This document, titled "RSFT v11 Rotational Substrate Field Theory: Unified Coherent Edition" by Anthony James Bell, presents a comprehensive theoretical framework that attempts to unify physics using only two primitive constants: the substrate wave speed (c) and the electron mass (mₑ). The theory is based on the premise that the universe's substrate is an infinite field of sub-Planckian points that spontaneously self-organizes into a face-centered cubic (FCC) lattice. From this starting point, the author claims to derive all fundamental physical constants and particle masses without the use of free parameters. Key Theoretical Components Foundational Principles: The theory relies on "Foundational Postulates" and a "Velocity Budget, " suggesting that Lorentz invariance is a mechanical result of stability within the substrate rather than a fundamental symmetry of space-time. Topological Particles: Elementary particles are described as topological defects or "vortex rings" (Clifford tori) within the FCC substrate. Zero Free Parameters: A major focus of the text is the derivation of constants—such as the gravitational constant (G), the cosmological constant (), and the masses of quarks and leptons—purely from the geometry and mechanics of the FCC lattice. Major Sections and Version 11 Updates The document is organized into 72 parts, with "v11" highlighting several specific breakthroughs: Lepton Mass Derivations: It provides a mass ladder for the muon and tau leptons, modeling them as excited "kink" states within the substrate. Electroweak Sector: The text models the Higgs boson as an amplitude mode of the electroweak condensate and the W boson as a transverse optical phonon. It also provides a geometric derivation for the Weinberg angle. Gravity and Cosmology: The document derives G from the substrate's equation of state and explains the cosmological constant as the residual pressure of the "Bell Medium" (unlocked substrate points). Hadronic Properties: It includes calculations for the proton charge radius and the mass difference between neutrons and protons based on the asymmetry of the underlying "Hopf" structures. Conclusion and Future Outlook The document concludes with technical summaries, notation guides, and a list of "Open Problems. " A primary goal mentioned in the final sections (Part LXVIII) is the "One-Primitive Horizon, " which aims to eventually derive the electron mass itself from the substrate's quantum gravity solution, potentially reducing the theory to just one primitive constant (c).
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Anthony Bell
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Anthony Bell (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69eefde9fede9185760d4c0c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19700085