- An observer sees only the light irradiated or reflected, and only at the moment when photons have reached light-sensitive cells in the retina of observer"s eye.
- Any light burst occurs before it will be seen. Therefore photons" motion towards an observer is always directed form the past to the future, which is the normal, positive time-course.
- The motion of the photons and other objects away from the observer happens backward in time, from the future to the past, which results in a negative time-increment.
- For the objects at subluminal speed, this only causes retardation of time, which is still positive.
- At the luminal speed, the negative time-increment is so great that time stops and the object adopts wave properties, i.e. a possibility to be in many places simultaneously.
- Superluminal objects get into the currently negative time with the reversed entropy processes and cause-effect relationship.
- In the negative time-space, the objects are not visible for a subluminal observer. However, they are entirely real.
In the negative time, the antimatter is hidden. It annihilates with all matter of the Universe at the moment of each successive Big Bang.