This project serves as a repository for theoretical and phenomenological models exploring the vacuum of spacetime as a dynamic, thermodynamic medium. Building upon the foundational principle of "Quantum Lenz's Law", the inherent geometric back-pressure generated by the vacuum to oppose rapid changes in topology or acceleration, formally introduced in black hole evaporation models (DOI: 10.5281/ZENODO.17858087) this repository formalizes how this restorative elasticity manifests across standard-model applied physics and cosmology. The project currently houses research synthesizing General Relativity and applied wave mechanics into seven distinct, testable mathematical frameworks: 1 Bulk Viscous Cosmology (mediating the Hubble Tension via vacuum friction and effective equations of state). 2 Emergent Gravity (vacuum entropic elasticity yielding apparent dark mass profiles). 3 Spacetime Thermodynamics (gravity as a macroscopic load response via Jacobson's Equation of State). 4 Spacetime Torsion (mechanical vacuum drag via Lense-Thirring precession). 5 Phononic Crystal Dynamics (acoustic bandgaps functioning as mesoscopic impedance floors). 6 Magnetohydrodynamics (helical confinement and rotational transforms in plasma). 7 Piezoelectric Crystallography (solid-state torsional energy harvesting bounded by fracture stress). The objective of this project is to provide a unified mathematical vocabulary and rigorous empirical bridges for researchers studying vacuum mechanics, cosmic expansion, and applied topological engineering. All frameworks herein are constrained by standard observational data and universally accepted dimensional mechanics.
Lee Holmes (Thu,) studied this question.