Rest mass or inertial mass?
Gauge:
(Bilge) wrote in message
e-al.net...
The quantity r_o is not the wavelenth of the pion. It's the range of
the Yukawa potential,
E^2 = p^2 + (mc^2)^2
(\hbar w) = (\hbar k)^2 + (\hbar k_0)^2
You forgot to square the first part sparky
I'm impressed. You found a typo.
[...]
Do you simply copy words from textbooks without reading the material
or trying to understand what it means?
This is a good example of when you should think twice about posting a
flame like this sparky - And you never did state why you have this
need to flame - Why is that?
Because you are an idiot who posts nothing but misinformation
under the guise of relativity and then "flames" anyone who corrects
you.
Anyway - I posted warnings here about this directly to you and you
ignored them.
If you are referring to your posts as some sort of warning by example,
then I haven't ignored them. Everytime I post I think to myself, "have
I failed to check this any better than pmb would have done"? If the answer
is no, then I check it again for mistakes and physics errots before
posting it. So far, I've never answered that question with a yes.
And here you are making the mistake I warned you about.
A typo? Try running one of your own posts (any one will do) through a
spell checker and then tell me about typos.
E is usually used to represent total energy. In this case E = hbar*w.
But the correct relation for the 4-momentum magnitude is
(E - V)^2 = p^2 + m^2
Where E = T + V
where T = time component of 4-momentum
I knew this would only be a matter of time before you made this
mistake.
You mean the typo?
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