Consider a
Lorentz boost in a fixed direction
z. This can be interpreted as a rotation of the time axis into the
z axis, with an
imaginary rotation parameter. If this rotation parameter were
real, it would be possible for a 180° rotation to reverse the direction of time and of
z. Reversing the direction of one axis is a reflection of space in any number of dimensions. If space has 3 dimensions, it is equivalent to reflecting all the coordinates, because an additional rotation of 180° in the
x-y plane could be included. This defines a CPT transformation if we adopt the
Feynman–Stückelberg interpretation of antiparticles as the corresponding particles traveling backwards in time. This interpretation requires a slight
analytic continuation, which is well-defined only under the following assumptions: • The theory is
Lorentz invariant; • The vacuum is Lorentz invariant; • The energy is bounded below. When the above hold,
quantum theory can be extended to a Euclidean theory, defined by translating all the operators to imaginary time using the
Hamiltonian. The
commutation relations of the Hamiltonian, and the
Lorentz generators, guarantee that
Lorentz invariance implies
rotational invariance, so that any state can be rotated by 180 degrees. Since a sequence of two CPT reflections is equivalent to a 360-degree rotation,
fermions change by a sign under two CPT reflections, while
bosons do not. This fact can be used to prove the
spin-statistics theorem. ==Consequences and implications==