The Aetheric Magnetic Substrate

The Aetheric Magnetic Substrate (AMS)

The Aetheric Magnetic Substrate (AMS) is postulated as a continuous, non-material, tension-bearing medium that permeates all space. It is not composed of particles, nor is it a fluid or gas; rather, it is a geometric substrate capable of supporting tension, torsion, curvature, and stable topological configurations.

The AMS possesses the following fundamental properties:

  • Continuity: The AMS is spatially continuous and does not admit discrete gaps or voids. Apparent “vacuum” regions are simply regions devoid of stable matter-knots, not absence of the substrate itself.
  • Tension-bearing capacity: The AMS can exist in states of differential tension. Gradients of tension correspond to what are phenomenologically described as forces or potentials.
  • Torsional degrees of freedom: The AMS can support twist (handedness) without requiring rotational motion of material constituents.
  • Geometric memory: The AMS can hold stable or metastable geometric configurations (e.g., standing torsion patterns), allowing persistent structures such as magnetic fields.

The AMS replaces the classical concept of an ether while explicitly avoiding fluid-mechanical assumptions (drag, flow, viscosity). It functions as a geometric field substrate rather than a material medium.

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