Submitted:
30 January 2026
Posted:
02 February 2026
Read the latest preprint version here
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction: Informational Coherence as a Cross-Regime Gravitational Framework

2. Foundations of Informational Spin
2.1. Conceptual Scope and Status
- Entropy in thermodynamics,
- Order parameters in condensed matter physics,
- Coarse-grained fields in effective theories.
2.2. Operational Definition
- Information exhibits correlated organization across degrees of freedom,
- This organization is dynamically stable against entropic dispersion,
- Coherence gradients influence observable system dynamics.
2.3. Distinction from Quantum Mechanical Spin
2.4. Mathematical Representation
- and represent informational state variables,
- and denote reference equilibrium states,
- and are scale-dependent exponents,
- N is the number of contributing informational elements.
2.5. Scale Invariance and Fractal Organization
2.6. Informational Coherence
2.7. Dynamics of Informational Coherence
- I denotes informational density,
- represents effective information flux,
- quantifies coherence dissipation.
2.8. Emergent Physical Effects
2.9. Interpretative Caution
- Informational spin is not claimed to be a new particle or field,
- It does not modify known quantum numbers,
- It serves as a unifying descriptor within a phenomenological theory.
2.10. Summary
3. The Matuchaki Parameter: Geometric Origin and Physical Interpretation
3.1. Context and Role in the TGU Framework
3.2. Phenomenological Identification
3.3. Geometric Normalization Argument
3.4. Systematic Deviations from Ideal Isotropy
- Stellar oblateness and magnetic field anisotropies,
- Non-uniform plasma distributions in the orbital environment,
- Large-scale tidal coherence gradients induced by galactic structure.
3.5. Physical Interpretation
3.6. Dimensionless Nature and Universality
3.7. Numerical Convergences
| Expression | Approximate Value |
3.8. Status of the Parameter
- A dimensionless coherence efficiency factor,
- Geometrically motivated rather than postulated,
- Empirically constrained but not freely fitted,
- Non-fundamental in the field-theoretic sense.
3.9. Summary
4. Cross-Scale Phenomenology: Galactic and Orbital Tests
4.1. Galactic Scale: Rotation Curve of Messier 104
4.2. Orbital Scale: Coherence Correction Factor and Convergence to GR
4.3. Trans-Scale Consistency and Physical Interpretation

5. Refined Orbital Precession Model: MASTER TGU Framework
5.1. Initial Formulation and Limitations
5.2. Coherence Resistance Factor
- AU (solar coherence radius)
- (harmonic coherence exponent)
- (orbital distance)
5.3. Justification of Exponent
- Harmonic structure: Corresponds to dimensions of compactified manifolds or independent modes in spin networks with icosahedral/dodecahedral symmetry
- Topological compactification: In higher-dimensional informational geometries, 12 dimensions arise from Calabi-Yau-like manifolds or exceptional Lie group symmetries
- Modular invariance: Consistent with modular forms of weight 12 (e.g., Eisenstein series ) governing partition functions in string theory
5.4. Constraint-Based Origin of the Coherence Exponent
5.4.1. Role of the Coherence Resistance Factor
- Exact convergence with General Relativity in the weak-field, low-strain limit;
- Finite and bounded behavior near compact coherence sources;
- Preservation of scale invariance across orbital, galactic, and cosmological regimes;
- Absence of unphysical divergence or overdamping of coherence effects.
5.4.2. Effective Dimensional Constraint of the Informational Manifold
- Closed coherence loops,
- Phase-preserving transport,
- Global flux normalization.
5.4.3. Cohomological Consistency Requirement
5.4.4. Symmetry and Generator Counting Argument
- Three generators associated with spatial rotations;
- Three generators associated with phase translations;
- Six generators associated with internal coherence couplings.
