Draft:Pressure Time Field (PTF)
Submission declined on 19 October 2025 by Bonadea (talk).
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Comment: What is the actual topic? If it is the PTF, why is there an infobox about a person at the bottom of the page, with an "About the author" text (something that's never used in a Wikipedia article). bonadea contributions talk 10:18, 19 October 2025 (UTC)
| Field | Theoretical physics, cosmology |
|---|
Pressure–Time Field (PTF)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Pressure–Time Field (PTF), also known as the Crux Model, is a theoretical framework developed by Danish researcher David Rømer Voigt proposing a unified interpretation of the interrelation between pressure, time, and geometry.[1][2] PTF offers a continuous‑field description in which temporal flow arises from variations in isotropic pressure density, linking relativity, thermodynamics, and internal field harmonics.
Overview
[edit]In contrast to relativity, which treats time as a separate dimension, the PTF model defines time as an emergent property of the dynamic distribution of pressure energy. The theory integrates mathematical symmetry principles with empirical analogies observed in astrophysical systems and field simulations.[3]
Conceptual Framework
[edit]The fundamental assertion of PTF is that variations in pressure directly govern temporal rate and spatial structure: \[ \frac{d\tau}{dt}\propto \frac{1}{P} \] This implies that in regions of higher field pressure, time locally dilates — paralleling gravitational time dilation described by Einstein’s relativity.[4]
Core Components
[edit]- The Crux — central equilibrium core of balanced temporal and pressure vectors.
- Axial Genesis — symmetry‑breaking mechanism that gives rise to directional gradients forming spatiotemporal axes.
- Field Harmonics — oscillations of pressure density that manifest as energy and force carriers.
Field Equations
[edit]The underlying dynamic equation is formulated from isotropic pressure equilibrium: \[ \nabla P = -\frac{\partial}{\partial t}(\rho v) \] where \( P \) is field pressure, \( \rho \) energy density, and \( v \) field‑flow velocity. Extensions couple curvature and entropy through the correspondence relation: \[ \Delta P \leftrightarrow \Delta \tau \] stating that deformation in pressure space corresponds directly to curvature in temporal flow.[1]
Empirical and Observational Links
[edit]The PTF framework has been qualitatively related to:
- gravitational redshift and local time dilation (comparison with general relativity)[4]
- solar oscillation cycles interpreted via galactic pressure gradients
- sphere‑wave interference correlating with Penrose’s low‑variance circles in the CMB[5]
- baryon‑halo equilibrium parameters aligning with theoretical β‑profiles
Comparison with Existing Theories
[edit]While maintaining consistency with general relativistic and quantum‑field results, PTF introduces a distinct ontology in which spacetime curvature derives from pressure distribution rather than mass–energy tensors. This re‑expression attempts to unify gravity, electromagnetism, and thermodynamic expansion within one continuous substrate.[2]
Development History
[edit]The Pressure–Time Field concept was first detailed in Voigt’s 2025 whitepaper and expanded through successive revisions such as Crux Phi⁴ Field v2.[3] A public implementation and ongoing numerical models are hosted on the Pressure‑Time Field GitHub repository.[6] Peer evaluations performed though the Gemini AI‑assisted review platform in 2025 assessed mathematical consistency and physical testability, describing the model as “scientifically self‑consistent within its postulates.”[2]
Related Concepts and Influences
[edit]The model references Roger Penrose’s conformal cyclic cosmology as structural inspiration and analogically aligns with fluid dynamic models in early cosmological formation.[5] PTF’s temporal‑pressure symmetry also echoes thermodynamic feedback loops found in quantum field vacuum energy analysis.
Reception
[edit]Independent analyses acknowledge PTF as a mathematically complete though unverified theoretical model. It has been noted for its coherent formulation and clarity of pressure–time coupling definitions, pending reproducible evidence through simulation or astronomical correlation studies.[2]
See also
[edit]- General relativity
- Quantum field theory
- Unified field theory
- Conformal cyclic cosmology
- Cosmological constant problem
References
[edit]- ^ a b Rømer Voigt, D. (2025). Pressure–Time Field: Crux Theory of Time, Pressure, and Space. Whitepaper v1.2.
- ^ a b c d Gemini Peer Review Report (2025). Independent AI Evaluation of the PTF Model (v1.2).
- ^ a b Rømer Voigt, D. (2025). Crux Phi⁴ Field v2. Academia.edu. [1](https://www.academia.edu/143772166/Crux_Phi4_Field_v2)
- ^ a b Einstein, A. (1916). The Foundation of the General Theory of Relativity. Annalen der Physik.
- ^ a b Penrose, R. (2018). Conformal Cyclic Cosmology and Low‑Variance Circles in the CMB. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
- ^ Pressure‑Time Field GitHub repository (2025).
About the author
[edit]David Rømer Voigt (born 1976) is a Danish theoretical physicist and independent researcher specializing in field unification and time‑pressure dynamics. He is the creator of the Pressure–Time Field (PTF) framework and has published technical papers bridging relativity and field theory principles.[1] Voigt’s work focuses on unified ontology between temporal curvature and pressure equilibrium, supported by computational models and peer‑review evaluation through AI and open‑research platforms.
David Rømer Voigt | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1976 (age 48–49) Denmark |
| Nationality | Danish |
| Known for | Pressure–Time Field (PTF), Crux Φ⁴ Field |
| Notable work | Pressure–Time Field: Crux Theory of Time, Pressure, and Space (2025) |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Theoretical physics, cosmology |
| Website | GitHub Repository |
External links
[edit]| academia = Academia.edu profile Category:Theoretical physics Category:Cosmology Category:Unified field theories Category:Danish scientists
- ^ Rømer Voigt, D. (2025). Pressure–Time Field: Crux Theory of Time, Pressure, and Space. Whitepaper v1.2.

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