Submitted by TheGandPTurtle t3_111g7s9 in askscience
MasterPatricko t1_j8j6gkn wrote
Reply to comment by Weed_O_Whirler in Light traveling through a medium that slows it. Does the same photon emerge? by TheGandPTurtle
> according to General Relativity, a massless particle must always travel at c.
That's special relativity, not general relativity (yes, GR includes SR, but you get what I mean).
The fundamental wrong assumption people make is that a wavepacket of the EM field -- a photon -- in a vacuum is somehow "the same" as the wavepacket of the EM field in a complex background of charged particles, i.e. a real material made of atoms.
To make an analogy (of limited range, please don't abuse it :)): no-one is surprised that a classical gravity wave in water and a wave in honey behave differently. Why is it surprising for an EM wave? /u/Keudn 's description is classical and doesn't explain how to calculate the speed in a medium, but aside from that missing depth, strictly correct.
Weed_O_Whirler t1_j8j8j8m wrote
I specifically talked about how there are models where the photon becomes a quasiparticle in my original answer to the question, I was simply explaining to the person who asked why there are complications when viewing EM waves moving slower.
MasterPatricko t1_j8j9h5k wrote
Right, and I didn't contradict you on that, I'm adding to your answer there. The only mistake you made here was you have confused GR and SR.
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