at 0 C. By whatever means (for example, we weigh them and use a gravitational law to equate that to mass) we find that both have a mass of 1 kg. We then heat one of the steel masses to 1000 C. Does it now have more mass (trivial as the difference may be)?
And, as it radiates heat and cools back to 0 C, does it lose that mass until it is again equal to the mass we did not heat?
Does a hot object have more mass than a cold object? I think the answer is yes, but thought I would check.
Suppose we have two equal quantities of steel at 0 C. By whatever means (for example, we weigh them and use a gravitational law to equate that to mass) we find that both have a mass of 1 kg. We then heat one of the steel masses to 1000 C. Does it now have more mass (trivial as the difference may be)?
And, as it radiates heat and cools back to 0 C, does it lose that mass until it is again equal to the mass we did not heat?