Thursday 4 January 2018

How much does light weigh?

Does light weigh anything? Well, yes and no.


If there were a simple answer to how much light weighs, we'd all know it. There would probably be some sort of elementary school rhyme to help us remember the exact figure! Instead, we are forced to wade through complicated half-answers that go something like, "Um, it kind of weighs a little, but not like how regular things weigh."

Photons are the smallest measure of light, and no, they don't have mass. So that's easy, right? Light is composed of photons, which have no mass, so therefore light has no mass and can't weigh anything.

Not so fast. Because photons have energy - and, as Einstein taught us, energy is equal to the mass of a body, multiplied by the speed of light squared. How can photons have energy if they have no mass?

Actually, what Einstein was proving is that energy and mass could be the same thing - all energy has some form of mass. Light may not have rest (or invariant) mass - the weight that describes the heft of an object. But because of Einstein's theory (and the fact that light behaves like it has mass, in that it's subject to gravity), we can say that mass and energy exist together. In that case, we'd call it relativistic mass - mass when an object is in motion, as opposed to at rest.

So our answer is a grab bag of yeses and nos. Does light have a mass that can be weighed on the bathroom scale? Most certainly not. But it is a source of gravitational fields, so we could say that a box of light weighs more than a box without light - as long as you're comfortable understanding that the "weight" you're measuring is a form of energy and not, say, pounds or kilograms.

Source - HowStuffWorks.com - How much does light weigh? by Kate Kershner published on 22 September 2014

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