Theoretical Framework of TRR-NOTIME – Theory of Relative Reality without Time
Description
The Theory of Relative Reality without Time (TRR-NOTIME) eliminates time as a fundamental physical dimension and replaces it with directional energy potential (SEP)—a vector quantity describing interactional readiness between systems. SEP is defined as energy per unit mass with spatial direction, offering a framework in which change arises from directional energetic asymmetries rather than temporal evolution. This model unifies redshift, gravitational interactions, quantum phenomena, and cosmogenesis without invoking time, velocity, or spacetime geometry. Key applications include: redshift as a pure SEP difference between emitter and observer; the GPS system reinterpreted through directional SEP projection; the Hafele–Keating experiment explained via SEP gradients; and black hole shadow formation as selective interactivity, not curvature. TRR further introduces the φ-state—a fully symmetric, directionless, non-interacting energetic condition representing the pre-Big Bang state—from which the universe emerges through its first structural asymmetry. By treating interaction as a function of spatial compatibility rather than temporal sequence, TRR offers a coherent, measurable, and timeless foundation for physical law. Unlike observer-dependent models, TRR-NOTIME does not describe what is seen, but why it occurs. It provides a physical cause—directional energy compatibility—underlying all measurable interactions, regardless of observational frames or timing.
Files
TRR NO TIME SEP-official v2.0.pdf
Files
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Additional details
Dates
- Accepted
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2025-05-05Version note:Note: A detailed structural analysis of the Hafele–Keating experiment is provided in the dedicated companion document: TRR–NOTIME: SEP-Based Reconstruction of the Hafele–Keating Experiment https://zenodo.org/records/15769571
References
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- Vessot, R. F. C., Levine, M. W., Mattison, E. M., et al. (1980). Test of Relativistic Gravitation with a Space-Borne Hydrogen Maser. Physical Review Letters, 45, 2081–2084.
- Ashby, N. (2003). Relativity in the Global Positioning System. Living Reviews in Relativity, 6.
- Hafele, J. C., & Keating, R. E. (1972). Around-the-World Atomic Clocks: Predicted Relativistic Time Gains. Science, 177, 166–168.
- Hawking, S. W., & Penrose, R. (1996). The Nature of Space and Time. Princeton University Press.
- Bohr, N., & Planck, M. (1983). Quantum Theory and Measurement. Princeton University Press.
- Březina, M. (2025). TRR-NOTIME: Theory of Relative Reality – Without Time. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11026674
- Březina, M. (2025).TRR–NOTIME Structural Interpretation of the Hafele–Keating Experiment without Time ver 1.1https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo./15769571