If you're not familiar with what aether theory has say about so called 'photons' then go to the "Aether Theory" forum here and read the tutorials.
Once you're acquainted with these ideas you can see that the strange wave-particle duality of the 'photon' is solved. Why does it behave as a wave and a particle? Simple. Because it's a wave of particles. The wave has physical mass and can present mass-like properties, but being composed of many particles - and not just being one solid object - it can flow and diffract around corners. It can be compared directly with waves of water molecules on the sea.
The cubic aether rotation also explains the sine wave nature of EM waves.
Another interesting thing to think about is that cubic aether rotation can occur on any of three axis, thus sending out EM waves in any of three planes. Is it mere coincidence that we have three varieties of EM polarisation for EM generators, such as radio transmitters and lasers? We have horizontal, vertical and circular polarisation. Presumably circular must be when the axis of aether spin is pointing at the observer. Horizontal would be when the axis of rotation is pointing upwards and vertical would be when the axis is horizontal. But more thought needs to go into this. If we have a transmitter and receiver on Earth they will not necessarily be aligned to the cubic geometry of the aether, so how does an EM wave be seen as being horizontally or vertically polarised when, for example, the aether is slanted at 30 degrees to the receiver?
