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ronaldoshaky
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Why does gravitational lensing occur if photons are massless?
Gravity acts on masses, but also on other things. I.e. it acts on the pressure. Photons do have a pressure.Because in general relativity, gravity is not a force that acts on masses as it is in Newtonian gravity.
JK423 said:Photons curve space as well! :)
Generally speaking, whatever has energy it curves space
If the cosmological constant is nonzero, then even what does not have energy, it curves space :).Generally speaking, whatever has energy it curves space
ronaldoshaky said:Why does gravitational lensing occur if photons are massless?
ZapperZ said:Please start by read the FAQ thread in the General Physics forum.
Zz.
How does gravity warp spacetime? Space is a vacuum, right? Does gravity manipulate a vacuum?
ronaldoshaky said:Thanks for the direct.
I have another q. How does gravity warp spacetime? Space is a vacuum, right? Does gravity manipulate a vacuum?
There are different definitions that people use for "mass," but most modern physicists would say that is false. When an object increases its speed, its energy increases, but not its mass.khemist said:While I have a very limited background in this subject (someone, please correct me wherever you can), it is common knowledge that as objects increase in speed they increase in mass
Even particles that are not moving produce and respond to gravity.khemist said:So is it possible that the creation of gravity is partly because particular particles are going extremely fast, therefore increasing their mass, which in turn is increasing their gravity, which THEN in turn attracts more particles to it, etc, etc.
diazona said:Even particles that are not moving produce and respond to gravity.
diazona said:There are different definitions that people use for "mass," but most modern physicists would say that is false. When an object increases its speed, its energy increases, but not its mass.
filegraphy said:Einstein said that an object that has mass cannot travel at the speed of light in a vacuum because therefore it would have infinite amount of relative mass. So a photon cannot have mass. Wrong or right?
filegraphy said:If the photon does not have rest mass, what allows the photon to have mass as it travels the speed of light.
filegraphy said:Gravity is a force between two massive objects the photon cannot directly interact with gravity because it does not possesses mass.
filegraphy said:Right but a new theory developed has said that the photon interacts with gravity because the space around the photon is bent. If the photon does not have rest mass, what allows the photon to have mass as it travels the speed of light. Gravity is a force between two massive objects the photon cannot directly interact with gravity because it does not possesses mass.
No, photons do not have mass. They are considered to be massless particles.
Gravitational lensing is the bending of light by the gravitational force of massive objects. Since photons are particles of light, they are affected by this bending and can be used to study the distribution of matter in the universe.
Yes, gravitational lensing can be used as evidence for the existence of dark matter. The amount of bending in light from distant objects can only be explained by the presence of massive, unseen matter in the universe.
Yes, photons can be affected by gravity. While they do not have mass, they do have energy and momentum, which can be influenced by gravitational forces.
The amount of gravitational lensing is directly related to the mass of an object. The more massive an object is, the more it will bend the light passing by it. This is why massive objects like galaxies are often used to study gravitational lensing.