5.4.5. Modular and Scaling Consistency
5.4.6. Uniqueness of the Exponent
- Weak-field convergence with General Relativity;
- Finite behavior near compact coherence sources;
- Effective dimensional consistency of the informational manifold;
- Closure of coherence transport under integration;
- Preservation of scale and symmetry structure.
5.4.7. Physical Interpretation
5.4.8. Status of the Result
5.5. Computational Implementation (MASTER TGU)
| import numpy as np |
| # TGU Constants |
| k = 0.0881 |
| n = 12 |
| rs_informational = 0.02391625 # AU |
| def calculate_alpha(e, a, k): |
| return 1.0 + k * (e / a) |
| def calculate_coherence_factor(r, rs, n): |
| epsilon = 1.0 + (rs / r)**2 |
| return epsilon**(-n) |
| # Example: Mercury |
| a = 0.387 # AU |
| e = 0.2056 |
| precession_gr = 42.98 # arcsec/century |
| alpha = calculate_alpha(e, a, k) |
| coherence_factor = calculate_coherence_factor(a, rs_informational, n) |
| tgu_precession = precession_gr * alpha * coherence_factor |
5.6. Numerical Convergence and Phenomenological Consistency
5.6.1. Solar System Bodies
| Body | e | a (AU) | Δ GR
|
ff | Coherence Factor | Δ TGU
|
Convergence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mercury | 0.2056 | 0.3871 | 42.98 | 1.0468 | 0.9553 | 42.98 | 100.00% |
| Venus | 0.0068 | 0.7233 | 8.60 | 1.0008 | 0.9870 | 8.49 | 98.78% |
| Earth | 0.0167 | 1.0000 | 3.84 | 1.0015 | 0.9932 | 3.82 | 99.46% |
| Mars | 0.0934 | 1.5237 | 1.35 | 1.0054 | 0.9970 | 1.35 | 100.24% |
| Icarus | 0.8269 | 1.0770 | 10.05 | 1.0676 | 0.9941 | 10.67 | 106.13% |
5.6.2. Exoplanet Predictions
| Exoplanet | e | a (AU) | Δ GR
|
ff | Coherence Factor | Δ TGU
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WASP-12b | 0.0490 | 0.0229 | 0.50 | 1.1048 | 0.00014 | 0.00007 |
| HD 80606b | 0.9332 | 0.469 | 1.20 | 1.1753 | 0.9693 | 1.37 |
| HAT-P-2b | 0.5170 | 0.0674 | 2.80 | 1.6758 | 0.2410 | 1.13 |
6. Cosmological Applications and Observational Consistency
6.1. Galactic Rotation Curves Without Dark Matter
6.2. Gravitational Lensing Reinterpreted
- is the angular distortion of light,
- is the informational coherence factor decaying with distance,
- is the local informational density associated with the lens,
- denotes the transverse gradient with respect to the line of sight.
6.3. Observational Comparison: LRG 3-757

6.3.1. Polarization Modulation in Lensed Regions
6.4. Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Interpretation
- = coherence decay rate with spatial curvature and entropy
- = metric anisotropy factor influencing angular coherence variation
- = residual oscillations from previous universal cycles
- k = wave number of dominant resonant mode in spin-informational field
6.5. Type Ia Supernovae and Cosmic Acceleration
6.6. Early Universe Galaxy Formation
6.7. Recent JWST Observations and Early Structure Formation
- JADES-GS-z14-0 (), exhibiting a stellar mass of order – and oxygen emission lines indicative of multiple generations of massive stars formed within less than [Ref. 18].
- Compact galaxies of the “Little Red Dots” (LRDs) population, frequently associated with rapid growth of primordial supermassive black holes [Ref. 19].
- Grand-design spiral structures such as Alaknanda, displaying well-defined arms, an elevated star-formation rate ( times that of the present-day Milky Way), and stellar mass already at –7 [Ref. 20].
- The “coherence basins” described in Section 13.2 provide a non-hierarchical aggregation mechanism that precedes baryonic condensation, facilitating the rapid assembly of disks, spiral arms, and enriched stellar populations over cosmologically short timescales.
