Why can't photons have a mass? Could you explain this to me in a short and mathematical way?
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4$\begingroup$ This is on an entirely different question, does the photon have a mass. The question is different, the answers are different. In fact, the "duplicate" question has NO answer that tells why it is believed that photons are massless. And the question is one of some interest. In addition to the current literature (i.e. arxiv.org/abs/0809.1003 ), J. D. Jackson has a discussion of this question and the question here has attracted 5 answers, none from a less than 400 rep author, and with a total of 9,000 reputation. Reopen the question. $\endgroup$– Carl BrannenCommented Feb 6, 2011 at 22:56
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1$\begingroup$ Jackson's book on Electrodynamics starts off in the introduction on the experimental evidence for why we believe a photon does not have a mass. It is not an axioma as far as I know. $\endgroup$– GerardCommented Feb 7, 2011 at 15:22
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$\begingroup$ Well, if photon has a zero mass, why they can't escape a black hole? Is this why any body with a mass can't escape a black hole? $\endgroup$– Vladislavs DovgalecsCommented Dec 15, 2016 at 19:33
6 Answers
The other answers explain that there's no paradox but they don't explain why the particular particle called photon is massless.
It's massless because it is the messenger particle responsible for electromagnetism which is a long-range force. Its range is infinite so the mass has to be zero. One may view the Coulomb potential as the zero-mass limit ($m\to 0$) of the Yukawa potential $$V(r) = \frac{\exp(-mr)}{r} $$ OK, so why is it massless and why the range is infinite? It's because of the unbroken $U(1)$ gauge invariance for the electromagnetic field that acts on the electromagnetic gauge potential as $$A_\mu\to A_\mu+\partial_\mu \lambda$$ The mass term (in the Lagrangian) for a gauge field would have the form $m^2 A_\mu A^\mu/2$ and it is not invariant under the gauge invariance above. The gauge invariance is needed to make the time-like mode $A_0$ unphysical - otherwise it would produce quanta with a negative norm (because of the opposite sign in the signature for the timelike direction) which would lead to negative probabilities.
However, gauge fields may consistently become massive via the Higgs mechanism - like the W-bosons and Z-bosons. Then they lead to short-range forces. Beta-decay is mediated by the W-bosons.
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3$\begingroup$ @MurodAbdukhakimov: That's not quite correct. Neutrinos always travel at some significant fraction of $c$ ;-) $\endgroup$ Commented May 26, 2013 at 16:29
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2$\begingroup$ Because the strong force is confining, so only color-neutral ("uncharged") particles are allowed to exist in isolation. Correspondingly, the force among such neutral particles decreases quickly with the distance. In fact, the decreases is faster than the power law because the gluons self-interact so they are confined, too. The mass of colored objects is a subtle thing - it depends on the RG scale and the masslessness is only relevant at very short distances, much shorter than the proton radius (QCD scale) where the confinement starts to matter. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 18, 2014 at 13:36
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2$\begingroup$ @MurodAbdukhakimov: that nothing with mass can travel at the speed of light is an axiom of physics. Einstein's equations show that in order for mass to travel at the speed of light would take an infinite amount of energy. Also, results show that neutrinos ALWAYS travel sub-C. So, you asked Crazy Peanut how he knew that neutrinos did not travel at the speed of light. I am going to reverse that on you. How do you know that neutrinos travel at the speed of light? Your profile lists theoretical particle physics as your specialty, so you must have some basis for your stance. $\endgroup$ Commented Mar 14, 2016 at 15:16
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6$\begingroup$ @LubošMotl This answer is wrong. If you add the mass term $\frac12 m^2 A^2$ to the QED Lagrangian, you break gauge invariance but there are no negative norm quanta. The theory (Proca Lagrangian) is well defined, unitary and finite (there are problems with naïve power-counting renormalisation, but as long as the current is conserved, all measurable quantities are finite). The most correct and general treatment of massive photons is through the Stückelberg mechanism (which becomes the Proca theory in the unitary gauge). The S. theory is perfectly well defined, unitary, covariant and finite. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 17, 2017 at 12:37
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1$\begingroup$ OK, I actually agree. I would still bet anything that the photon is exactly massless - and there are also reasons that will be understood beyond the QFT framework why it has to be so. I think it's not an accident that the light but massive gauge bosons we know get their mass from the Higgs mechanism, not via Stueckelberg, and in quantum gravity, the Stueckelberg masses have to be high enough - comparable to the fundamental scale - for consistency, for some reasons similar to the weak gravity conjecture if not exactly that one. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 18, 2017 at 6:12
There is nothing special about the photon having zero mass. Although zero is the smallest mass any particle can have, it is as good as any other value. In this sense, there is no mathematical proof that the photon has to have zero mass, this is a purely experimental fact. And, to our best knowledge, the photon mass is consistent to zero.
