Comment Re:What if... (Score 1) 191
There's still something that doesn't quite work with this argument as far as I can see. (I am a particle experimentalist and not a theorist, but hear me out. I'd be very interested to see if you have an argument for why the following idea doesn't work.) I understand that mass is necessary for flavour oscillations, but my issue is with the argument of SR banning any time dependence for massless particles.
Sure there's no "Electric photon" or "Magnetic photon" as you say, but there IS a distinct, measurable, time dependent difference between, say, a horizontally and a vertically polarized photon.
Say I have a circularly polarized photon fired at a horizontal filter. The probability of that photon passing the filter is dependent on the photon's time of flight before hitting it.
It seems to me like I could experimentally measure a time dependent property of the photon: The same experiment performed at different times on an identically prepared photon yields different results. So how does this "mesh" with the SR argument? Perhaps you're being too general?