The no information at a distance principle and local mathematics: some effects on physics and geometry
Paul Benioff

TL;DR
This paper explores how the 'No information at a distance' principle and local mathematics influence physics and geometry, affecting theoretical descriptions and potentially relating to dark matter or energy.
Contribution
It introduces the effects of a scalar field on local mathematical structures and their implications for physics and geometry, extending the 'No information at a distance' principle.
Findings
The $oldsymbol{ abla}oldsymbol{ extbf{A}}$ field appears as a scalar coupling in the Dirac Lagrangian.
The $oldsymbol{ extbf{A}}$ field can have any mass value, affecting physical theories.
Effects on path lengths and distances in geometry are demonstrated.
Abstract
Local mathematics assumes the existence of number structures of different types, vector spaces, etc. localized at each space time point. Relations between number structures at different locations are based on two aspects: distinction between two so far conflated concepts, number and number value and the "No information at a distance" principle. This principle forbids the choice of the value of a number at one location to determine the value of the same number at another location. Value changing connections, related to a real valued field, move numbers between structures at different locations. The effect of the field, or its exponential equivalent, on numbers extends to other mathematical structures, vector spaces, etc. The presence of affects theoretical descriptions of quantities in physics and geometry. Two examples are described, the effect…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRelativity and Gravitational Theory · Algebraic and Geometric Analysis
