Description This paper is archived as a speculative research work. This paper revises the role of phase in the EAS scalar-field framework before undertaking a full theory of scalar-field interactions. The central claim is no longer merely that electromagnetic-like readout requires phase-distinguishing exterior channels. The deeper claim is that every persistence-compatible bounded support must be phase-capable in the scalar-field sense: its scalar-field presentation must be able to ground a recurring ordered interface pattern of distinguishable subpatterns. The paper first separates scalar-field slot phase from interface pattern phase. Scalar-field slot phase is the report of which cyclic rank-3 slot is exposed in a scalar-field step. Interface pattern phase is the position of a distinguishable subpattern within a recurring ordered pattern presented to the interface. A single interface phase may extend over any number of scalar-field steps. Frequency is therefore not the rank-3 slot cycle itself, but an interface recurrence-rate readout of a full recurring pattern after interface calibration. The paper then incorporates two scalar-field ingredients now treated as part of the EAS ontology: second-order ordering and fractional scalar-value noise. Second-order ordering prevents scalar-field variation from being reduced to first-order dissipation, while fractional scalar-value noise supplies support-preserving plus/minus scalar-value variation proportional to the scalar values of points. For a persistence-compatible bounded support, positive admissibility stiffness sectors are required by support stability. If fractional noise has a nonzero nonuniform component in such a sector, then the second-order ordering relation forces an oscillatory-like scalar-field presentation component. Thus persistence-compatible bounded supports are generically phase-capable. To formalize scalar-field slot structure, the paper uses the phase-colored rank-3 report graph Gᵖhi = (V, E₀, E₁, E₂), whose colored directed records encode the slot-phase exposure of cyclic rank-3 associations. This graph distinguishes phase-transitive structures, whose slot-phase records are mutually equivalent under automorphism, from phase-distinguishing structures, whose slot-phase records carry non-arbitrary graph-theoretic distinction. This graph-theoretic classification remains essential for boundary/exterior hulls, exterior channels, and interaction bridges, but it is not by itself the complete phase-capability test. Phase-capability also requires recurring ordered presentation. Electromagnetic-like readout is then treated as a specialization of the general phase-capability result. A charged bounded support must be phase-capable and must also possess a charge-addressed exterior channel through which phase-consistency relation can be compared or transported. Photon-like structure is not represented as bounded support or continuous scalar propagation, but as a quantized, nonlocalizable phase-channel event grounded in scalar-field slot structure and read at the interface as pattern-phase consistency. The resulting framework identifies a scalar-field basis for phase-capable bounded supports, and only then derives the role of phase-distinguishing exterior channels in electromagnetic-like representation.
Michael Labhard (Sun,) studied this question.
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