- #36
schroder
- 369
- 1
navneet023 said:yes...electric charge can't be zero...how can u say its zero or not..we say smthng is not there just coz we r not able to detect it...its zero with respect to us...our calculation system...nd not even zero...so small that we can't get any instrument so as to measure it...
I agree with this because I do not believe it is possible to conduct any experiment that can measure down to an absolute value of “zero”. Even the “absolute zero” of temperature is not zero! This is where the concept of limits in calculus assists us in evaluating measurements of extremely small quantities. All we can hope for is to establish some maximum limit to a quantity which cannot be measured down to zero. This has been done with the photon by the Charge Composition Explore Spacecraft and in various laboratory experiments. I believe the limit to be 7 x 10-17 eV. This does not prove that the photonic mass is not zero, nor does it establish the rest mass of a photon as any particular number. But it does leave open the possibility at least that the photon just might have rest mass. I don’t think we can discount this possibility. It may well be that some day we will establish that the basic unit of mass is one photon mass. It seems reasonable to me that such a minimum should exist as it would explain why the speed of light has a maximum value.