Abstract

Relativistic mass change with speed is considered here as the effect of a viscous, dilatant vacuum, whose apparent viscosity is related to the Lorentz factor. Transient solid-like vacuum due to shear stress is presented as the reason why vacuum prevents the speed of massive objects from being indefinitely increased. Such a vacuum – that in a previous study allowed to exactly calculate the Pioneer anomaly, Mercury’s perihelion precession, and was shown to be compatible with stable planetary orbits – leads here to a quantum formula for the relativistic kinetic energy. A formula which distinguishes between the case of accelerated charges in a vacuum, for which a Stokes–Einstein radius comes into play, and the case of accelerated macroscopic bodies, for which the quantum potential term vanishes. In this way, incidentally, one obtains again correct results for the Pioneer 10, confirming the role of vacuum’s viscous force. This description of a quantum mechanism underlying the relativistic kinetic energy may be also helpful in constructing a theory of quantum relativity and may even tell us more about the interactions of matter with the Higgs field and the dark sector: two issues which can be themselves linked to a dilatant vacuum.

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