F Stein
Member
- Messages
- 200
Hi time geeks, does a electric field and a magnetic field have mass
I thought your E=MC2 @Einstein stated mass and energy is the same thing, therefore if electric fields and magnetic fields are also different aspects of the same thing and if they produce mass? Well mass affects gravity therefore can affect time. I'm trying to make heads and tails of this schematic email to me by @Starlite she claims is a gravitational dilation machine. I'm trying to work out if it's bulshit or bullion, to use your terminology.If you go with Newtonian physics then both fields are comprised of force. Thus using Newton's equation F=MA, the answer to your question would be yes. But in the real world force is not divisible. So mass has never been measured. It is merely used in physics math to make one thing equal to something else. Except that in the real world those math rules don't apply. So no apples are spontaneously turning into oranges. And no piles of bullshit are turning into gold bullion either.
Mass doesn't affect gravity in our universe. A more accurate way to describe it would be to say a quantity af matter affects gravity. Mass is just a mathematical convenience for mathematicians to use.I thought your E=MC2 @Einstein stated mass and energy is the same thing, therefore if electric fields and magnetic fields are also different aspects of the same thing and if they produce mass? Well mass affects gravity therefore can affect time. I'm trying to make heads and tails of this schematic email to me by @Starlite she claims is a gravitational dilation machine. I'm trying to work out if it's bulshit or bullion, to use your terminology.
Electro-mass as one would refer to it here.Hi time geeks, does a electric field and a magnetic field have mass
The big question is can electro-mass in the form of a magnetic vortices create a enough mass to generate gravitational dilation of time?Electro-mass as one would refer to it here.
I thought energy and mass where simply different sides of the coin. Mass is energy and energy is mass.?The answer is no, fields do not have mass.
Harte
Photons are the carriers of the electromagnetic force. Photons are massless at rest. Photons have what's called "relativistic mass" which is based entirely on their energy level (wavelength,) but it only manifests as momentum and then only if the photon strikes something. It certainly doesn't warp space, which is what any particle with a rest mass does.I thought energy and mass where simply different sides of the coin. Mass is energy and energy is mass.?