- The scale-invariance and fractal organization of informational structures (Section 2.5) naturally account for the coexistence of primordial supermassive black holes and their mature host galaxies, without requiring finely tuned direct-collapse seeding mechanisms.
- The observed high star-formation efficiency is interpreted as the result of coherent collapse rather than stochastic gas-cloud collisions amplified by dark matter halos.
- Coherence signatures in the CMB on angular scales corresponding to the seeds of early galaxies (Test IV, Section 11.5).
- Spatial correlations between primordial supermassive black holes and background gravitational lensing polarization gradients.
- Absence of extended dark matter halos in weak-lensing maps of galaxies, with excess convergence explained instead by coherence modulations (Test III, Section 11.4).
7. Mathematical Duality Between TGU and General Relativity
7.1. Concept of Duality in Physical Theories
- Wave–particle duality in quantum mechanics,
- Hamiltonian and Lagrangian formulations of classical dynamics,
- Thermodynamics and statistical mechanics,
7.2. Variable Mapping Between GR and TGU
| General Relativity | TGU |
| Spacetime metric | Informational coherence field |
| Curvature tensor | Coherence gradient |
| Stress–energy tensor | Informational density distribution |
| Geodesic deviation | Coherence-driven trajectory adjustment |
| Gravitational constant G | Effective coherence coupling |
7.3. Formal Correspondence of Field Equations
7.4. Orbital Precession as a Dual Observable
7.5. Equivalence Classes and Regime Dependence
- Low-strain, weak-field regime: Exact or near-exact equivalence.
- Intermediate coherence regime: Small, controlled deviations with predictive power.
- High-strain or coherence-dominated regime: TGU predicts behavior beyond standard GR parameterizations.
7.6. Interpretative Complementarity
- General Relativity excels as a geometric description of spacetime.
- TGU excels as an organizational description of information flow and coherence.
7.7. Epistemological Status of the Duality
- A phenomenological equivalence supported by numerical convergence,
- A structural mapping between variables, not a claim of ontological reduction,
- A working hypothesis subject to falsification in regimes where the predictions diverge.
7.8. Implications for Unification
8. Quantum and Subatomic Applications
8.1. Particle Genesis from Informational Collapse
8.2. Higgs Field as an Emergent Coherence Effect
8.2.0.1. Numerical Consistency with LHC Higgs Measurements



8.3. Superconductivity Through Electronic Coherence
- = superconducting current
- = electronic network coherence
- = informational density of participating electrons
9. Experimental Validation Pathways
9.1. Gravitational Wave Polarization Analysis
- Detection of mode asymmetries in LIGO/Virgo/KAGRA data
- Correlation of polarization anomalies with coherence gradient regions
- Targeted observations of black hole mergers in asymmetric environments
9.2. CMB Polarization Studies
- B-mode anomaly detection with CMB-S4 and future missions
- Correlation of polarization patterns with predicted coherence structures
- Search for cyclic patterns suggesting previous universal iterations
9.3. Laboratory Coherence Experiments
- Quantum oscillator arrays to measure coherence fluctuations
- Ion trap systems simulating coherence collapse and particle genesis
- Optical cavity experiments testing coherence gradient effects
10. Computational Implementation of the TGU Framework
- Informational spin similarity metric (Eq. 3.2)
- Emergent coherence index (Eq. 4.1)
- Pairwise informational interaction potential (Eq. 5.3)
- Informational substrate tension (Eq. 6.2)
11. Experimental Tests and Falsifiability of the Unified Theory of Informational Spin
11.1. Guiding Principle for Experimental Tests
A valid test must probe regimes where informational coherence gradients predict behavior that cannot be absorbed into standard relativistic or dark-sector parameterizations without additional assumptions.
11.2. Test I: High-Eccentricity Orbital Precession
11.2.1. Unique TGU Signature
- Scale non-linearly with ,
- Cannot be mimicked by post-Newtonian terms alone,
- Are insensitive to small uncertainties in stellar mass.
