Photon = coherence released Electron = coherence held Exchange = coherence transacted Appearance = coherence registered The photon reveals. The electron bounds. Exchange discloses the world. The first paper asked what the photon reveals. It answered: the photon reveals coherence released as light. The second paper asked what the electron reveals. It answered: the electron reveals coherence held as charged boundary. This third paper asks what happens between them. It answers: exchange makes appearance possible. A photon can carry light, but light becomes visible only when matter can receive, redirect, transform, or register it. An electron gives matter boundary, but matter becomes luminous, colored, measurable, and technologically useful only through photon exchange. The visible world is therefore not light alone and not matter alone. It is coherence exchanged into appearance. This paper completes the Photon–Electron Disclosure trilogy by interpreting light–matter interaction as the transaction between phase-unbound photon coherence and charged electron boundary closure. The first paper interpreted the photon as coherence released. The second interpreted the electron as coherence held. The present paper interprets their interaction as coherence transacted: the bridge by which light enters matter, matter answers light, and the visible world becomes measurable, knowable, and engineerable. The manuscript does not replace quantum electrodynamics, optics, spectroscopy, electrodynamics, or semiconductor physics. It preserves their operational success while offering a deeper ontological reading. Absorption is interpreted as coherence intake. Emission is coherence release. Scattering is coherence redirection. Spectra are exchange grammars. Color is selective exchange. Measurement is exchange stabilized into record. Technology is engineered control of photon–electron exchange. Pair production and annihilation are interpreted as deeper reversible transformations between released photon coherence and paired charged boundary closure. The central theorem is that the visible, measurable, and technologically engineered world arises through lawful exchange between photon disclosure and electron boundary response. The final synthesis is simple: the photon reveals, the electron bounds, and exchange discloses the world. γ ↔ e⁻ = coherence transacted between light and boundary
Philip Lilien (Thu,) studied this question.