Part 1: General relativity has gravity act on photons not directly (as with objects with mass) but by bending the space&time around the object. The photons are unaffected. The path they take is curved, so they appear to bend. Sort of like how you can walk in a "straight line" on earth, but eventually appear where you started. Because the earth is curved, your path is curved, it has nothing to do with how much mass you have.
Now there is a way to describe reflection and refraction using only photons, and that process is described below by other posters:
The process of reflection/refraction is really a process of absorption/emission on a really small level. When electrons, say those of silicon atoms, are bombarded with photons, they absorb their energy, and, quite temporarily, the photon ceases to be observable as light.
The electron then immediately emits a photon in the opposite direction, producing the illusion of light moving more slowly; however, we know that the speed of light is constant in every possible scenario, even outside a vacuum. This just happens to be one of the strange consequences of the quantized state of matter at the sub-atomic level.
An atom is a system which wants to exist in its ground state. It does not want to absorb the energy of a photon and thus, it ejects the energy in the form of a photon (the energy difference as a result of the "collision" is manifested in a slight change in the wavelength/frequency of the emitted photon)
Very good answer above, for further information on electron reflection/diffraction, Richard Feynman has some excellent free video lectures on QED that were intended for the layperson.
Answer2:
Photons have mass and the concept of rest mass is false.
Daring to challenge General Relativity, Photon's have mass W = hf = pc = mcc, thus m=hf/c2= h/cw and thus is affected by gravity.
Einstein's Deflection 1.7" is the result Gravity tan D= .5gt2/150Gm = .5 x9.8 x150G/c2=8.16666E-6 ,
where t= 150Gm/c and g= 9,8 earth's gravity.
Answer 3: There is a reason why gamma, X-ray, Bharat Radiation, and light photons attract towards Earth. Both energy and matter constitute three components: electric, magnetic, and gravitational. In clear words, since photon's gravitational component facilitates attraction towards Earth.
that gravity affected light, space and time itself, and as a result the Sun would deflect starlight passing by it. Changes in the apparent direction of stars in the sky, seen close to the Sun during a total eclipse, could confirm the idea.
Yes, Saturn's rings do have some gravity, but it is very weak compared to the gravity of larger objects like planets and moons. The gravity from Saturn's rings is not significant enough to affect spacecraft or other objects passing through the ring system.
The odds depend on the specific sex-linked disorder. For carrier mothers of an X-linked recessive disorder, there is a 50% chance of passing the affected gene to a son (who would be affected) and a 50% chance of passing the gene to a daughter (who would be a carrier). For X-linked dominant disorders, there is a 50% chance of passing the gene to both sons and daughters.
In space, passing wind would not make any sound due to the lack of air molecules to carry the sound waves. Additionally, there would be no gravity to cause the gas to rise or fall, so it may disperse more evenly in all directions.
Newton's law of universal gravitation describes the force of gravity between two objects with mass. In hockey, gravity affects the movement of the puck and players on the ice surface. Players need to consider gravity when shooting, passing, and skating to anticipate how the puck and their movements will be influenced by gravitational forces.
accelerate above the speed limit
gravity isnt your problem, passing through the earth's hot core is.
Light is affected by everything it touches. If it touches a glass of water, it *refracts* (bends).
no. unless you're in a hot boxed area you will not be affected in the least bit if you're literally "passing by", no, it will not.
Change the fuel filter and have the cat convertor checked out
that gravity affected light, space and time itself, and as a result the Sun would deflect starlight passing by it. Changes in the apparent direction of stars in the sky, seen close to the Sun during a total eclipse, could confirm the idea.
No. Even if it were true, there isn't any way to do this. Any such laws would be instantly unconstitutional.
Yes, Saturn's rings do have some gravity, but it is very weak compared to the gravity of larger objects like planets and moons. The gravity from Saturn's rings is not significant enough to affect spacecraft or other objects passing through the ring system.
That is called passing an argument by value.
The king could delay the passing of law for 3 years by zil
Define "vertical". If "vertical" means "the direction indicated by a plumb bob," it should be self-evident that yes, gravity is directly vertical. If "vertical" means "in the direction of a line passing through the point in question and the center of the Earth", then not necessarily. On the side of a mountain, the direction of gravity will be affected by the mass of the mountain. However, this is a teeny tiny effect compared to the mass of the Earth as a whole.
-9.8 m/s/s from the top, side=0