
The closer to layman's terms this can be explained (if it can be, that is), the better. - I'm not highly edjumacated.

Space curves. They follow space.JacksSmirkingRevenge wrote:...other massless particles are affected by gravity as evidenced by gravitational lensing effects, black holes etc?![]()
The closer to layman's terms this can be explained (if it can be, that is), the better. - I'm not highly edjumacated.
tl:drScienceRob wrote:To my understanding: As photons travel along "space-time". As they go near something such as a black hole, which bends 'space-time" into a curvature, straight is no longer straight. So while the photon would travel straight it instead travels "straight" or curved from an outside perspective. I would imagine in the perspective of the photon it is still going straight though.
Well they definitely have momentum; when photons collide with an object, they transfer momentum to it, which is the whole principle behind light sails...ScienceRob wrote:Yeah, I thought about pointing that out Jim. The only problem with velocity or momentum implying mass is that it is light particles traveling at the speed of light. In a vacuum, the speed of light is invariant. As such they have no rest mass. This isn't to say that their rest mass is zero but simply they cannot have a rest mass. I must admit, though, on a personal level I want to think the photon must have some mass yet there is no evidential support for this. *shrug*
- Massive.(mass-full?)
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