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The mass of a physical system is its intrinsic energy.
It is a somewhat arbitrary choice, made necessary by the theory of relativity, to decide whether the old term ‘mass’ should be used for intrinsic energy or total energy; one may clarify that intrinsic energy is rest mass while total energy is relativistic mass.
Traditionally, mass and energy are measured in different units related by the speed of light: . Thus one may call a system's mass its rest energy when it is measured in units of energy; conversely, one may call a systems's total energy its relativistic mass when it is measured in units of mass.
The kinetic energy of a system is the difference between its total energy and its mass (or rest energy). Thus the kinetic energy is the energy due to the motion of the system (or better, due to the relative motion of the system and the observer).
When a system is thought of as the combination of several subsystems, then its mass also may be broken into several pieces:
The latter entry may be positive (in which case the system is liable to separate into its component parts, at least at sufficiently high temperature, giving off energy) or negative (in which case the system is bound and can be expected to remain together until additional energy is added).
Mass may be given in terms of energy and linear momentum as
As for the linear velocity, we also have
(For nonrelativistic units, change to , to , and to .)
For a particle travelling at the speed of light, we therefore have . When , we have . When , we still have . However, in nonrelativistic physics, it is much more useful to use kinetic energy instead of the total energy ; then we have
exactly and
when . Notice that this last expression makes sense already in nonrelativistic units.
For a system made up of subsystems (indexed by ), we have
where is the mass of subsystem , is the kinetic energy of subsystem relative to the whole system, and is the potential energy of the forces between system and system . The sum
is the binding energy of the system; when it is positive, it gives the minimum energy that must be added to the system to break it into components that do not interact. In many cases, the relative kinetic energies are negligible, so we can calculate binding energy by subtracting masses as
In nonrelativistic physics, where kinetic energy is always negligible, the are also negligible compared to the masses, so it is not possible at all to calculate the sign of the binding energy using masses. Instead, we have
the statement of nonrelativistic conservation of mass.
Many of the formulas above rely on , or equivalently . For tachyons, where this is violated, the mass becomes an imaginary number. For this reason, it may make more sense to work with (which is always real) than with itself. We also implicitly assume that ; for exotic particles? in which , it is convenient also to take . (In this case, of course, it is not sufficient to work only with .)
fundamental scales (fundamental/natural physical units)
See also:
Last revised on November 19, 2023 at 00:46:59. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.