- #1
- 8,888
- 649
From a thread on GPE:
Does mass increase as velocity approaches light speed?
Does "weight" also increase?
Does the stregth of gravity from the object also increase?
If the mass and weight increase by the same ratio, then the rate of acceleration towards a black hole wouldn't be limited and would be ever increasing. What prevents such an object from reaching or exceeding light speed (as witnessed by an external observer)?
I tried to follow the wiki link, but it seems there's no simple (or single) explanation for mass in GR:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_in_general_relativity
This one has me curious as well.skeptic2 said:So for an object free falling from infinity to a black hole, even though it's velocity may become relativistic, it doesn't gain mass?
Does mass increase as velocity approaches light speed?
Does "weight" also increase?
Does the stregth of gravity from the object also increase?
If the mass and weight increase by the same ratio, then the rate of acceleration towards a black hole wouldn't be limited and would be ever increasing. What prevents such an object from reaching or exceeding light speed (as witnessed by an external observer)?
I tried to follow the wiki link, but it seems there's no simple (or single) explanation for mass in GR:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_in_general_relativity
Last edited: