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The Electromagnetic Structural Encodement (ESE) Hypothesis: A Coherence-Based Framework for Matter Formation

Publicada
Servidor
Preprints.org
DOI
10.20944/preprints202507.0613.v1

We propose the Electromagnetic Structural Encodement (ESE) Hypothesis, afoundational reformulation of matter, wherein all physical structure is not the resultof mechanical particles or substance, but the manifestation of quantized, standingelectromagnetic waveforms. According to ESE, what we perceive as “matter” is infact a spatially coherent interference field governed by a discrete set of resonancefrequencies. This field encodes both the identity and the form of the structure,from subatomic particles to complex systems.We introduce a formal mathematical framework that models matter as a boundedregion of high electromagnetic coherence C(⃗r), stabilized through constructive in-terference of finite wave modes. Structural persistence is defined by a minimumcoherence threshold, while collapse or transformation results from perturbation ofphase or frequency components.This hypothesis offers a unifying ontological bridge between quantum field the-ory, electromagnetic theory, and emerging wave-based models of physical reality.It is testable via AI-driven spectral inversion, photonic cymatics, and quantum-level field perturbation. If validated, ESE provides a programmable foundation forphysics—enabling matter synthesis, biological reconstruction, and waveform-basedcosmological engineering.ESE reframes the universe as not made of particles, but of encoded light—resonantenergy frozen into form by harmony in field space. This model positions coherence,not mass, as the fundamental quantity from which identity, stability, and existenceemerge.

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