11.2.2. Observational Targets
- Binary pulsars with asymmetric mass ratios,
- Highly eccentric exoplanets (e.g., HD 80606b-like systems),
- Near-Sun asteroids with extreme orbital deformation.
11.2.3. Falsification Criterion
11.3. Test II: Gravitational Wave Polarization Anomalies
11.3.1. Unique TGU Signature
11.3.2. Experimental Strategy
- Cross-correlation of polarization data from LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA,
- Comparison of events traversing distinct galactic environments,
- Statistical separation from instrumental polarization biases.
11.3.3. Falsification Criterion
11.4. Test III: Gravitational Lensing Without Dark Matter Profiles
11.4.1. Unique TGU Signature
- Lensing effects spatially offset from baryonic mass peaks,
- Reduced correlation with Navarro–Frenk–White halo profiles,
- Environment-dependent lensing anomalies.
11.4.2. Observational Targets
- Galaxy clusters with known lensing–mass discrepancies,
- Strong-lensing systems with asymmetric environments,
- High-redshift lenses observed by JWST and Euclid.
11.4.3. Falsification Criterion
11.5. Test IV: Cosmic Microwave Background Coherence Signatures
11.5.1. Unique TGU Signature
- Phase-correlated low-ℓ multipoles,
- Non-Gaussian coherence residues aligned across scales,
- Weak but systematic departures from isotropy.
11.5.2. Experimental Strategy
- Reanalysis of Planck and future CMB-S4 polarization data,
- Search for coherence-aligned phase correlations,
- Cross-comparison with large-scale structure surveys.
11.5.3. Falsification Criterion
11.6. Test V: Laboratory-Scale Coherence Experiments
11.6.1. Unique TGU Signature
- Ion-trap arrays with tunable coherence dissipation,
- Superconducting circuits under coherence modulation,
- Optical cavities with engineered coherence gradients.
11.6.2. Experimental Strategy
- Measurement of decoherence rates under spatial coherence gradients,
- Comparison with standard quantum noise models,
- Reproducibility across independent platforms.
11.6.3. Falsification Criterion
| Test Domain | Decisive for TGU |
|---|---|
| High-eccentricity orbits | Yes |
| Gravitational wave polarization | Yes |
| Dark-matter-independent lensing | Yes |
| CMB phase coherence | Yes |
| Laboratory quantum coherence | Partial |
11.7. Experimental Status and Outlook
12. Experimental Tests at the Galactic Center
12.1. Motivation for Galactic Center Tests
- Strong gravitational potentials,
- High orbital eccentricities (),
- Large periapsis velocity fractions of the speed of light,
- Minimal perturbations from distributed matter.
12.2. Orbital Precession in TGU
12.3. Case Study: The S2 Star
- Semi-major axis: ,
- Eccentricity: ,
- Orbital period: years,
- Central mass: .
12.4. Predicted Deviations and Observational Sensitivity
- Higher-order coherence effects may become observable for stars with smaller semi-major axes than S2,
- Stars with comparable eccentricity but reduced orbital scale ( AU) could exhibit percent-level deviations,
- A population of yet-undiscovered inner S-stars would provide decisive tests of coherence resistance effects.
12.5. Relation to Observational Programs
- Infrared interferometry (e.g., GRAVITY-class instruments),
- Long-term astrometric monitoring of the Galactic Center,
- Spectroscopic measurements of relativistic redshift near periapsis.
12.6. S2 as a Convergence Regime
12.7. Falsifiability Criteria
- Stars with significantly exceeding that of S2 exhibit no systematic deviation from GR beyond measurement uncertainties,
- Observed deviations scale inconsistently with the coherence factor ,
- Independent measurements of precession and redshift fail to show correlated coherence signatures.
12.8. Summary
12.9. S2 Orbit Constraints and Bayesian Consistency with General Relativity
13. Experimental Test: Hercules–Corona Borealis Great Wall
13.1. Motivation
13.2. TGU Interpretation: Coherence Basins
13.3. Numerical Simulation
13.4. Formation Timescale
13.5. Observational Signatures and Falsifiability
- Phase-coherent imprints in the cosmic microwave background correlated with large-scale filaments,
- Systematic alignment of galaxy orientations along coherence gradients,
- Reduced dependence on massive dark matter halos for structural stability.
13.6. Summary
13.7. Comparative Analysis: Hercules–Corona Borealis Great Wall in TGU vs. CDM
13.7.1. Observational Context
13.7.2. Interpretation within the CDM Framework
- A statistical fluctuation within cosmic variance,
- A projection or selection effect in GRB catalogs,
- A structure whose significance diminishes under refined statistical treatment.
13.7.3. Interpretation within the TGU Framework
- Informational coherence precedes mass clustering and acts as a structural substrate,
- Matter accretes along gradients of informational coherence rather than purely local gravitational potentials,
- Large-scale filaments and walls emerge naturally from extended coherence domains established prior to nonlinear gravitational collapse.
13.7.4. Formation Timescale Comparison
| Aspect | ΛCDM | TGU |
|---|---|---|
| Initial driver | Density perturbations | Informational coherence gradients |
| Growth mode | Hierarchical (bottom-up) | Coherence-driven (top-down) |
| Timescale to Gpc scale | ≳ several Gyr | Early coherence imprint |
| Role of dark matter | Essential | Not required |
| Interpretation of Her–CrB | Statistical anomaly | Natural coherence basin |
13.7.5. Observational Signatures and Falsifiability
- No preferred phase coherence across Her–CrB scales,
- Randomized orientations beyond statistical clustering,
- No correlated imprints beyond density-based statistics.
- Phase-correlated large-scale patterns,
- Possible alignment signatures in low-multipole CMB modes,
- Coherence-linked anisotropies not reducible to density fluctuations alone.
13.7.6. Status and Scope
| Aspect | ΛCDM Paradigm | TGU Paradigm |
|---|---|---|
| Initial Driver | Primordial density perturbations (Gaussian). | Primordial informational coherence gradients. |
| Growth Mode | Hierarchical (bottom-up) via successive mergers. | Coherence-driven (top-down/structural). |
| Gpc Timescale | ≳ several billion years. | Early/near-instantaneous coherence imprint. |
| Role of Dark Matter | Essential for collapse and structural stability. | Not required; coherence provides the scaffolding. |
| Her–CrB Interpretation | Statistical anomaly or extreme fluctuation. | Natural and predicted coherence basin. |
| Observational Signature | Mass distribution based on density flow. | Phase alignment and large-scale spin correlation. |
13.7.7. Summary
13.8. Galactic Rotation Curves Without Dark Matter
13.9. Pulsar Timing as a High-Strain Validation Channel: NICER and FAST
13.9.1. Motivation within the TGU Framework
- Informational coherence gradients are steep,
- Orbital strain is extreme,
- Small deviations can accumulate coherently over long timing baselines.
13.9.2. Observational Opportunities with NICER
- Precision tracking of pulse arrival times sensitive to coherence-modulated spacetime effects,
- Constraints on spin-coherence coupling through phase stability,
- Independent cross-checks of mass-radius inferences under coherence-based corrections.
13.9.3. Radio Timing with FAST
- Long-term accumulation of orbital residuals,
- Tests of periastron advance and Shapiro delay under coherence-modified dynamics,
- Statistical separation between stochastic noise, extended-mass effects, and coherence-driven deviations.
13.9.4. Current Status and Falsifiability
- Deviations should scale nonlinearly with strain rather than mass alone,
- Residuals should correlate across timing, spin, and orbital observables,
- Effects should become statistically significant in extreme or highly eccentric pulsar systems.
