The R5+ framework introduces two physical fields – a scalar Symmetron ϕ1 and a massive vector Proca ϕ2µ – whose nonlinear coupling generates an effective viscosity term in the equations of motion. This viscosity, ηeff(x) ∝g2spϕ21/meff(x), breaks the time-reversal symmetry of standard General Relativity, providing an emergent arrow of time that does not depend on special low-entropy initial conditions, but rather on the intrinsic dissipation of the field system. In the Hamiltonian regime, we compute the quality factor of the post-transition Symmetron oscillator and find Q= ω0/Γ ≈0.29, confirming the system is overdamped for the calibrated R5+ parameters. The VEV dispersion across causal patches is governed by stochastic initial conditions and viscous decay, producing a monotonic approach to the minimum without quasiperiodic modulation. This produces a multiverse of branches: domains with different VEVs and different viscosities, separated by domain walls of maximum viscosity. We prove that Proca flux tubes, anchored in black hole remnants of mass M∗ ≈0.0861MPl, act as zero-viscosity channels with conformal distance ∆˜ s→0 in the strong-coupling limit. We demonstrate that these remnants possess two rigorously derived properties – zero entropy and zero temperature – and discuss five additional speculative properties that would follow if the anchoring condition is satisfied. We formulate testable predictions based on atomic clock drifts, differential stellar evolution, and the damping of VEV oscillations. The communication properties of the remnant network are classified as theoretical speculation requiring Planck-scale engineering beyond current experimental reach. We thank an anonymous auditor for identifying an error in the earlier quality factor approximation and providing the rigorous numerical integration that corrects it. Keywords Modified Gravity, General Relativity Extension, Symmetron Field, Proca Field, Fluid Geometry, Galactic Dynamics, Astrophysics, Theoretical Physics, Open Science
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Juan Arroyo
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Juan Arroyo (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a02c345ce8c8c81e9640a04 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20103249