"There followed also the principle of the equivalence of mass and energy, with the laws of conservation of mass and energy becoming one and the same.", Albert Einstein, "Considerations Concerning the Fundaments of Theoretical Physics", Science, Washington, DC, vol. 91, no. 2369, May 24th, 1940 scanned image online
Poincaré, H. (1900), „La théorie de Lorentz et le principe de réaction”, Archives Néerlandaises des Sciences Exactes et Naturelles5: 252–278. See also the English translation
stanford.edu
plato.stanford.edu
In F. Fernflores. The Equivalence of Mass and Energy. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. [2]
uni-potsdam.de
stat.physik.uni-potsdam.de
"Einstein was unequivocally against the traditional idea of conservation of mass. He had concluded that mass and energy were essentially one and the same; 'inert[ial] mass is simply latent energy.'[ref...]. He made his position known publicly time and again[ref...]...", Eugene Hecht, "Einstein on mass and energy." Am. J. Phys., Vol. 77, No. 9, September 2009, onlineArhivirano 2021-02-24 na Wayback Machine-u.
web.archive.org
"Einstein was unequivocally against the traditional idea of conservation of mass. He had concluded that mass and energy were essentially one and the same; 'inert[ial] mass is simply latent energy.'[ref...]. He made his position known publicly time and again[ref...]...", Eugene Hecht, "Einstein on mass and energy." Am. J. Phys., Vol. 77, No. 9, September 2009, onlineArhivirano 2021-02-24 na Wayback Machine-u.