E=Mc2 was a way Einstein made up. E=MC2 means energy equals the mass (M) and the C is the speed of light squared.(E=energy,M=Mass,C=speed of light,2=squared)
The "m" in Einstein's equation E=mc^2 represents mass. It signifies that energy (E) is equivalent to mass (m) times the speed of light (c) squared.
E=Mc2 was a way Einstein made up. E=MC2 means energy equals the mass (M) and the C is the speed of light squared.(E=energy,M=Mass,C=speed of light,2=squared)
E=mc2 means energy=mass multiplied by the speed of light squared.
The "E" in Einstein's equation, E=mc^2, represents energy. This equation describes the relationship between energy (E), mass (m), and the speed of light (c), showing that mass can be converted into energy.
The "c" in E=mc2 stands for the speed of light, which is approximately 299,792 kilometers per second. This equation, proposed by Albert Einstein in his theory of special relativity, relates energy (E) to mass (m) and the speed of light (c).
M represents Mass
E = mc^(2) 'E' is the Energy 'm' is the 'mass' 'c' is the 'speed of light in a vacuum. in nuclear disintegration, when an atom disintegrates into two smaller atoms, there is a difference in the 'mass(m)', Miniscule though it may be, but when multiplied to the speed of light squared , there is million if not billions of Joules of energy, which is released. The speed of light in a vacuum is 3.8 x 10^(8) J . Hence c^(2) = [3.8 x 10^(8)] = 1.44 x 10^(17) (m/s)^(2)
no number E=energy m=mass and c=speed of light squared
No. E=mc2 is a formula. Energy equals mass times the speed of light squared.
E (Energy) equals M (Mass) times C2 (speed of light square)
Energy.
There is no sum of e=mc2, it is an equation concerning matter and energy. e=mc2 stands for: Energy equals mass times the velocity of light squared. E = M C 2
The concept of E=MC2 was discovered by Henri Poincare.
mass
no.
yes it is.
Ask Einstein , or read his research papers on the subject. However, notice the parallel for kinetic energy (KE) KE = m v^(2) Where KE is the Kinetic Energy m is the mass ( much greater than the differential mass of Einstein). v is the velocity (much less than the speed of light). v^(2) is the velocity squared. KE deals with large objects moving at slow speeds.