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Sparky wrote:I know. It can be confusing. Read this first:
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/R ... _mass.html
... then let us know if you still have questions.
legosbulock wrote:of course light has mass or it couldnt be influenced by gravity.
strong gravitational fields may not be able to interact with light but they do change the shape of space-time. Light is responding to the curvature in space caused by gravity not the because gravity is 'pulling' on it.
flannel jesus wrote:legosbulock wrote:of course light has mass or it couldnt be influenced by gravity.
I googled this out of curiosity, the answer I found may be of interest to you:strong gravitational fields may not be able to interact with light but they do change the shape of space-time. Light is responding to the curvature in space caused by gravity not the because gravity is 'pulling' on it.
So gravity doesn't influence light directly, it changes the shape of space itself, and since light travels in space, it effectively changes the shape of the path that light is taking.
Space-time is a graph with space time coordinates. Apart from mathematical treatment, what physical reasoning explains their interdependence? How can space vanish and turn into time? Unless it is clearly explained, it cannot be science.
For space to contract or expand or change shape, it has to be some entity. Where is the direct proof?
Vilas Tamhane wrote:For space to contract or expand or change shape, it has to be some entity. Where is the direct proof?
BadgerJelly wrote:@ legosbulock
It may help you if you regard the terms "mass" and "energy" for what they truly are. HUMAN concepts. We do our best to understand the world that appears around us by labeling things for a better understanding.
No one is sure what Mass or Gravity is. They are names to explain a phenomenon we observe through experimentation.
If you start to look at literally EVERYTHING in this way maybe you will better understand our lack of understanding and the scientific theories made to date and why people hold these beliefs in high regard over other beliefs.
I advise you to check out ANY lecture by Richard Feynman and how he talks about nature and our understanding of it. (You'll find an array of videos on Youtube and I would personally recommend anyone to watch them regardless of mathematical knowledge - although it does help you to appreciate things more obviously if you have some grasp of mathematics)
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