Chronometric Closure Paper IV: Source-to-Clock Mapping and First Precision-Clock Benchmark for the Chronometric Record Channel Tovi Zituny — Independent Researcher, May 2026 Overview This paper is the fourth in the Chronometric Closure Series and the first implementation paper within the benchmark/falsifiability closure burden established by Paper III. It does not constitute a new closure burden. Where Paper III defined the cross-channel survival architecture in abstract form, Paper IV constructs the first explicit source-to-observable map connecting the chronometric record-channel source to a measurable precision-clock residual. Main Result Starting from the record-channel source term inherited from Papers I and II: JR = κR D ∂_τ log R, the paper defines the first normalized source-to-clock map: FclockR: (κR, D, ∂_τ log R, βclockR) ↦ Δν/ν|CUP, R = βclockR · NclockR · κR · D · ∂_τ log R. Here NclockR is a prespecified clock-response normalization fixed before evaluation — not a free post-hoc fitting parameter. Using the fractional systematic uncertainty of the strontium optical lattice clock reported by Aeppli et al. (2024), the paper states the first precision-clock survival condition: βclockR · NclockR · κR · D · ∂_τ log R ≤ Bclock = 8. 1 × 10⁻¹⁹. This converts the record-channel source from an abstract theoretical term into a concrete product constraint: any chronometric record-channel parameter region predicting a clock residual above the benchmark threshold is excluded by the precision-clock channel. Three benchmark families are defined (C0, C1, C2) covering unit-normalized, interrogation-time-normalized, and constant-amplitude conventions. A three-threshold scan (strict 8. 1×10⁻¹⁹, standard 10⁻¹⁸, conservative 10⁻¹⁷) is provided. An illustrative sensitivity table maps pairs of (D, γR) to the resulting constraint on ΛRᶜlock. The paper further decomposes the record-flow amplitude as QR = D · γR where γR = ∂_τΣR is the effective record-loss rate, and connects QR to the Tier-I' coherence residual of CIFT, δχcoh = D (R−1), through the weak-degradation approximation (valid under ΣR ≪ 1). This ties the clock-facing map directly to the experimental logic already introduced in CIFT rather than treating QR as a purely formal amplitude. Claim Status The result is a first benchmark inequality and parameter-space exclusion rule — not a detection claim. Clock survival means non-exclusion within the specified benchmark family, not confirmation of the chronometric programme. The full source-to-clock map Fclock is not complete: future implementation papers must build the distinguishability-channel clock map FclockD, the spatial-gradient clock map Fclock^∇, and the full combined residual Fclock. Nine failure modes are identified and classified, including overinterpretation of survival, overinterpretation of exclusion, and insufficient independent modelling of QR. Structure The paper contains eleven sections. Section 2 establishes the clock-benchmark literature basis (Aeppli et al. 2024, Blatt et al. 2008, Sherrill et al. 2023, Zheng et al. 2023). Section 3 constructs the record-channel source-to-clock map. Section 4 states the three benchmark inequalities. Section 5 defines normalization conventions and benchmark families. Section 6 develops the parameter-scan logic and sensitivity table. Section 7 introduces the QR = D · γR decomposition and the Tier-I' link. Section 8 identifies nine failure modes and an interpretation hierarchy. Section 9 updates the Paper III architecture and maps future clock-map extensions. Section 10 assesses implications and next steps. Section 11 concludes. A claim-status summary table is provided.
tovi zituny (Sun,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: