[serious];48949445 said:
There is no such thing as "near infinite mass" Any finite mass is infinitely distant from infinite mass. We do see increases in apparent mass at high velocities of course. This has NOTHING to do with statistics so I'm not sure why that's in there. E=MC^2 "happens" regardless of velocity by the way. In fact, relativistic effects (the phrase you were looking for) happen at any velocity. Since all motion is relative, there exists both a rest frame and a multitude of non rest frames for any object. As far as the energy of the vacuum (the term for the spontaneous creation and destruction of virtual particles and antiparticles) that has nothing to do with E=MC^2 so again, I'm not sure why you are bringing it up.
THe whole paragraph reads like a word salad. You bounce around between unrelated topics misusing terms and failing to tie the disjointed concepts together. It is impossible to accelerate any massive particle to the speed of light. This would require an infinite amount of energy. Photons travel the speed of light only by virtue of being massless particles. Gravitation works on relativistic mass. We have observed proof of this via gravitational lensing. if a massive particle reaches the speed of light, it will have infinite energy, infinite mass, and infinite gravitation. and what, pray tell, do you think the difference between the two is?No. This has already been explained to you by numerous people numerous times. The energy of any particle/system is finite The mass of any particle/system is finite. In fact, the total energy (including mass) of a system is invariant in any given inertial reference frame.
And I'm sorry, some one else can sort out the rest of the mess you've posted.
Usually when someone starts saying something like, "What you're saying sounds like word salad. You aren't making any sense! Can you please clarify this?! You don't know what you're talking about!" it's always symptomatic of intellectual pride. The general idea being that the individual is just skimming over the unclear post without reading it, thinking, "this guy doesn't know what he's talking about, so I'll just skim through it to look for things to criticize..." The truth of the matter, however, is it's always the guy with the intellectual pride who has the stunted intellect. As you will learn in the proceeding posts (and further research on your part), you were premature to criticize my postings. Intellectual pride (all of it unwarranted, BTW) will further prevent you from issuing the apology.
Only critical, forced reading on your part will get you to this position (the position of learning you are wrong, followed by you learning something new, and my position). Will you let yourself think critically for once? Or, are you just going to skim through this post of mine like you did all the other ones?
Here is what I said that induced the confusion. I'll go through it step-by-step:
I think the basic idea that things that are illegal in classical mechanics can be legal in QM.
Something like spontaneous particle/antiparticle creation is illegal in classical mechanics but legal in quantum mechanics. Classical mechanics is that branch of physics up to but not including relativity, time-wise.
Knowing that, the idea says that when the mass gets accelerated to near light-speed (hence acquires near-infinite mass), statistics takes over and allows this E=MC2 to happen, provided the energy presents itself from the mass before it can even be observed.
QM (Quantum Mechanics) is a purely statistical enterprise. Determining where photons land on a screen in a diffraction experiment is determined by statistics, because we can never know where photons land on a screen. We can only use something called sum over histories to get an approximation where the photons will land. Because of this, QM becomes a science of statistics. So when I said, "Statistics takes over", I mean uncertainty with regards to the mass (infinite or finite?) of the particle takes over; we can't know with certainty (and never can) whether or not the particle acquires infinite mass before turning into energy during the E=MC2 process.
We also see violations of this type in the virtual vacuum, where particles and antiparticles materialize and annihilate so quickly that the process--illegal in CM--takes place without the possibility of observing it.
Again, I reaffirm the idea that illegal phenomena that happens according to classical mechanics is legal in quantum mechanics. Again, I use the idea of virtual particle pairs.
I have to make the distinction between rest mass and relativistic mass.
What I did is I entered the number "1" for v (the speed of the massive particle), which as you can see is the speed of light. Notice how the Lorentz Transformation generated an "Infinity" as the result. That means that if you accelerate a particle to the speed of light, its mass becomes infinite. I didn't say this; Albert Einstein said it.
Rest mass is different than relativistic mass. The former is the mass of an inertial reference frame that's not really moving very fast compared to the reference frame that's carrying out the observation on it. The latter--relativistic mass--is a mass that is moving and accelerating very quickly relative to the person observing it.
I entered v=c in the program at hyperphysics.com and it outputted "infinity."
So what happens to your "incredibly fatal amount of energy for all existence?" Since mass is simply defined as, "A resistance to a change in motion," there is nothing fatal about the amount of this energy; the mass, when it = c, simply becomes resistant to any further attempts at changing its' motion, that's all. If we have an infinite gravitational mass, then things might get scary. But in the meantime, we're discussing inertial and not gravitational masses. There is a difference.
Inertial mass = resistance to a change in motion. If it's infinite, no big deal.
Gravitational mass = how much you weigh. IF it's infinite, then the Universe has problems.
Here I illustrate the difference between inertial and gravitational masses. One requires an acceleration, the other does not.
Yes, per the equation above (Einsteins not mine so don't blame me).
Or anything else that moves at light-speed for that matter. P=0 when v=c.
Again, when v = c, P will always = 0. For this reason there was a misinterpretation on your part with regards to how you thought I was interpreting the lorentz contractions.
Here I tell Cabal that everything I am discussing is extrapolated from Einstein's equations and not my own.
I inputted values into his equations and got infinity as a result.
I didn't say mass becomes infinite before it turns into energy, Einstein said it. He has my unbounded admiration because so.
You're correct and I am guilty in being unclear. Black holes can't have infinite gravitational mass. Why? Because the idea would violate conservation laws, that's why. If a very large star collapses to make a black hole, then the gravitational mass of that new black hole can only be as much as the mass of the star that did the collapsing; increasing gravitational mass to the system violates conservation of mass.
A black hole does have infinite
inertial mass, however. That's why a black hole's density may also be infinite.
In other words, it's technically impossible to move a black hole using any means. Whichever direction the star was moving at the time of its collapse, that's the direction it will move and continue to move as a black hole.
Here I clarify my discussion on masses, and that I should have said "gravitational mass" or "inertial mass" when discussing the mass of a black hole.
I hope this helps. If it doesn't, you are either still reading it too fast, or your understanding of these matters is below what is required for you to participate constructively in this thread.
Everything I have been discussing is on an elementary, layman level. I can't see why we are having the problems in comprehension.