Open mikehelland opened 3 years ago
In the decelerating photon hypothesis, v=c-HD, a freshly emitted photon always has a distance of D=0, and thus v=c.
Does that conflict with the CPT symmetry? The difference between the absorbed photon and emitted photon is distance and speed, not charge or parity.
"CPT says that reversing time, mirroring space and flipping the charges in a process doesn't change the probability of said process. If an atom absorbs a slow photon and an electron is kicked out by it, the revere can happen. An anti-ion captures a positron, and emitts a slow photon. Of course you don't have to have a whole anti-ion for this, if an atom interacts with slow photons than either quarks or electrons interact with slow photons, so positron or anti quark reactions should have produced slow photons in particle accelerators in my opinion."