An intracellular calcium frequency code model extended to the Riemann zeta function
Keith R Willison

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel model linking intracellular calcium signaling to the Riemann zeta function, suggesting a mathematical basis for neural encoding of prime number distributions and their biological relevance.
Contribution
It extends calcium frequency coding models by connecting them to the Riemann zeta zeros, proposing a physiologically plausible encoding mechanism involving ion channels and calcium transients.
Findings
Riemann zeta zeros can be encoded as calcium potential changes
Pairs of zinc channels form Dirac fences encoding zeta zero spacings
Brain frequency modes overlap with zeta zero pair beat frequencies
Abstract
We have used the Nernst chemical potential treatment to couple the time domains of sodium and calcium ion channel opening and closing rates to the spatial domain of the diffusing waves of the travelling calcium ions inside single cells. The model is plausibly evolvable with respect to the origins of the molecular components and the scaling of the system from simple cells to neurons. The mixed chemical potentials are calculated by summing the concentrations or particle numbers of the two constituent ions which are pure numbers and thus dimensionless. Chemical potentials are true thermodynamic free Gibbs/Fermi energies and the forces acting on chemical flows are calculated from the natural logarithms of the particle numbers or their concentrations. The mixed chemical potential is converted to the time domain of an action potential by assuming that the injection of calcium ions accelerates…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural dynamics and brain function · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research · Fractal and DNA sequence analysis
