Advancing the unification of probability, curvature, and quantum emergence through Entanglement Compression Theory (ECT).
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ECT and Variable Propagation: How Compression Geometry Resolves VSL Challenges
This page provides a focused technical note on how Entanglement Compression Theory (ECT) addresses the central motivations behind varying–speed–of–light (VSL) theories while resolving the conceptual and structural issues identified in the literature. It is intended as a companion to the main ECT overview and assumes familiarity with the Primordial Wave Equation, the Lawrence Universal Wave Function (LUWF), and the compression–curvature formalism.
Propagation as an Emergent Equilibrium
ECT does not vary fundamental constants. Instead, it derives all propagation behavior from the local compression geometry of the LUWF. In this framework, the observed speed of light is an equilibrium propagation velocity arising from the balance between dispersive tension and compressive curvature. This balance is quantified by the local invariant
U(x) = T(x) / C(x)
where T(x) measures dispersive tendency and C(x) encodes the LaFF-governed compression response. The effective propagation speed is then
ceff(x)² = U(x).
In uniform regions, U(x) stabilizes to the observed constant c². In regions with compression gradients, U(x) departs slightly from this value, producing small but measurable propagation shifts. ECT therefore predicts variable propagation not as a modification of relativity, but as a geometric consequence of the underlying field.
How ECT Aligns with the Motivations of VSL
VSL theories were introduced to address early-universe smoothing, horizon-scale correlations, and high-energy propagation anomalies. ECT naturally reproduces these effects without postulating an explicit c(t) or c(x) function. Instead:
- Early-universe compression gradients yield rapid information propagation.
- Oscillation–compression balance produces natural smoothing without inflation.
- High-energy dispersion shifts arise from compression-dependent propagation.
- Frequency-dependent propagation appears as a geometric effect, not a new postulate.
ECT therefore supports the motivations behind VSL while replacing its assumptions with a mechanism.
How ECT Resolves the Structural Problems in VSL
The 2003 review by Magueijo highlights several conceptual challenges faced by VSL models:
- Dependence on unit conventions for dimensional constants.
- Hard or soft breaking of Lorentz symmetry.
- Bimetric constructions with separate photon and graviton metrics.
- Ad-hoc functional forms for c(t) or c(x).
- Energy non-conservation in certain formulations.
ECT resolves these issues at the mechanism level:
- No unit ambiguity: propagation shifts arise from dimensionless compression ratios.
- No preferred frame: Lorentz symmetry emerges in the weak-deformation limit.
- No bimetric structure: a single effective metric arises from the compression tensor.
- No arbitrary functions: propagation varies only where compression gradients exist.
- Conservation preserved: the Primordial Wave Equation enforces deterministic energy flow.
ECT therefore provides the structural foundation that VSL theories lack, while preserving the phenomena they aim to explain.
Effective Geometry and the Compression Tensor
Propagation and curvature are unified in ECT through the symmetric compression tensor
C(sym)μν = ∇μ∇ν(−lnερ₁),
which encodes how information density bends local geometry. The effective metric is
geffμν = gμν + κ̃L*² C(sym)μν.
This single correction governs both geometric curvature and propagation behavior. In the weak-deformation limit, ECT reproduces general relativity exactly. In regions with strong compression gradients, it predicts small deviations that correspond to the VSL-like effects identified in the literature.
Why ECT Is Not a Varying-Constant Theory
ECT does not vary c, G, or ħ. Instead, it shows that these constants are equilibrium properties of the oscillatory medium. Variations in propagation speed reflect local geometric conditions, not changes in fundamental constants. This distinction preserves the conceptual clarity emphasized in the 2003 review while providing the mechanism that earlier frameworks lacked.
Citation
Magueijo, J. (2003). New varying speed of light theories. Reports on Progress in Physics, 66(11), 2025–2068. https://doi.org/10.1088/0034-4885/66/11/R04