If you want to describe a theory with a zero mass vector in a manifestly relativistic way, you have to have gauge invariance. This is a mathematical fact. As is the fact that if you force this symmetry to be quantum mechanically exact, the mass will not receive quantum corrections (perturbatively, at least). Gauge theories can be shown to have all sorts of other nice features (like IR finiteness, if you sum enough virtual and real diagrams) and that makes us believe that at low energies they are the right theories.
But one would be inverting the logical order within physics if one says that the mass of the photon is zero because EM is described by a gauge theory. EM is described by a gauge theory because the photon has zero mass. There would be no problem with special relativity either. The fact that the maximal velocity is the same as the velocity of light in the vacuum is, again, an experimental fact (equivalent to the one we are discussing here) but by no means necessary by any mathematical theorem.
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1$\begingroup$ If Maxwell's equations are to be relativistically covariant, then light must travel at some constant c' in all frames. If it wasn't the same as the universal limiting velocity c, you'd end up with a different velocity for a photon and hence light from the velocity addition formula. From this it must have zero rest mass, correct? $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 9, 2011 at 17:43
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2$\begingroup$ Sure, any zero mass field equation will have this property, not only Maxwell's equation. I know that historically it was not done this way, but teaching in the historical sequence is usually the worst thing to do. Today, the way people understand is the following: you measure the mass and the spin of the particle. From these values and special relativity you can get a well define lagrangian with which you calculate all the rest. $\endgroup$– RafaelCommented Feb 9, 2011 at 18:36
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$\begingroup$ "If you want to describe a theory with a zero mass vector in a manifestly relativistic way, you have to have gauge invariance.". This is wrong. Maxwell equations allow for magnetic charges, in wich case no $U(1)$ gauge invariance is possible. But source-free EM waves are still possible, even with magnetic charges. $\endgroup$ Commented May 26, 2013 at 10:05
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$\begingroup$ IR and EM? I am no familiar with these acronyms $\endgroup$ Commented Nov 29, 2023 at 12:13
According to the special theory of relativity, any particle with a finite mass requires an infinite amount of energy to reach the speed of light. Therefore no particles with any intrinsic mass can travel with the speed of light. The energy required to attain a speed $v$ is given by $E$ = $\frac{mc^2}{\surd1-v^2/c2}$ - $mc^2$ As $v$ approaches $c$, $E$ approaches $\infty$.
Only massless particles are allowed to travel at the speed of light. Photon is massless, hence it can travel with the speed of light. The energy of a photon is given by $E = pc$ where p is the momentum of the photon.
