Einstein's most famous equation, E=MC2 (Energy=Mass x Speed of Light (in a vacuum) Squared) is the equation for Mass-Energy equivalence, which is that the mass of a body is equal to its energy content. It is the core basis for obtaining a nuclear reaction.
That would be called mass energy, or total internal energy.
No. E=mc2 is a formula. Energy equals mass times the speed of light squared.
There is no sum of e=mc2, it is an equation concerning matter and energy. e=mc2 stands for: Energy equals mass times the velocity of light squared. E = M C 2
No E just applies to energy
Mass-energy equivalence
Mass Energy.
That would be called mass energy, or total internal energy.
Energy.
E (Energy) equals M (Mass) times C2 (speed of light square)
No. E=mc2 is a formula. Energy equals mass times the speed of light squared.
There is no sum of e=mc2, it is an equation concerning matter and energy. e=mc2 stands for: Energy equals mass times the velocity of light squared. E = M C 2
No E just applies to energy
E is energy and MC2 is matter used to the second power... now you solve it
zero mass = zero energy
Mass-energy equivalence
Energy
e = mc2 is an equation, it has no size of its own. The value of e (energy) depends on the amount of mass (m) and conversely. The smaller the mass is the smaller the amount of energy.