On Jun 15, 5:08 pm, The Ghost In The Machine
sirius.tg00suus7038.net> wrote:
> In sci.physics.relativity, BradGuth
>
gmail.com>
> wrote
> on Sun, 15 Jun 2008 15:35:04 -0700 (PDT)
> <22314a25-6bc9-40ac-ac5e-ca853b14c...@w7g2000hsa.googlegroups.com>:
>
>
>
>> On Jun 15, 2:59 pm, The Ghost In The Machine
>> sirius.tg00suus7038.net> wrote:
>>> In sci.physics.relativity, Uncle Al
>>>
hate.spam.net>
>>> wrote
>>> on Sun, 15 Jun 2008 11:56:38 -0700
>>> <485565E6.C9F3D...@hate.spam.net>:
>
>>>> BradGuth wrote:
>
>>>>> On Jun 14, 7:40 pm, BURT yahoo.com> wrote:
>>>>>> Changing Gamma is also creating weight at the same time. Change of
>>>>>> motion creates weight in the opposite direction. Change of motion is
>>>>>> changing the Gamma factor.
>
>>>>>> I believe Gamma also plays a role in gravity.
>
>>>>>> Mitch Raemsch; Twice Nobel Laureate 2008
>
>>>>> How about just getting those Google/NOVA newsgroup gold stars working?
>
>>>>> I too believe that such photons are directly related to their having
>>>>> created mass and gravity.
>
>>>>> - Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth
>
>>>> 1) Photon rest mass is less than 10^(-51) grams or 7x10^(-19)
>>>> electron volts. If the photon had non-zero rest mass then
>>>> electromagnetism would have a finite range and force proportional to
>>>> 1/r^2 would not obtain.
>
>>> But electromagnetism *does* have a finite range...a few
>>> tens of billions of light years. ;-) I'll admit to
>>> some curiosity as to how that can be translated into
>>> an upper limit for photon mass.
>
>>> Of course, if a photon has 10^(-54) kg mass, one gets an
>>> energy of 4.5 * 10^-38 J using Newton's equations, and a
>>> frequency of 68 microHertz using Planck's.
>
>> Is there but only one photon mass for the entire spectrum of photons?
>
> I do wonder.
>
>
>
>> Seems an IR photon might have a slightly different mass hauling
>> capability than a gamma photon.
>
>> Perhaps the zero mass photon dump trucks are those of different mass
>> hauling capacity.
>
> Eh?
It's kinda my dyslexic encrypted format. Try reading it backwards.
You do know what a zero mass photon dump truck is, don't you?
It's somewhat like the FWC of a given pixel well capacity, or call it
a bucket that holds X amount of photons before overflowing.
- Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth