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No. Mass and Energy are equivalent (E=mc2). The are different manifestations of one and the same thing.
No. Mass and kinetic energy are not the same thing.
Matter and energy, which according to E=mc2, are interchangeable.Another answer:To be technically correct, we are talking about mass, not matter. Einstein's equation e = mc2 does not necessarily mean that mass and energy are interchangeable - it means that they are the same thing. Mass is energy, and energy is mass. Its not an issue of converting from one to the other - its a matter of them being the same thing - just different frames of reference.
There are different types of equations to calculate different types of energy.
Mass and mass are the same thing.
law of conservation of energy and mass
It states that energy can change but mass can not change Chuma.C
E=mc squared was Albert Einstein's most famous formula. It states that energy and mass are the same thing, and how much energy is contained in a given mass, or vice versa. It is known as "The theory of relativity".
There is no specific equation that violates the law of conservation of mass. The law of conservation of mass states that mass is conserved in a closed system, meaning that mass cannot be created or destroyed. Any equation that violates this law would imply the creation or destruction of mass, which is not possible according to current scientific understanding.
To my knowledge, Albert Einstein was the first to publish a scientific paper on the concept of mass-energy conservation. This is most famously arranged into the formulae E=mc^2, where E is the quantity of energy, m the 'mass defect' (the amount of mass 'lost' or converted to energy) and c^2 the speed of light squared.
No, if you are dealing with kinetic energy. momentum is the relationship between mass and velocity... equation is p=mv p = momentum m = mass v = velocity energy is the relationship of one half of the mass and velocity squared... equation is ke = .5mv2 ke = kinetic energy m = mass v = velocity If the equations don't make sense then thing about it logically. Momentum is the concept of an object moving with a certain speed that has a certain mass. Kinetic energy also consists of things moving that have a certain mass and velocity. Kinetic energy is just a different thing so it is calculated different. Potential energy is the other type of energy. This is the energy of an object that is NOT moving. So if dealing with potential energy the energy is not in motion and therefore does not have momentum.
E=mc^2 states that mass and energy are interchangeable, and that a little bit of mass creates a lot of energy.