User:Bob K31416/Sandbox/SL


 * I think the point you are trying to make involves the relativity of simultaneity which was discussed in this part of the article,

"Another counter-intuitive consequence of special relativity is the relativity of simultaneity: if the spatial distance between two events A and B is greater than the time interval between them multiplied by c, then there are frames of reference in which A precedes B, others in which B precedes A, and others in which they are simultaneous, with the consequence that such events cannot have a causal relation." You seem to be defining the two events as the respective measurements of each particle which occur at different places that are separated by a distance greater than ct. If that is what you mean, then the relativity of simultaneity does not apply here since the measurements of the two particles can be made in all reference frames, not just a particl

but the edit you made was still illogical since it implied that "faster than c" meant instantaneous in all frames.