- #1
Leo.Ki
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When an electron and a positron, for instance, annihilate, do their fields disappear away at c from the point of the annihilation, letting their former influence still apply beyond the vanishing line?
If the energy of these particles is entirely in their fields, as I sometimes read, how can the whole of their infinite fields instantly convert into gamma-ray photons or other particles without violating Relativity?
If the energy of these particles is entirely in their fields, as I sometimes read, how can the whole of their infinite fields instantly convert into gamma-ray photons or other particles without violating Relativity?