13.9.5. Summary
13.10. Pulsar Tests with NICER and FAST: Observational Validation of the TGU
Observational Context.
TGU Prediction in the Pulsar Regime.
- periastron advance,
- orbital period decay,
- higher-order timing residuals linked to coherence gradients rather than mass-only effects.
Concrete Validation Strategy.
- Exact convergence with General Relativity for low-eccentricity pulsars and isolated rotators.
- Absence of free-fitting parameters beyond the universal coherence constant k and the topologically derived exponent .
- Predictable, strain-dependent deviations in timing observables for highly eccentric or ultra-compact systems, exceeding instrumental systematics.
Status and Outlook.
13.11. Binary Pulsars as Convergence Benchmarks: PSR B1913+16 and PSR J0737−3039A/B
13.11.1. PSR B1913+16 (Hulse–Taylor Pulsar)
13.11.2. PSR J0737−3039A/B (Double Pulsar)
13.11.3. Interpretation and Implications
14. Primordial Nucleosynthesis in the Informational Spin Framework
14.1. Informational Dynamics During the Primordial Era
14.2. Numerical Estimates and Element Abundances
14.3. Implications for the Lithium Problem
14.4. Discussion
15. Axiomatic Foundations of Informational Spin
15.1. Axiom I — Informational Primacy
15.2. Axiom II — Coherence as a Physical Property
15.3. Axiom III — Existence of Informational Spin
15.4. Axiom IV — Scale Invariance of Informational Structures
15.5. Axiom V — Emergence of Effective Forces from Coherence Gradients
15.6. Axiom VI — Entropy as Informational Decoherence
15.7. Axiom VII — Phenomenological Closure
- Internal mathematical consistency,
- Convergence with experimentally verified theories in tested regimes,
- The generation of falsifiable predictions in unexplored domains.
15.8. Status of the Axioms
16. Conclusions and Future Perspectives
16.1. Key Theoretical Advances
- The formulation of informational spin as a scale-invariant coherence descriptor applicable across physical and quantum systems.
- The geometric motivation of the Matuchaki Parameter as a dimensionless coherence efficiency factor.
- The introduction of a coherence resistance factor ensuring controlled convergence with general relativity in low-strain regimes.
- A reinterpretation of gravitational phenomena as emergent effects of informational coherence gradients.
16.2. Empirical and Phenomenological Consistency
- Numerical convergence with observed orbital precession values in the Solar System.
- Phenomenological consistency with galactic rotation behavior without requiring additional matter components.
- Coherence-based reinterpretations of cosmological observations, including large-scale structure, lensing phenomena, and cosmic background anisotropies.
- Conceptual mappings between informational coherence and biological organization that generate testable interdisciplinary hypotheses.
16.3. Future Research Directions
- Derivation of TGU parameters from deeper quantum-informational foundations.
- Large-scale numerical simulations enabling direct statistical comparison with CDM cosmology.
- Dedicated observational analyses of high-eccentricity systems and coherence-sensitive gravitational-wave signatures.
- Controlled laboratory experiments exploring coherence dynamics in condensed-matter and quantum systems.
- Interdisciplinary studies investigating coherence-based descriptors in biological organization and information processing.
16.4. Philosophical Implications
- Physical laws emerge from structured informational coherence rather than from isolated force carriers alone.
- Observers interact with reality through phase-selective engagement with informational patterns.
- Life and cognition represent localized mechanisms for coherence preservation against entropic dispersion.
- Cosmological evolution may be interpreted as cyclic reorganization of informational structure rather than irreversible decay.
Code and Data Availability
Appendix A. Limitations, Domain of Validity, and Risks of the TGU Framework
Appendix A.1. Phenomenological Nature of the Theory
Appendix A.2. Regime of Validity
- Weak-field and low-strain gravitational systems: In this regime, including most Solar System dynamics and weakly relativistic astrophysical systems, TGU is constructed to converge exactly or near-exactly to General Relativity. Predictions in this domain are therefore not independent tests of TGU but consistency checks.
