This work develops a unified geometric framework in which four-dimensional spacetime emerges as a projection of a higher-layer manifold equipped with curvature, torsion, and a stratified fiber structure. Minimal excitation modes arise from tension-field dynamics and phase alignment across layers, forming stable composite configurations when the higher-layer tension is minimized. Instabilities in the tension field lead to mode bifurcation and the appearance of asymmetric projection states in four dimensions. The formalism provides a mathematically rigorous structure based on differential geometry, fiber bundles, Gauss–Codazzi relations, ADM decomposition, and Ricci flow. Effective four-dimensional field theories are derived through mode expansion along fibers, and the algebra of projection operators is formulated explicitly. The framework naturally connects to several physical phenomena, including black-hole information transport, neutrino mass generation, weakly projected dark-matter–like modes, and effective dark-energy contributions from upper-layer curvature. Additional applications include gravitational-wave signatures, black-hole shadow distortions, primordial non-Gaussianity, and hierarchical structure formation. This article is intended as a standalone geometric theory of emergent spacetime. It also provides the mathematical foundation for a broader research program referred to as the R-layer Mode Theory.
Tsuyoshi Tohi (Fri,) studied this question.
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