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$\begingroup$ Good answer, just minor points: "are allowed" -> "are forced/required", "it can travel" -> "it has to travel". Because otherwise it seems like they can also decide not to :) $\endgroup$– MarekCommented Feb 6, 2011 at 19:01
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$\begingroup$ This doesn't explain why photons don't have (rest) mass - very small rest mass, yes. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 7, 2011 at 3:16
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$\begingroup$ @John McVirgo: Are you really voting on the basis of the merit of the answer? BTW your comment is absolute nonsense. $\endgroup$– user1355Commented Feb 7, 2011 at 3:24
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$\begingroup$ @sb1 "why can't photons have mass?" was the question. It could be that photons have a finite rest mass and so don't reach this limiting velocity. How can we know that the speed of a photon is this limiting velocity? $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 7, 2011 at 5:24
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4$\begingroup$ It is a nice precise explanation but it's wrong, unless you make the circular definition "the c used in Maxwell's field equations is the same c used in special relativity". If there were some proof that it was impossible in the manner of 2+2=4 people wouldn't be getting paid to set limits on the mass of the photon as in Phys.Rev.D82:065026,2010, "Upper Bounds on the Photon Mass", Antonio Accioly, José Helayël-Neto, Eslley Scatena, arxiv.org/abs/1012.2717 Google Proca electrodynamics. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 10, 2011 at 3:18
In the context of special relativity, anything that travels at the speed of light can't have a nonzero rest mass. One way to see this is that the kinetic energy of an object of mass $m$ moving at speed $v$ is $$ mc^2\left({1\over\sqrt{1-v^2/c^2}}-1\right), $$ which tends to infinity as $v\to c$. Physically, this means that it would cost an infinite amount of energy to raise a massive particle up to speed $c$.
As far as special relativity is concerned, it's logically possible that photons do have mass and travel at speeds (slightly) less than $c$. (This would mean that the quantity $c$ that occurs in special relativity should not be called "the speed of light.") The experimental limits on this possibility are extremely severe, though.
I may have misguessed the level of your question and the sort of answer you're looking for. For instance, there are separate reasons for believing the photon to be strictly massless based on gauge invariance.
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$\begingroup$ Nice answer (+1) Could you elaborate though why the Lorentz factor is placed in the above equation? While it is a factor that successfully accounts for the size of time dilation, it does not seem to have obvious connection to the mass-energy formula... The same formula definition also causes infinite energy to be required for accelerating to $c$. So, could one derive this formula mathematically from the time dilation factor $\frac{1}{\sqrt{1 - \frac{v^2}{c^2}}}$ directly? $\endgroup$– JamesCommented Oct 12 at 18:49
I think the central issue is the invariant interval and invariant mass. A particle moving in spacetime has the interval $ds^2~=~dt^2~-~dx^idx_i$. There is the corresponding invariant mass $m^2~=~E^2~-~p^2$, which is the momentum spacetime interval. So let us consider the plane wave $\psi~=~exp(-i{\vec k}\cdot{\vec x}~+~i\omega t)$ $=~exp(-ik^\mu x_\mu)$. The Laplacian operator $\Delta~=~\nabla^2~-~\partial^2/\partial t^2$ applied to $\psi$ is $$ (\nabla^2~-~\partial/\partial t)~=~(\omega^2~-~k^2)\psi~=~\hbar^{-2}(E^2~-~p^2)\psi. $$ This is an eigenvalued problem with $\Delta\psi~=~\lambda\psi$. If the particle has mass this eigenvalue is the mass squared. This means there is dispersion as $|k|~=~\sqrt{\omega^2~-~m^2} $ and for $\omega~=~2\pi/\lambda$ we then have that $$ |k|~=~c\sqrt{2\pi/\lambda^2~-~m^2} $$ The velocity of a wave is then only exactly $c~=~1$, or $|k|~=~2\pi/\lambda$, with of course $kc~=~\omega$, for $m~=~0$, and otherwise we contradict our assumption of the wave existing on a null interval $ds^2~=~0$. If the invariant interval in the spacetime is zero, then the corresponding invariant mass in the momentum-spacetime must be zero.
The above Laplacian in the case of a photon is predicted as the wave equation operator by Maxwell's equations.
put simply - mass terms for photons break gauge invariance.
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5$\begingroup$ In its current form this is a very poor answer. Please look at some of the more highly voted answers on the site for a better model. $\endgroup$ Commented May 25, 2013 at 23:47
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2$\begingroup$ You need to elaborate or state WHY a mass term breaks guage invariance or this answer is useless. $\endgroup$ Commented May 26, 2013 at 2:02
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2$\begingroup$ useless is a tad strong - should i elaborate and state why gauge symmetries hold in standard model too?????? this was meant to be a 'short' and 'mathematical' answer as requested. $\endgroup$– phaedrusCommented May 26, 2013 at 15:03