- Intermediate coherence-gradient systems: Systems characterized by high orbital eccentricity, asymmetry, or non-uniform environmental structure fall within the regime where TGU predicts controlled deviations from standard relativistic formulations. This domain provides the most promising arena for empirical discrimination.
- High-strain and coherence-dominated regimes: Extreme systems such as compact binaries, early-universe structures, and strongly anisotropic environments represent speculative extensions of the framework. Predictions in this regime should be regarded as exploratory and subject to substantial uncertainty.
Appendix A.3. Non-Uniqueness of Informational Interpretations
Appendix A.4. Risk of Parameter Calibration Bias
Appendix A.5. Falsifiability and Scientific Risk
Appendix A.6. Summary
- A phenomenological, coherence-based unifying framework,
- Validated by internal consistency and numerical convergence in tested regimes,
- Predictive but not yet microscopically complete,
- Explicitly limited in scope and open to falsification.
Appendix B. Experimental Validation Pathways: Falsifiable Tests of the TGU Framework
Appendix B.1. Guiding Principles for Experimental Testing
- Convergence in Verified Regimes: In weak-field, low-strain environments, TGU must converge to GR within observational uncertainties.
- Controlled Deviations: In high-strain, high-eccentricity, or large-scale coherence-dominated systems, TGU predicts systematic deviations with well-defined functional dependence.
- Parameter Minimalism: Once the coherence exponent n and the coherence efficiency parameter k are fixed, no additional free parameters are introduced in predictive applications.
Appendix B.2. Orbital Precession in Extreme Eccentricity Regimes
Appendix B.2.1. Predicted Observable
Appendix B.2.2. Experimental Targets
- Near-Sun asteroids with (e.g., Icarus-type objects)
- Compact exoplanets with high eccentricity ()
- Relativistic binary pulsars with asymmetric orbital geometries
Appendix B.2.3. Falsification Criterion
Appendix B.3. Gravitational Wave Polarization Modulation
Appendix B.3.1. Predicted Effect
Appendix B.3.2. Observational Strategy
- Cross-correlation of polarization data from LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA
- Comparison of polarization ratios for events propagating through different galactic environments
- Statistical stacking of high signal-to-noise events
Appendix B.3.3. Falsification Criterion
Appendix B.4. Gravitational Lensing Beyond Mass-Based Models
Appendix B.4.1. Key Prediction
Appendix B.4.2. Experimental Approach
- Comparative lensing analysis of galaxy clusters with similar mass distributions
- Correlation of lensing anomalies with dynamical coherence indicators
- Independent verification using weak and strong lensing datasets
Appendix B.4.3. Falsification Criterion
Appendix B.5. Cosmic Microwave Background Coherence Signatures
Appendix B.5.1. Observable Signatures
- Low-ℓ multipole alignments
- Directional asymmetries consistent across temperature and polarization maps
- Phase-correlated oscillatory residuals
Appendix B.5.2. Testing Strategy
- Joint analysis of Planck, ACT, and upcoming CMB-S4 datasets
- Phase-coherence statistics beyond standard power-spectrum analysis
- Cross-validation with large-scale structure surveys
Appendix B.5.3. Falsification Criterion
Appendix B.6. Laboratory-Scale Coherence Experiments
Appendix B.6.1. Candidate Systems
- Coupled quantum oscillators
- Ion-trap arrays
- High-Q optical cavities
Appendix B.6.2. Expected Signature
Appendix B.7. Summary of Experimental Status
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| System | (deg yr−1) | (deg yr−1) | (deg yr−1) | Relative Deviation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PSR B1913+16 | ||||
| PSR J0737−3039A/B |
| Element | Observations | TGU Prediction | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Helium-4 () | Excellent agreement | ||
| Deuterium () | Consistent | ||
| Lithium-7 () | Reduced relative abundance | Improved tension |
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