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When I was a graduate student in experimental high-energy particle physics c. 1980, none of the people I worked with (fellow experimentalists and theorists alike, in that field) used relativistic mass
[tex]m = \frac {m_0} {\sqrt {1 - v^2 / c^2}}[/tex]
in their work, to the best of my memory. The only place I remember seeing relativistic mass used was in a textbook about particle-accelerator design, written in the 1950s and hence already rather old.
I recognize that my experience is limited to HEP. Therefore, I am genuinely curious, in light of the arguments that sometimes break out here about relativistic mass:
In which areas of physics nowadays do physicists use relativistic mass in their work? I'd like some references to examples of professional research publications (journal articles, monographs, etc.) that use relativistic mass, as opposed to writings for laymen, or treatments in introductory school or university textbooks, or polemics for or against the use of relativistic mass. They should be fairly recent, ideally from this century, but at least since about 1980 or so.
[tex]m = \frac {m_0} {\sqrt {1 - v^2 / c^2}}[/tex]
in their work, to the best of my memory. The only place I remember seeing relativistic mass used was in a textbook about particle-accelerator design, written in the 1950s and hence already rather old.
I recognize that my experience is limited to HEP. Therefore, I am genuinely curious, in light of the arguments that sometimes break out here about relativistic mass:
In which areas of physics nowadays do physicists use relativistic mass in their work? I'd like some references to examples of professional research publications (journal articles, monographs, etc.) that use relativistic mass, as opposed to writings for laymen, or treatments in introductory school or university textbooks, or polemics for or against the use of relativistic mass. They should be fairly recent, ideally from this century, but at least since about 1980 or so.