This manuscript extends the persistence defined ontology program from class conditioned unknown search into predictive object generation. Earlier work established that the unknown does not form one undifferentiated remainder, but resolves into distinct persistence defined classes with distinct governing equations, counting rules, invariants, admissibility regions, and failure surfaces. The present paper begins the next bridge: the construction of a predictive discovery engine capable, in principle, of resolving unknowns into explicit prediscovery object candidates. The central problem addressed here is the gap between structured absence and exact prediction. The prior program could identify missing lanes and specific constrained targets, but it did not yet include the machinery needed to infer constituent structure, admissible internal composition, mass windows, decay lane structure, production thresholds, or favorable discovery environments before experiment. This manuscript introduces that machinery in formal architecture. Four predictive bridges are defined:(1) admissible composition,(2) persistence to mass mapping,(3) decay lane decomposition, and(4) collision formation scoring. These are not added heuristically. They are introduced as necessary extensions if a persistence defined framework is to become a true prediscovery engine rather than remain a classifying ontology. The paper begins with composite objects, since Bindons provide the shortest path from persistence defined structure to collision resolvable prediction. A Bindon prediction engine is constructed with the following components: a structured constituent alphabet, an admissibility kernel, an architecture state space, a symmetry placement filter, a persistence burden term, a stabilization gain term, a ranked candidate score, a mass window solver, a dissociation tree generator, a branch weight map, and a production lane score. Together these yield the first full predictive object form: constituent tuple, architecture, admissibility strength, mass window, window sharpness, dissociation structure, ranked branch structure, and ranked production environment. To prevent arbitrary forward claims, the manuscript also imposes a validation requirement. The same unchanged engine must first recover an established heavy composite under locked rules before being applied to the unresolved heavy composite lane. Known object recovery is treated as a calibration problem, and unknown object generation is treated as a comparative run under identical engine rules. The paper therefore defines explicit recovery criteria, unknown resolution criteria, actionability criteria, and the conditions under which the framework may legitimately be said to possess true prediscovery ability. The claims are intentionally bounded. This manuscript does not present a finished experimentally calibrated numerical solver, does not claim discovery of a new particle, and does not assert final validated forward prediction. It establishes the formal architecture required for that next stage. The result is a complete manuscript level framework for moving from persistence defined unknown classes to ranked prediscovery object candidates.
Kearon Allen (Sun,) studied this question.