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and if it does wat is it

2006-11-21 11:56:50 · 7 answers · asked by I_Need _Answers 1 in Science & Mathematics Alternative Other - Alternative

7 answers

I think instead of "weight" you mean "mass". "Weight" refers only to the measurment of matter in a gravatational field. But that's another issue.

The answer is "no" light (or photons) have no mass. Or as close to none that it isn't worth mentioning.

Remember, light is the fastest thing we know of. The closer any bit of matter gets to moving at the speed of light, the more massive (if it helps, think "heavier") it becomes. Eventually it becomes so massive that the engergy it would take to actually get it to move AT the speed of light is infinate. So any object with mass cannot move at the speed of light. Since light DOES move at the speed of light (duh) it can't have mass.

BUT...light does have energy. And Einstein says energy = mass. And that's true. If you took a great big sheet of aluminum foil a mile across and stuck in into space, all the photons (bits of light) coming from the sun would whack into the foil. Eventually all that whacking would start to make the foil move. Just like the wind blows a sail. In fact, this sort of aluminum foil gizmo is called a "solar sail". So light DOES have a sort of mass when it is moving.

But for the most part when you're talking about an object having mass, you're talking about it's mass when it is sitting still. This is called it's "rest mass". And sitting still (if it could sit still) light has zero mass.

2006-11-21 12:22:00 · answer #1 · answered by Atrocious 3 · 0 0

Light does not have weight. This is because it has no mass. Mass means you can touch, smell, or hear it but none of those apply. Light is just what makes you see better. Also if it had weight the beam and the light would curve downwards. Weight = Gravity pull on mass.

2006-11-21 20:15:09 · answer #2 · answered by Treebark12002 1 · 0 0

Light has neither weight nor mass, but it does exert a force, although it is very small. Laser light is concentrated light of one wavelength, so its net energy is much higher than in a beam of ordinary light (like a flashlight), where the peaks and valleys of the different wavelengths tend to cancel each other out.

2006-11-21 20:03:54 · answer #3 · answered by TitoBob 7 · 0 0

Put for lasers together in one focused beam then a thick enough piece of anything. Now push. You tell me.

2006-11-21 20:00:04 · answer #4 · answered by vanamont7 7 · 0 0

No.I agree with the 2nd answerer.He took the words right out of my mouth.

2006-11-21 20:07:25 · answer #5 · answered by Shenlong The God Dragon 3 · 0 0

I presume you mean Bud light its not advertise by wieght but by calorie

2006-11-21 20:40:26 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no

2006-11-23 17:09:34 · answer #7 · answered by Anthony 3 · 0 0

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