04 July 2025
Energy-Mass States of Bound and Free Electrons: ECM Interpretation of Atomic Transitions, Thermionic Emission, and Photon Emission.
02 July 2025
Complementarity of Dynamic and Apparent Mass in ECM: (ΔMᴍ ↔ Mᵃᵖᵖ)
Soumendra Nath Thakur
A core interpretive principle within ECM is the complementarity between dynamic mass displacement (ΔMᴍ) and apparent mass (Mᵃᵖᵖ). These quantities are not merely opposites in algebraic sign, but mutually defining constructs that gain physical significance only in relation to one another.
For example:
ΔMᴍ represents the emergent or emitted mass-equivalent energy due to frequency scaling, as in:
hf = ΔMᴍ c²
Mᵃᵖᵖ = −ΔMᴍ captures the corresponding loss or reduction in apparent mass from the source system.
This mutual dependence mirrors other foundational complements in nature:
Black and white as absence and presence of light
Potential and kinetic energy in transition
Finite and infinite as relational constructs
In ECM, neither ΔMᴍ nor Mᵃᵖᵖ has causal validity in isolation. It is their interaction—seen in transformations like:
KEᴇᴄᴍ = −Mᵃᵖᵖ c ² or ΔMᴍ = hf / c²
—that defines real physical outcomes such as radiation, gravitational weakening, and cosmic expansion.
This principle of complementarity reinforces ECM's broader stance: that energy and mass, emergence and loss, are not independent absolutes, but relational constructs whose meaning arises through causal symmetry.
Summary
ECM restores physical continuity and causality by linking frequency to mass-energy emergence, rejecting singularities and probabilistic quantum behavior. Its structural pillars are:
Frequency-scaling of force, energy, and displacement
Nonlinear collapse at Planck thresholds
Energetic boundary formation instead of metric expansion
Deterministic time onset defined by
This unified interpretation enables ECM to model dynamics across photon, collapse, and cosmological scales with logical continuity and dimensional precision
Pre-relativistic framework and ECM:
Soumendra Nath Thakur
Relativity is not necessary for the very phenomena it is often praised for explaining. In truth, it diverted science away from rational foundations by introducing dilatable time and curved, blended space — abstraction that complicate rather than clarifying physical reality.
The pre-relativistic framework was already sufficient to support a more consistent and physically intuitive understanding of the universe. What was needed was not a leap into spacetime distortion, but a deeper refinement of classical principles.
This is where Extended Classical Mechanics (ECM) comes in — a framework with the potential to restore coherence and rational causality to physics. Once fully explored, ECM may well demonstrate that relativity’s perceived necessity was a historical detour, not a scientific inevitability.
01 July 2025
🚀 ANNOUNCEMENT: Publication of ECM Appendices 20–22
I'm pleased to announce the release of a critical three-part extension to the ECM series, now published and available on ResearchGate:
Redshift, blueshift, and radiation are modelled as frequency-governed mass-energy transitions.
🧭 These three appendices form a cohesive pillar in the ECM framework—bridging photon-scale quantization, trans-Planckian collapse, and universal boundary emergence.
— Soumendra Nath Thakur