massenergy
Mass energy, or mass–energy, refers to the concept that mass and energy are related manifestations of the same physical quantity as described by special relativity. The rest energy of a particle with invariant mass m0 is E0 = m0 c^2, where c is the speed of light. The total energy E includes kinetic energy and the momentum contribution, and the mass–energy equivalence is commonly expressed by the equation E = mc^2. More generally, for a particle with rest mass m0 and momentum p, the energy–momentum relation is E^2 = (pc)^2 + (m0 c^2)^2. In the nonrelativistic limit, E ≈ m0 c^2 + p^2/(2m0). The invariant mass remains constant in any closed process; the notion of relativistic mass is rarely used in modern physics.
Mass-energy conservation states that in isolated systems, the total mass-energy E is conserved, though mass can
Historically, Einstein introduced the relation in 1905, linking mass and energy and enabling a quantitative framework