Abstract We model space–time as a compressible, barotropic, viscoelastic medium with state variables (, p, , cₛ). In the static, weak-field limit a scalar enthalpy potential h obeys a Gauss/Poisson law, yielding an emergent inverse-square field h=-/r and Kepler’s third law T=2³/ for test-body orbits—without assuming Newton’s law or the Einstein field equations. The same 1/r potential follows independently from pressure, density-response, and variational/free-energy routes, establishing uniqueness under linearity, locality, and isotropy. An EOS-controlled correction scales as (r) / (cₛ²r), implying ppm-level bounds from Solar-System orbits. We give measurement-mode reconstructions (JPL Horizons, epoch J2000 TDB) with ppm residuals and a realistic nonzero Moon residual at the 10^-3 level (expected from tides and oblateness). We relate the framework to thermodynamic/emergent-gravity programs and outline constraints from gravitational-wave propagation (GW170817). The model is falsifiable via (cₛ, ) and reduces to the Newtonian/PPN limit in the Solar System.
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Mohd Mudassir
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Mohd Mudassir (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68d6e0fc8b2b6861e4c3f517 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-7688887/v1
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