Posts

“Gravity Without Geometry: A Finite‑Capacity Matrix Network Model of Galactic Halos, Binary Mergers and the CMB”

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```html FCMFD: Exploratory Matrix‑Network Framework FCMFD: An Exploratory Matrix‑Network Framework for Gravitational Relaxation Version 1.1 — Public Release Based on numerical experiments in Google Colab using SPARC rotation curves, matrix network simulations, Planck CMB data and LIGO ringdown data. Abstract We present an exploratory mathematical framework termed Finite Coupled Monad Field Dynamics (FCMFD) – a coordinate‑free, non‑abelian matrix network model in which relaxation‑like behaviour emerges from a finite‑capacity dynamical system with fractional memory and amplitude saturation. No background spacetime geometry is assumed; instead, the state of the system is represented by a set of Hermitian operators M i (t) coupled via an adjacency matrix W ij . Network interaction amplitudes propagate through commutator terms [M i , M j ]; memory is implemented via a Grünwald‑Letnikov‑inspired fractional time derivative; saturation is enforced by spectra...

FCMFD: From Galactic Halos to Binary Mergers — A Constitutive Framework without Dark Matter

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FCMFD: Algebraic Substrate Theory of Gravitational Relaxation FCMFD: A Unified Algebraic Substrate Theory of Gravitational Relaxation From Galactic Halos to Binary Mergers — A Constitutive Framework without Dark Matter Version 1.0 — Public Release Based on numerical experiments in Google Colab using SPARC rotation curves, matrix network simulations, and LIGO ringdown data. Abstract We present the complete mathematical formulation of Finite Coupled Monad Field Dynamics (FCMFD) — a coordinate‑free, non‑abelian matrix network theory in which gravitational phenomena emerge from a finite‑capacity substrate with fractional memory and amplitude saturation. No background spacetime geometry is assumed. The state of the universe is represented by a set of Hermitian operators M i (t) coupled via an adjacency matrix W ij . Stress propagates through commutator torque [M i , M j ]; memory is implemented via a Grünwald‑Letnikov fractional time derivative; and ...

Finite Coupled Monad Field Dynamics: A Geometry‑Free Substrate Model of Gravitational Relaxation

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Finite Coupled Monad Field Dynamics | White Paper v1.0 Finite Coupled Monad Field Dynamics A Coordinate‑Free Algebraic Substrate Model of Gravitational Relaxation Version 1.0 — For Public Release Abstract We present a numerical implementation of Finite Coupled Monad Field Dynamics (FCMFD), a model in which gravitational‑wave‑like signals arise from a non‑abelian matrix network with fractional memory and amplitude saturation. No background spacetime geometry is assumed. The system is defined by a set of Hermitian operators M i (t) coupled via an adjacency matrix W ij . Stress propagates through commutator terms [M i , M j ], and saturation (“phase locking”) is enforced by spectral truncation. Fractional time evolution is approximated using Grünwald–Letnikov weights. We simulate three configurations: a single saturated node, a binary inspiral with time‑varying coupling, and the same inspiral with stochastic noise added to the saturated core. From each we...

The Monad‑Field: Comparative Relaxation Signatures under a Nonlinear Magnetar‑Like Mapping

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White Paper: Comparative Relaxation Signatures under a Nonlinear Magnetar‑Like Mapping White Paper: Comparative Relaxation Signatures under a Nonlinear Magnetar‑Like Mapping Abstract This study compares two relaxation models—an empirical stretched‑exponential form and a constant‑order fractional (Mittag–Leffler) model—subjected to a shared nonlinear observational mapping motivated by magnetar timing phenomenology. The mapping applies a time‑dilation factor (1 + k·S(t)), cumulative phase integration, and extraction of the lag‑rate envelope. An effective relaxation exponent β_eff is obtained by fitting the late‑time decay of the lag‑rate to a stretched‑exponential surrogate. The resulting β_eff(k) curves exhibit qualitatively distinct behaviours. Stretched‑exponential substrates show strong and opposite coupling trends for β_true = 0.5 and β_true = 0.2. In contrast, constant‑order fractional substrates yield β_eff values that are nearly independent of coupling. These...

Monad‑Field Retrospective

Monad‑Field Retrospective From Geometry to Tension: A Retrospective Reflections on the Monad‑Field Framework – v1.0 to v3.6 Where we started The initial idea was simple: gravity is not the curvature of an empty spacetime, but the constitutive response of a 3D tension field – the substrate. The equations were sketched, the ontology was ambitious, but the empirical grounding was weak. There was no data pipeline, no falsifiable predictions, no cross‑scale evidence. It was a philosophical manifesto dressed in mathematical clothing. The turning point The critical shift was not a theoretical breakthrough – it was a methodological one. We stopped asking “is the theory true?” and started asking “what does the data actually show?” That meant building a Substrate Radar (later formalised as Constitutive Substrate Analysis): a pipeline to extract memory kernels, hysteresis, and relaxation exponents from public datasets – LIGO ringdowns, SPARC rotation curves, X‑ray cavities, TDE l...

The Atlantean World

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These pins are the reconstructed paleopositions of ancient megalithic and monolithic sites when Gondwana existed. (Not modern lat/long.) Göbekli Tepe — 10°N, 25°E Jericho — 5°N, 20°E Giza Pyramids — 0°, 20°E Stonehenge — 30°S, 10°E Teotihuacan — 40°S, 60°W Tiwanaku — 55°S, 50°W Mohenjo‑Daro — 20°S, 40°E Easter Island — 70°S, 80°W Baalbek — 0°, 25°E Angkor — 35°S, 60°E Nabta Playa — 5°S, 20°E Chavín de Huántar — 50°S, 45°W Great Zimbabwe — 40°S, 30°E Yonaguni — 45°S, 70°E Sacsayhuamán — 55°S, 50°W Carnac Stones — 25°S, 5°E Aksum — 5°S, 25°E Nan Madol — 50°S, 75°E Puma Punku — 55°S, 50°W Note: Coordinates are paleogeographic reconstructions — approximate positions wi...