Magical Realist
Valued Senior Member
Can someone explain to a layman the concept of rest mass of a photon and how. if a photon has mass, it is able to move at the speed of light?
Photons are force carriers of the electromagnetic force, which has infinite range. As such, they must be massless. The same thing goes for gravitons, if they exist. The carrier particles for the strong and weak forces have mass, which means those are short-range forces.Can someone explain to a layman the concept of rest mass of a photon and how. if a photon has mass, it is able to move at the speed of light?
Looking at some ideas about photons having a tiny microscopic itisy bitsy wee bit of mass with a decay 1/2 life longer than the estimated life of the UniverseBut relativity prevents anything from moving faster than light, so massless particles all move at the speed of light - the fastest speed there is.
Photons are force carriers of the electromagnetic force, which has infinite range. As such, they must be massless. The same thing goes for gravitons, if they exist. The carrier particles for the strong and weak forces have mass, which means those are short-range forces.
Another thing to say, in light of the discovery of the Higgs field, is that photons don't couple to the Higgs field, so therefore they are massless.
As for moving at the speed of light, every massless particle must move at the speed of light.
This might be a bad way to think about it, but consider Newton's law a=F/m. If you apply force F to mass m, its acceleration is a. If m happens to be zero, then you get infinite acceleration with any applied force. But relativity prevents anything from moving faster than light, so massless particles all move at the speed of light - the fastest speed there is.
If a photon has no mass, then how can it be affected by gravity?
IMO, the speed of light is the fastest possible way reality is able to refresh itself via quantum change.Looking at some ideas about photons having a tiny microscopic itisy bitsy wee bit of mass with a decay 1/2 life longer than the estimated life of the Universe
Along with a WHY
Why is the speed of light what it is? I can understand it cannot be Zero or Infinity but why has it settled for the speed it has? Why not say 100 klm faster, or slower?
Is there some reason/restriction which makes the speed of light what it is?
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Causal dynamical triangulation (abbreviated as CDT) theorized by Renate Loll, Jan Ambjørn and Jerzy Jurkiewicz, and popularized by Fotini Markopoulou and Lee Smolin, is an approach to quantum gravity that like loop quantum gravity is background independent.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causal_dynamical_triangulationThis means that it does not assume any pre-existing arena (dimensional space), but rather attempts to show how the spacetime fabric itself evolves.
Possibility. Not heard of that as explanationIMO, the speed of light is the fastest possible way reality is able to refresh itself via quantum change.
This is a hard science forum, and the OP is asking for a basic explanation of a basic principle. Perhaps we could forego the more ... speculative opinions?IMO, the speed of light is the fastest possible way reality is able to refresh itself via quantum change.
In Einstein's universe, gravity is not a force that affects mass; gravity is a curvature of space time. Photons travel along a geodesic through this curved space time - essentially, the geodesic is what is seen by the photon as "straight".If a photon has no mass, then how can it be affected by gravity?
Photons travel along a geodesic through this curved space time - essentially, the geodesic is what is seen by the photon as "straight".
It can't - it wouldn't be a photon - so it's a moot question.If a photon was standing still, would it still be affected by gravity?
"Light is never really "standing still" despite the article headlines. It can be stored and sections of the wave nature, overtaking other parts of the spectrum...
While a photon is never standing still, photons/light do affect the geometry of spacetime [gravity] ever so slightly, due to their momentum. The same reason that light sails work.If a photon was standing still, would it still be affected by gravity?
Photons/light follow geodesics in spacetime. It is pointless asking about time from the frame of reference of a photon as there is no such thing in that frame. A photon [from its own frame] will cross the universe in an instant.Does a photon travel along a worldline in spacetime? I thought time ceased to exist at the speed of light.
Photons/light follow geodesics in spacetime. It is pointless asking about time from the frame of reference of a photon as there is no such thing in that frame. A photon [from its own frame] will cross the universe in an instant.
https://phys.org/news/2014-05-does-light-experience-time.html
Because light is an exception, to the rule, in that it is already at and maintains constantly the universal maximum speed...the curvature of spacetime caused by photons/light, changes the geometry of the spacetime. I would also envisage time dilation and this may help.....If a photon follows a curved geodesic thru spacetime, then it is accelerating. How can it accelerate past the speed of light?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geodesics_in_general_relativityIs a geodesic 3 dimensional motion in space or 4 dimensional motion in spacetime?
A naive way to think about photons having zero rest mass and yet interacting with a gravitational field, is that the curvature in spacetime doesn't change the photon's energy, but it does make it appear to follow a longer path.
But that longer path depends on an independent observer who can 'see' the curvature in space around a massive object--at some remove, that is.