we can`t with the technology we have today we can only convert like one billionth of a percentile of mass into energy, if we could eventually do it a glass of water could power the world for a long time
No, nothing can violate the law of conservation of energy, it's a law! Energy can convert to mass, and mass can convert to energy, but the overall total of mass and energy in the universe is constant.
No. Nor can you convert mass into energy. In any reaction - including nuclear reactions - both the amount of mass and the amount of energy remain the same, before and after the reaction. For example, the energy that escapes from a nuclear reaction also has a corresponding mass. On the other hand, the energy existed before the reaction as well, in the form of (nuclear) potential energy.
Gamma rays are a type of electromagnetic radiation, which is a type energy. Because a gamma ray is a type of energy, it has no mass.
Yes, light is a form of pure energy as it has no mass. Similar to things like thunder and fire, light is none of the three phases of matter: solid, liquid, gas.
One of light's defining characteristics is that it does not have mass; it is instead pure energy. To answer your question, no one discovered it because it has been proven to be false.
No. Mass and kinetic energy are not the same thing.
You generally need a catalyst or a mechanism to convert the energy. For example to convert fuel (a mass) into thermal energy, oxidizer and a spark are needed.
No, nothing can violate the law of conservation of energy, it's a law! Energy can convert to mass, and mass can convert to energy, but the overall total of mass and energy in the universe is constant.
Fast enough to convert 4 million tons of mass to energy, every second.Fast enough to convert 4 million tons of mass to energy, every second.Fast enough to convert 4 million tons of mass to energy, every second.Fast enough to convert 4 million tons of mass to energy, every second.
Einstein's famous equation, E=mc2, basically means that energy and mass are interchangeable - that under the right conditions, mass can turn into pure energy, and energy can turn into mass. So, in essence, it can be said that matter can turn into pure energy if it is travelling at the speed of light.
Convert grams into moles. To do so, you divide mass by the molar mass of the substance.
Nuclear Fusion
No. Nor can you convert mass into energy. In any reaction - including nuclear reactions - both the amount of mass and the amount of energy remain the same, before and after the reaction. For example, the energy that escapes from a nuclear reaction also has a corresponding mass. On the other hand, the energy existed before the reaction as well, in the form of (nuclear) potential energy.
No. You might say it is "pure energy", but any energy has an associated mass, according to the formula e = mc2. Thus, the associated mass can be calculated as m = e/c2. (Therefore, it will also have momentum.)
EM radiation carries energy without a mass-carrying medium. In that sense, they are energy in pure form. However, considering Einstein's mass-energy equivalency (E=mc2), EM energy can, in rare circumstances, be converted to mass at a rate of 300,000,000 Joules/kilogram, and mass converted to energy at the same rate.
Because light is pure energy.
generators which convert mechanical energy to electrical energy and motors which convert electrical energy to mechanical energy