Ultrarelativistic limit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In physics, a particle is called ultrarelativistic when its speed is very close to the speed of light c, such that its total energy E2 = m2c4 + p2c2 is almost completely due to its momentum (p c \gg m c^2), and thus can be approximated by E = pc. This can result from holding the mass fixed and increasing p to very large values (the usual case); or by holding the energy E fixed and shrinking the mass m to negligible values. The latter is used to derive orbits of massless particles such as the photon from those of massive particles (cf. Kepler problem in general relativity).

In general, the ultrarelativistic limit of an expression is the resulting simplified expression when p c \gg m c^2 is assumed. Or, similarly, in the limit where the Lorentz factor is very large (\gamma \gg 1).

The ultrarelativistic limit corresponds to having a momentum

[edit] Accuracy of the Approximation

For calculations of the energy of a particle, the relative error of the ultrarelativistic limit for a speed v = 0.95c is about 10%, and for v = 0.99c it is just 2%. For particles such as neutrinos, whose γ are usually above 106 (v very close to c), the approximation is essentially exact.

[edit] Other limits

The opposite case is a so-called classical particle, where its speed is much smaller than c and so its energy can be approximated by E = m c^2 + \frac{p^2}{2m}.

[edit] See also