Volume XII introduces R-layer cosmology, a tension-driven framework in which the expansion of the Universe responds to the local gravitational environment. Unlike the standard ΛCDM model, which assumes homogeneous and isotropic expansion, the R-layer framework predicts direction-dependent and scale-dependent variations in the inferred Hubble parameter. The central relation of the model is: H(r,t)=k Θ0(t)−α Φ(r), where the effective expansion rate is governed by the tension of a boundary layer that is modulated by the gravitational potential. This mechanism naturally produces: the observed Hubble tension (TRGB vs. SNe Ia vs. strong lensing), anisotropies in the local velocity field (Local Void, Virgo infall), large-angle anomalies in the CMB (quadrupole–octopole alignment), hints of anisotropic growth in large-scale structure. The dynamical evolution of the background tension Θ0(t) yields late-time acceleration without a cosmological constant, providing an alternative to dark energy. In the homogeneous limit, R-layer cosmology reduces to ΛCDM, ensuring consistency with standard cosmology while extending it to anisotropic regimes. The model predicts distinctive observational signatures, including: directional dependence of H0, scale dependence of H0, void-driven acceleration, anisotropic weak lensing, environmental dependence of galaxy rotation curves, CMB large-angle anomalies, anisotropic structure growth. These predictions are testable with current and upcoming surveys, including TRGB programs, strong-lensing time-delay measurements, DESI, LSST, Euclid, and CMB polarization missions. Volume XII establishes R-layer cosmology as a unified, tension-driven alternative to ΛCDM, capable of explaining multiple anomalies within a single physical mechanism.
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Tsuyoshi Tohi
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Tsuyoshi Tohi (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a2117dfd499ed480b170bfd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20508394
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