Submitted:
19 August 2025
Posted:
27 August 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
- [1]
- Einstein, Relativity (1905/1915)
- [2]
- Feynman, The Character of Physical Law (1965)
- [3]
- Peskin & Schroeder, An Introduction to QFT
- [4]
- Dodelson, Modern Cosmology
- [5]
- Wheeler, “It from Bit”
- [6]
- ’t Hooft, on holography
- [7]
- Susskind, on holography
2. Projection Operator and Capacity Constraints
2.1. Setting and Notation
2.2. Projection Operator: Structural Axioms
- A1 (Idempotent Projection). is idempotent: . Operationally, once information has been projected onto , re-applying does not alter . This encodes the notion that “observation lives on the interface.”
- A2 (Local Causality/Finite Influence Domain). For any localized perturbation supported in a small neighborhood of and introduced at interface time , its induced response on has a finite influence domain: there exists a constant (to be determined endogenously) such thatwhere is the image point(s) on corresponding to via K. This is a causality postulate tailored to the projected dynamics; we will show later that the same c emerges as the characteristic speed of the governing PDE.
-
A3 (Finite Capacity Bounds). The interface has finite informational capacity in both temporal update and spatial resolution. We encode this with bounded “information density” and “information flux” , which satisfy a continuity-type balance:with capacity boundsHere s represents the net injection from through the kernel K into . The precise constitutive relation between and will be specified by the variational structure below.
- A4 (Stability/Lipschitz Continuity). and the induced dynamics are stable: for suitable norms ,with . Time evolution on forms a strongly continuous semigroup, and solutions do not blow up in finite time under admissible sources s.
-
A5 (Minimum Distortion Principle under Capacity Constraints). The actual projected field minimizes a distortion functional subject to the capacity bounds (A3). Concretely, over a time window ,subject to the pointwise capacity constraints in (A3). Here:
- penalizes rapid temporal updates (temporal capacity);
- penalizes steep spatial gradients (spatial capacity);
- models retention/accumulation on the interface (vanishing for “pure boundary modes”);
- is the effective source induced by via the kernel K (precise form given in §Section 2.3).
2.3. The Kernel-Induced Source
- ;
- For localized perturbations of , is compactly supported in a neighborhood compatible with (A2).
2.4. Capacity Constraints and Dualization
2.5. Variational Principle and Euler–Lagrange Equations
2.6. Hyperbolicity, Characteristic Cones, and the Speed Limit
2.7. Energy Balance, Information Flux, and a Local Speed Bound
2.8. Massless Boundary Modes vs Retentive Modes
- Massless (boundary) modes:, group velocity . These correspond to non-retentive excitations (no net accumulation on the interface), i.e., “photons” in the projectional sense.
- Massive (retentive) modes:. Retention reduces the maximal group velocity, aligning with subluminal propagation.
2.9. Parameter Identification and Physical Interpretability
- a maximal temporal update rate (effective sampling per unit time per unit volume), and
- a maximal spatial resolvability (effective samples per unit length).
- Increasing temporal update capacity (larger ) raises c;
- Increasing spatial resolution capacity (larger ) lowers c for fixed ;
- The ratio fixes the universal limiting speed perceived on .
2.10. Regularity, Well-Posedness, and Compatibility with Axioms
- Well-posedness (Hadamard): Given and , there exists a unique weak solution with continuous dependence on data.
- Finite Propagation: Support of solutions respects the characteristic cones determined by c (consistency with A2).
- Stability (A4): Energy estimates show no finite-time blow-up under bounded source , consistent with Lipschitz continuity of the solution operator.
2.11. Summary of Section
- We defined a projection operator with kernel K mapping higher-dimensional information to interface fields .
- We posited finite capacity on the interface (A3) and a minimum-distortion variational principle (A5) under these constraints.
- Dualization yields an effective quadratic action with coefficients that encode temporal capacity, spatial capacity, and retention.
- The Euler–Lagrange equation is hyperbolic, with a characteristic speed that both enforces and explains the finite influence domain (A2).
- Massless (non-retentive) and massive (retentive) modes arise as and cases of the same structure, fixing their propagation speeds relative to c.
- Energy/flux identities provide a local information-speed bound , furnishing an information-theoretic interpretation of the speed limit.
3. Formal Derivation of the Speed Limit
3.1. Governing Equation Revisited
3.2. Characteristic Speed and Hyperbolicity
3.3. Massless and Massive Modes
3.4. Energy Identity and Flux Bound
3.5. Compatibility with Projectional Axioms
- A1 (Idempotency): Once projected, evolves solely under (3.1), consistent with .
- A2 (Causality): The domain-of-dependence result (Theorem 3.1) guarantees finite influence bounded by c.
- A3 (Finite Capacity): Bounds on and feed into , fixing c.
- A4 (Stability): Energy estimates (Lemma 3.1) guarantee no blow-up under finite sources.
- A5 (Minimum Distortion): The governing PDE is exactly the Euler–Lagrange equation from minimizing the penalized functional under capacity constraints.
3.6. Summary
- The governing dynamics of the projected field are hyperbolic with characteristic velocity .
- This finite speed emerges from capacity constraints, not as an external postulate.
- Massless excitations propagate at c; massive excitations propagate subluminally.
- An energy/flux inequality provides a local information-theoretic bound, further confirming that no signal exceeds c.
4. Interpretation of the Emergent Universal Speed Limit
4.1. From Postulate to Derived Constant
4.2. Photon as Boundary Mode
4.3. Local Invariance and Universality
4.4. Absence of Dispersion in Vacuum
5. Comparison with Existing Frameworks
5.1. Reframing the Universal Speed Limit
5.2. Comparison with Special Relativity
5.3. Comparison with Quantum Field Theory
5.4. Information-Theoretic Analogies
5.5. Relation to Holography and Quantum Gravity
5.6. Cosmological Implications
5.7. Summary
6. Consolidated Perspective on c
6.1. Unified Limiting Velocity
6.2. Vacuum Nondispersion
6.3. Local Conformal Invariance
6.4. Preparing for Discussion
7. Discussion
- Emergent c: The universal speed limit arises not from postulation but from projectional geometry and finite informational capacity.
- Photon as Boundary Mode: Photons are naturally identified as non-retentive excitations that propagate at c, while massive particles correspond to retentive modes with .
- Unified Interpretation: Relativity, QFT, and holography are reinterpreted as emergent structures consistent with, but not primary to, projectional capacity.
- Observational Consequences: Any frequency dependence of c, or slow temporal drift in its value, would indicate scale-dependent or evolving capacity ratios. Thus TAP offers concrete falsifiability.
- Philosophical Import: The framework connects physics with information theory and even metaphysical notions: the observable world is not a self-contained arena but a projection of deeper informational structures.
8. Conclusion
References
- A. Einstein, “Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Körper,” Annalen der Physik, 1905.
- R. Feynman, The Character of Physical Law, MIT Press, 1965.
- M. Peskin and D. Schroeder, An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory, Addison-Wesley, 1995.
- S. Dodelson, Modern Cosmology, Academic Press, 2003.
- J. A. Wheeler, “Information, physics, quantum: The search for links,” in Complexity, Entropy, and the Physics of Information, ed. W. H. Zurek, Addison-Wesley, 1990.
- G. ’t Hooft, “Dimensional reduction in quantum gravity,” in Salamfestschrift, World Scientific, 1993.
- L. Susskind, “The world as a hologram,” Journal of Mathematical Physics, vol. 36, 1995. [CrossRef]
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