Photons

RS2 can shed some light on the nature of photons.

It is well known in conventional science that the photon has a dual nature, sometimes being observed as a particle (photon, quanta of energy), other times being observed as a wave (a light wave). Research into the processes, observation and measurement of the photon that yielded this conclusion has revealed that the photon is still nothing but a motion, with the apparent dichotomy simply being two different points of observation with different sets of premises.

The basis of the different perspectives comes from the geometries assumed.

All 'localized' objects, for the material sector observer, exist at a point in space. This is what makes them "local", they are here and can be measured. All speed relationships (s/t) are local for the material observer.

Non-local objects, for the material observer, exist as patterns of energy, wave functions. They cannot be located at a single point in space because the geometry is based on energy, (t/s). They are localized in time, but since conventional science is unable to measure temporal coordinates, they are treated as waves. In the assumptions of RS2, this coordinate system is counterspace, literally the "counter" to "space". Note carefully that counterspace is not the Cosmic sector, it is a material perspective of the energetic realm.

As defined:

Photon: localized speed, observed in the material, spatial coordinate system.

Wave: non-localized energy, observed in the material, counterspatial coordinate system.

Are there "cosmic photons"? No. The photon has no rotational base to determine its material or cosmic bias. All it has is frequency, which can be low (a/b where b>a) or high (a/b where a>b).

The photon has no motion outside of its unit of space or time, and hence cannot directly affect any other motion structure. It is also fixed at an absolute location in the natural reference system and therefore photons have no motion relative to each other.