J
Joeblow93132
Guest
Q,
You just contradicted yourself. Mass is known by two things: its gravitational field or gravitational interaction AND, as you pointed out, it's momentum.
Funny, because photons have both. They're paths curve when they approach massive objects, and they exert a force on objects they hit.
How am I supposed to prove that photons have mass, if can't use the two most important properties of mass as the proof?
Note: Photons slow down as they enter into denser matter like glass, and they accelerate back to c when they exit it.
Tom
You just contradicted yourself. Mass is known by two things: its gravitational field or gravitational interaction AND, as you pointed out, it's momentum.
Funny, because photons have both. They're paths curve when they approach massive objects, and they exert a force on objects they hit.
How am I supposed to prove that photons have mass, if can't use the two most important properties of mass as the proof?
Note: Photons slow down as they enter into denser matter like glass, and they accelerate back to c when they exit it.
Tom