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LFIS 20-22: LFCT Infrastructure Update
Nine observational regimes. One fixed structure. New tests are public, and the framework’s core commitments are now explicitly locked.
Jan 31
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Michael
1
▣ 9 Regime Summary — Continuity Without Accumulation
Nine observational regimes test coherence from galaxies to cosmology. No new forces, no retuning—structure persists, drift stays bounded.
Jan 29
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Michael
1
▣ Regime 9 — Drift Without Accumulation
Regime 9: Distance residuals show linear structure without runaway growth. Drift appears as bounded, environment-routed representation—not accumulation…
Jan 29
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Michael
▣ Technical Note — Regime 8
Regime 8: Environmental depth reshapes inference, not physics. Clusters and voids reroute representation, revealing structured dispersion where…
Jan 28
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Michael
▣ Regime 8 — Environmental Depth
Regime 8: Across clusters and voids, coherence persists as environment reroutes what’s representable. Balance holds while inference shifts—depth changes…
Jan 28
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Michael
▣ Post 7 (Technical Note) — Regime 7: Angular Closure and Lensing Degeneracy
Regime 7 technical note: Strong lensing preserves angular geometry exactly while mass inference drifts, showing gravity conserves geometric…
Jan 26
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Michael
▣ Regime 7 — Lensing and Clocks
Regime 7 strips everything down to structure alone: lensing and time delays show the same balance without motion, formation, or paths—coherence remains…
Jan 26
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Michael
▣ Regime 6 — Star Formation Continuity (SFC)
Regime 6 tests coherence without motion: even star formation rates align with galactic balance. New stars begin in place, showing structure constrains…
Jan 24
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Michael
▣ Regime 5 — High-Redshift Disks as a Stress Test
High-redshift disks are a known stress regime. This post tests whether LFCT coherence holds without equilibrium or reinforcement.
Jan 18
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Michael
▣ Regime 4 — Wide Binaries
Wide binary stars offer the cleanest gravity test we have. GAIA shows Kepler’s law holds—until low acceleration forces geometry itself to soften.
Jan 13
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Michael
▣ Regime 3 — Galaxies Aren’t a Mystery to Solve First
For decades, the baryonic Tully–Fisher relation (BTFR) has been treated as a curious correlation in galaxy dynamics — a tool for testing dark matter…
Jan 3
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Michael
December 2025
▣ Regime 2 — Ultra-Faint Dwarf Galaxies: Too Little Mass
When gravity is pushed to its limit, geometry still holds: Ultra-faint dwarf galaxies are the weakest, messiest systems we know — with barely enough…
Dec 21, 2025
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Michael
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