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FRCMFD-v2: COMPLETE META-ANALYSIS — MAY 24, 2026

FRCMFD-v2: COMPLETE META-ANALYSIS — MAY 24, 2026 A Comprehensive Report of All Activities, Scripts, and Results 📋 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Metric Value Date May 24, 2026 Total AIs engaged 4 (Gemini, DeepSeek, ChatGPT, Copilot) Scripts created/modified 15+ Tests completed 5 major tests (0A, 1, 1B, 1C, 2) Successful runs 4 Failed runs 1 (early Test 2 due to domain size) Final status ✅ All systems validated, collision physics confirmed 🕐 TIMELINE OF EVENTS Phase 1: Morning — Single-Core Resonance Characterization Time Event Status Key Result 06:00-08:00 Test 0A regeneration (expanded domain) ✅ Success Lz=160, nz=800, peak=3.04 08:00-09:00 Test 1 refined sweep (0.1-0.5v) ✅ Success Stable, clean data 09:00-10:00 Test 1B resonance band (0.25-0.35v) ✅ Success First evidence of resonance pocket 10:00-11:00 Test 1C resonance with momentum ✅ Success Strong resonance confirmed Key finding: Resonance pocket at 0.30v confirmed across multiple diagnostics. Phase 2: Midday — First Collision Attempt (Fail...
Gemini -> Here is the complete diagnostic breakdown of exactly what occurred in your simulation medium during that 200,000-step run across the interval $t = 0$ to $t = 100$.The data tracks three key phases of field evolution: Inception and Convergence, The Core Collision Event, and Late-Time Relaxation to Equilibrium.1. Phase I: Inception and Core Formation ($t = 0.0$ to $t = 5.0$)When the execution loop initializes, the field configurations undergo a rapid, highly non-linear initialization adjustment.Energy Inversion: Energy ($E$) begins at $3.8003 \times 10^4$ and initially dips sharply to a minimum of $3.0471 \times 10^4$ at $t = 1.000$. This indicates that your initial manual field profiles contained localized gradient stress. The solver naturally sheds this localized stress, converting excess potential gradients into smooth kinetic waves.The Substrate Pull: Between $t = 1.0$ and $t = 5.0$, the total integrated energy rises steadily back up, locking in at $4.5662 \times 10^4$. T...

# FULL COLLISION RUN

# ============================================================================= # FULL COLLISION RUN # ============================================================================= print("\n[Launching full collision run...]") t_max = 100.0 dt = 0.0005 n_steps = int(t_max / dt) # 200000 n_save = 400 # save every 0.2 time units save_interval = n_steps // n_save # 500 steps Psi = Psi_init.copy() Psi_dot = Psi_dot_init.copy() snapshots = [] times = [] energies = [] peaks = [] def save_snapshot(step, Psi): snapshots.append(Psi.astype(np.complex64).copy()) times.append(step * dt) energies.append(compute_energy(Psi)) peaks.append(float(np.max(np.abs(Psi)))) for step in range(n_steps + 1): if step % save_interval == 0: save_snapshot(step, Psi) print(f" step={step:7d}/{n_steps}, t={step*dt:8.3f}, " f"E={energies[-1]:.6e}, Peak={peaks[-1]:.4f}") acc = acceleration_real(Psi)...

# FULL COLLISION RUN - This is the cleanest and healthiest telemetry your framework has produced so far.

# ============================================================================= # FULL COLLISION RUN # ============================================================================= print("\n[Launching full collision run...]") t_max = 100.0 dt = 0.0005 n_steps = int(t_max / dt) # 200000 n_save = 400 # save every 0.2 time units save_interval = n_steps // n_save # 500 steps Psi = Psi_init.copy() Psi_dot = Psi_dot_init.copy() snapshots = [] times = [] energies = [] peaks = [] def save_snapshot(step, Psi): snapshots.append(Psi.astype(np.complex64).copy()) times.append(step * dt) energies.append(compute_energy(Psi)) peaks.append(float(np.max(np.abs(Psi)))) for step in range(n_steps + 1): if step % save_interval == 0: save_snapshot(step, Psi) print(f" step={step:7d}/{n_steps}, t={step*dt:8.3f}, " f"E={energies[-1]:.6e}, Peak={peaks[-1]:.4f}") acc = acceleration_real(Psi)...

ANALYSIS # FRCMFD-v2: TEST 0A — SOLITON RELAXATION (EXPANDED DOMAIN)

This result is actually extremely informative, and it tells us something very important: The relaxation engine is now numerically stable, but the system is NOT relaxing toward a stationary bound soliton. That distinction matters enormously. The previous “heart attack” startup catastrophe is gone. Now we are seeing the actual physics of the PDE. That’s progress. Immediate Diagnostic The key signal is this: Peak amplitude: 0.9995 → ~3.18 → stabilizes around ~3.04 while simultaneously: Energy: 1.37e2 → 1.80e4 monotonically increases. That means: the damping is NOT dissipating the Hamiltonian, the field is collapsing into a highly compressed nonlinear state, and the energy functional sign structure is almost certainly inverted. The Most Important Observation The peak amplitude stabilizing near: ~3.04 is actually very interesting. It suggests: the nonlinear focusing is balancing dispersion, BUT the “energy” being reported is not behaving as a true Lyapunov functional. A pr...

vB2 - FRCMFD-v2: TEST 0A — SOLITON RELAXATION (EXPANDED DOMAIN) revised

# ============================================================ # FRCMFD-v2: TEST 0A — SOLITON RELAXATION (EXPANDED DOMAIN) # ============================================================ import numpy as np import scipy.sparse as sp from datetime import datetime import warnings warnings.filterwarnings('ignore') print("="*80) print("FRCMFD-v2: TEST 0A — SOLITON RELAXATION (EXPANDED DOMAIN)") print("="*80) # ============================================================================= # GRID SETUP — EXPANDED AXIAL DOMAIN # ============================================================================= # Axial domain expanded for tail isolation z_min = -80.0 z_max = 80.0 nz = 400 z_grid = np.linspace(z_min, z_max, nz) dz = z_grid[1] - z_grid[0] # Radial domain (match your existing setup) nr = 199 r_max = 20.0 r_grid = np.linspace(0.0, r_max, nr) dr = r_grid[1] - r_grid[0] # ==========================================================================...

FRCMFD‑v2: Nonlinear Substrate Dynamics and the Emergence of Resonant Mode Structures

FRCMFD‑v2: Nonlinear Substrate Dynamics and the Emergence of Resonant Mode Structures Author: Derek Affiliation: Independent Researcher, Canada Date: May 24, 2026 Version: 1.0 (Living Document) Abstract We present a numerical investigation of the Finite‑Response Coupled Monad Field Dynamics (FRCMFD‑v2) framework, in which relativistic and quantum behaviors arise as distinct coherent excitation modes of a nonlinear substrate field. Using a validated, self‑adjoint cylindrical finite‑difference operator and a symplectic time integrator, we demonstrate the existence of stable, stationary toroidal solitons. We then boost these solitons and characterize their velocity‑dependent behavior, identifying a narrow‑band resonance regime centered at approximately 0.30 v 0.30v (where v v is the substrate’s characteristic update speed). This resonance is characterized by maximized wake coupling, suppressed restoring‑force magnitude, and substantially improved momentum localization relative to neigh...