Originally posted by zeropoint
Not exactly. This notion of ``relativistic mass'' increasing with velocity was rejected by Einstein and subsequently by all modern physicists. The fictitious relativistic mass m<sub>r</sub> was first introduced so that one could write the equations of motion of relativistic particles in Newtonian form using F = m<sub>r</sub>a where m<sub>r</sub> increases with velocity. Later study found that m<sub>r</sub> was an absolutely useless quantity that plays no role in any physical equation. The correct form is F = dp/dt<sub>0</sub> where p = m<sub>0</sub>u is the 4-momentum, u = dx/dt<sub>0</sub> is the 4-velocity, x = (cx<sup>t</sup>, x<sup>x</sup>, x<sup>y</sup>, x<sup>z</sup>) is 4-position, m<sub>0</sub> is the ``invariant'' rest mass, and d/dt<sub>0</sub> denotes the derivative with respect to proper time. Therefore we may define F = m<sub>0</sub> d<sup>2</sup>x/dt<sub>0</sub><sup>2</sup>, where F is the 4-force and d<sup>2</sup>x/dt<sub>0</sub><sup>2</sup> the 4-acceleration (second derivative of 4-position wrt proper time). Noting that dt/dt<sub>0</sub> = 1/(1− v<sup>2</sup>/c<sup>2</sup>)<sup>1/2</sup> (relativistic gamma) we obtain F = m<sub>0</sub>d<sup>2</sup>x/dt<sup>2</sup> 1/(1− v<sup>2</sup>/c<sup>2</sup>). As such it would require an infinite force and thus infinite power to accelerate to the speed of light.