Submitted:
31 October 2025
Posted:
03 November 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework: TAP and Projectional Dissipation
The arrow of time and the growth of entropy are both consequences of how a higher-dimensional informational structure projects into a lower-dimensional spacetime.
2.1. Informational Projection and Dissipation
2.2. Geometric Expression in Black Hole Mergers
2.3. Physical Meaning of Projectional Dissipation
2.4. The TAP Principle Restated
3. Analogy Across Dissipative Systems
3.1. Driven–Dissipative Quantum Systems
3.2. Optical Microresonators and Dissipative Solitons
3.3. Nonlinear Duffing Chains and Perturbation Propagation
3.4. Universality of Projection–Dissipation Duality
4. Predicted Observable Signatures
4.1. Tail-Wave Echoes and Phase Micro-Perturbations
- M is the final black hole mass,
- a is the spin parameter,
- is the geometric dissipation rate (linked to ),
- is the effective tail frequency,
- and is the phase offset from the main ringdown mode.
4.2. Relation to Horizon Area Surplus
4.3. Potential Observational Targets
- The echo structure arises from curvature-phase realignment between two merging projection surfaces.
- The decay constant corresponds to the geometric dissipation rate, linked to horizon-area growth.
- Multiple mergers can be statistically stacked to reveal consistent phase-tail patterns buried below the current noise floor.
4.4. Detectability and Falsifiability
- No signal detected: spacetime projection is purely geometric and lossless.
- Signal detected: temporal directionality emerges as a measurable physical phenomenon.
5. Discussion and Cosmological Implications
5.1. From Local to Cosmic Projection
5.2. CMB Anomalies as Phase Anisotropies
5.3. Informational Irreversibility on the Cosmological Scale
5.4. Toward an Observational TAP Cosmology
- Cross-correlation analysis between CMB phase anomalies and large-scale structure (LSS) distributions to test for coherent projectional signatures.
- Spectral distortion searches in the CMB to detect non-thermal relics of projectional dissipation at early epochs.
- Polarization alignment studies to evaluate whether the Axis of Evil corresponds to a preferred projection direction rather than a statistical fluctuation.
5.5. Broader Theoretical Context
- It extends the holographic principle by introducing dissipation and directionality absent in standard holography.
- It aligns with thermodynamic cosmology, yet replaces the notion of random entropy increase with structured, geometry-driven information loss.
- It provides a physical underpinning for Prigogine’s dissipative structures, situating them within the geometry of spacetime rather than within chemical or biological systems.
5.6. Summary of Cosmological Implications
- The arrow of time arises universally from projectional dissipation.
- Black hole mergers represent localized, high-intensity projection events.
- CMB anomalies encode large-scale geometric irregularities of the same origin.
- Temporal evolution corresponds to the integral of informational loss across the cosmic boundary.
6. Conclusion
6.1. From Geometry to Temporality
6.2. Scientific Implications
- Astrophysical Verification: Detectable tail-wave echoes and phase micro-perturbations in post-merger gravitational-wave data could reveal dissipation at spacetime boundaries.
- Cosmological Corroboration: Persistent anomalies in the CMB, such as the Cold Spot or Axis of Evil, may represent projectional phase anisotropies on cosmic scales.
- Theoretical Integration: TAP provides a geometric–informational basis for the second law of thermodynamics and for the universality of temporal asymmetry.
6.3. Philosophical Reflection: Time, Letting Go, and Awareness
6.4. Outlook
- Developing a formal mathematical model of the projection operator and its curvature–dissipation tensor.
- Performing statistical echo searches across multiple gravitational-wave events to constrain the dissipation rate .
- Mapping TAP’s predictions onto early-universe dynamics to test whether projectional anisotropy could serve as an alternative explanation for inflationary or dark-energy phenomena.
6.5. Final Synthesis
“If the world is a projection, then we are its light.”
Acknowledgments
Appendix A: Mathematical Modeling of Dissipative Projection
A.1 Projection Operator and Information Mapping
A.2 Dissipation Tensor and Geometric Asymmetry
A.3 Information Entropy and Dissipation Rate
A.4 Horizon Area Surplus and Dissipative Work
A.5 Phase Perturbation Spectrum
A.6 Unified Projection–Dissipation Identity
A.7 Discussion
- a full tensorial expansion of including back-reaction terms,
- numerical simulations of projection-induced ringdown signatures,
- and quantum-information analogues connecting TAP to holographic entanglement entropy.
Appendix B: Statistical Detection Framework for TAP Tail-Wave Signals
B.1 Data Selection and Preprocessing
- Bandpass filtering in the range 20– to remove seismic and high-frequency noise components.
- Time-domain whitening to flatten the detector noise spectrum.
- Windowing of the post-merger segment (), where is the end of the inspiral–merger phase.
- Normalization of amplitude to unit variance across the selected segment.
B.2 Residual Stacking and Phase Alignment
B.3 Spectral and Phase-Coherence Analysis
B.4 Statistical Significance and Control Tests
- Shuffle the phase alignment order across residuals and recompute .
- Generate 10,000 synthetic realizations to establish a null distribution of .
- Compute the empirical p-value for observed peaks at .
- Time-reversal check: reversing should destroy the coherent peak.
- Cross-detector consistency: the signal should appear in both Hanford and Livingston data.
- Null injections: simulated ringdown-only waveforms must not reproduce the same feature.
B.5 Expected Parameter Constraints
B.6 Summary of Detection Pipeline
- Acquire and preprocess LVC strain data for selected BBH mergers.
- Subtract best-fit QNM models to isolate residuals.
- Normalize and mass-scale the residuals.
- Phase-align and stack across multiple events.
- Compute and spectra.
- Assess significance via Monte Carlo shuffling and cross-detector validation.
- A null result () constrains TAP by setting an upper bound on .
- A positive detection (, coherent phase) reveals the first empirical trace of geometric dissipation in spacetime.
B.7 Broader Relevance
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