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  • Photons have mass.
  • Photons have momentum.
  • Photons have energy.
  • Photons are affected by a gravitation field and follow a curved path called a geodesic. (A geodesic is a straight line in curved space, so what you call curved depends on whether you are a geometer or if you are watching from a distance.)
  • Photons have a gravitational field of their own which exerts an attractive force on other matter.
  • Photons interact electromagnetically with matter and other photons.
  • Energy of a photon equals Plank's constant times the frequency.
  • Mass of a photon is equal to energy divided by the speed of light squared.
  • Higher frequency photons have more energy and hence more mass and it is well known that sometimes the energy of a photon can be converted into a particle with mass (usually in pairs).
  • Photons have zero "rest mass" but that is not the "mass" in E=mc2. It is not rest mass that determines momentum or energy or gravitational attraction.
  • And, photons are never at rest.
  • If you accelerate to "catch up" to a photon, the photon does not appear to slow down, but its frequency decreases and energy decreases, approaching zero (same as the "rest mass" as you approach the speed of light.

All that is true, but it is also true that characterizing any of these in a proper theoretical framework will inherently involve quantum mechanics, special relativity and general relativity.

Addendum:If the question is posed as to whether photons have "physical mass," one must ask for a definition of nonphysical mass. There is mass, just mass, and there is no circumventing "mass." It does not come in types or flavors or with provisos. Mass is mass.

One more thing for the questioner:

Photons are quanta of energy, photons are not matter. They have mass since energy has mass. Mass as a property of energy is no different than mass as a property of matter. [Great summary of photon properties above]

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Dixie Langosh

Lvl 10
4y ago

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