My previous note on the proton model utilized radically simplified semi-classical reasoning to recover empirical metrics without introducing free parameters.
This new paper scales that exact framework up into the multi-body nuclear domain, treating the neutron and deuteron not as static configurations bound by unobservable “glue” forces, but as an elegant, non-linear synchronization problem involving coupled electromagnetic phase clocks.
Oddly enough, by shifting the ontology away from isolated particles toward relational, phase-locked coherence, the math naturally operates within realistic nuclear regimes—generating an internal neutron magnetic radius of 0.81-0.93 fm, a finite spatial interaction boundary of about 2 fm, and a near-field locking energy of about 2 MeV. These values all closely match experimentally observed ranges.
We, therefore, think this is quite significant. If anything, it shows, perhaps, that progress sometimes does not come from adding more parameters to describe some ‘black box’, but from acknowledging that stable matter may correspond to highly constrained, coherent oscillatory organization.
Read the paper here: “Relational Stability and Synchronization Geometry in the Neutron–Deuteron System”
Post Scriptum: A subsequent sanity check carried out with the LLM DeepSeek has resulted in two companion pieces that should be read alongside the main paper (click and select on ‘public files’ on the above-referenced RG page).
- “On the Factor 2 in the Electron’s Ring‑Current Model: A Clarification of Scales” resolves a long‑standing confusion about the electron’s Compton radius and the equipartition of energy, showing that the model is internally consistent.
- “On the Binding Energy of the Deuteron: A Correction and Reinterpretation” corrects a numerical error in the static magnetic dipole‑dipole calculation (the correct value is ~15 keV, not 2.2 MeV) and reinterprets the deuteron binding energy as a non‑linear phase‑locking energy, leaving the rest of the synchronization framework unaffected.
Both notes are available on this ResearchGate page. I thank DeepSeek for its careful analytical assistance.
