This document outlines the theoretical construction and physical instantiation of Arecibo-II, a finite binarylattice transmission designed for communication with extraterrestrial intelligence. Unlike historical SETI efforts (such as the 1974 Arecibo message) that relied on visual heuristics, anthropomorphic pixel art, and prime-factorization area locks, Arecibo-II utilizes strict topological invariance to eliminate human cultural bias.The transmission employs an internal "grammatical lock" driven by periodic synchronization pulses (separator rows containing a single center bit). This mechanism acts as a global phase lock, forcing the recipient to decode the signal in a strict, chronological sequence. The payload systematically bootstraps its own mathematical language from first principles, guiding the receiver through a rigid derivational flow: Peano arithmetic, tuple spaces, directional discrete calculus, the emergence of classical Maxwell fields, spectral projector algebra, and finally, a master evolution law for universal operator stabilization (the Omega-Sigma framework).Furthermore, the paper details the translation of this 2D spatial lattice into a 1D time-domain bitstream. Modulated via Binary Frequency-Shift Keying (2-FSK) over the 1420.405 MHz Hydrogen line, the transmission takes the form of an information-dense, highly optimized chirped pulse. When analyzing the varying bit-widths of the semantic bands over time, the signal reveals a distinct five-stage amplitude envelope—an algorithmic radar ping that physically mirrors the ascending complexity of the derived physics. Ultimately, Arecibo-II guarantees that any receiving intelligence is structurally compelled to reconstruct our exact theoretical framework of the universe, leaving zero room for misinterpretation.
Andrew Kim (Thu,) studied this question.