Light as Frequency on Two-Dimensional Curvature

Pattern Field Theory (PFT) fundamentally redefines light as a curvature-based frequency phenomenon, rejecting the photon model and explaining light’s observable behavior through dimensional interaction and curvature anchoring mechanisms.

Light as Pi Particle Frequency

Light is Not a Photon

In PFT, light is not a particle (photon) but an oscillating frequency state riding the rotational curvature of Pi particles along two-dimensional space. The so-called photon is a measurement illusion arising from local frequency interception within 3D gravitational fields.

Pi Particle as Light Carrier

The Pi particle serves as a minimal curvature loop, acting as a transmission vessel for light frequency along two-dimensional curvature:

f_{light} = \\frac{c}{\\lambda_{\\pi}}

Where:

  • flight = light frequency
  • c = propagation constant through 2D curvature
  • λπ = effective wavelength along Pi particle curvature

Permission Function of Light Visibility

Light becomes visible only upon interference with 3D mass curvature. Visibility is a conditional interaction:

P_{visibility} = f(\\rho_{3D}, G_{local}, D_{Pi})

Where:

  • Pvisibility = probability of light becoming observable
  • ρ3D = local 3D mass density
  • Glocal = local gravitational curvature
  • DPi = local Pi particle disturbance level

Light, Mass, and Black Holes

Light is the free curvature state, mass is the locked curvature state. Black holes force light to collapse through sequential dimensional failure: first 3D observation disappears, then 2D curvature collapses, and finally 1D propagation dissolves back to metacontinuum.

Explaining Atmospheric and Cosmic Light Effects

  • Rainbows occur through light curvature folding in water-induced gravity pockets.
  • Light disks and halos represent Pi particle anchoring distortion patterns.
  • Night sky remains dark (Olbers' paradox) because uncollapsed frequency in 2D space is unobservable without 3D interference.

Next Steps:

Next, in Article 4, we fully explain black hole collapse as a violent dimensional equilibrium event.

Continue to Article 4: Collapse Dynamics →

← Back to Article 2: Time and Gravity