# 7. Double Curl Transport Closure
Chapter 6 established that the fundamental flow $\mathbf{F}$ must evolve by
curl if it is to preserve its divergence-free structure. That still leaves a
narrower question: what is the simplest curl-based closure that makes transport
possible?
A single self-curl relation,
$$
\partial_t \mathbf{F} = k\,\nabla \times \mathbf{F},
$$
preserves source-free turning. But one local rotation only recirculates the
flow. It turns the structure around itself, but it does not yet carry energy
from one region into another. Transport requires a second, complementary
rotation. A point rotated once circulates. Rotated twice in a complementary
way, it advances.
A second step cannot be a gradient, because chapter 6 already showed that a
gradient update generically introduces divergence. The next admissible
possibility is therefore a second source-free rotation:
$$
\nabla \times (\nabla \times \mathbf{F}).
$$
In the source-free case,
$$
\nabla \cdot \mathbf{F} = 0
\qquad\Longrightarrow\qquad
\nabla \times (\nabla \times \mathbf{F}) = -\nabla^2 \mathbf{F}.
$$
Locally, a transporting configuration of $\mathbf{F}$ can therefore be
expressed by an axis of advance together with two complementary transverse
degrees of freedom of the same flow. The same local point serves as the
fulcrum for both turns, but the turns occur in different transverse
orientations. That difference is what makes them complementary rather than
redundant. Call these two aspects
$$
\mathbf{F}_{+}, \qquad \mathbf{F}_{-}.
$$
The minimal first-order local relation that realizes this double turning is
$$
\partial_t \mathbf{F}_{+} = k\,\nabla \times \mathbf{F}_{-}, \qquad
\partial_t \mathbf{F}_{-} = -k\,\nabla \times \mathbf{F}_{+},
$$
with
$$
\nabla\cdot\mathbf{F}_{+}=0,\qquad
\nabla\cdot\mathbf{F}_{-}=0.
$$
Now each aspect changes by the curl of the other. This is the minimal real
closed transport relation: no sources, no action at a distance, no extra
fields, and no higher-order operators.
Transport becomes legible only after the flow is resolved into these
complementary aspects, because the coupled update acts on the pair as a whole.
If we
write one complete local state as
$$
C = (\mathbf{F}_{+},\mathbf{F}_{-}),
$$
then one application of the coupled update maps one configuration $C_1$ into another
configuration $C_2$. Repeated application therefore generates an ordered chain
of configurations:
$$
(\mathbf{F}_{+},\mathbf{F}_{-})_1,\;
(\mathbf{F}_{+},\mathbf{F}_{-})_2,\;
(\mathbf{F}_{+},\mathbf{F}_{-})_3,\;\dots
$$
That order is abstracted from the mapping itself. Only afterward is it
conveniently labeled by a parameter and written in differential form. In that
later form, the double rotation yields the wave equation for each aspect, as
shown in Appendix 203. For the present argument, the essential point is
simpler: one rotation recirculates, while two complementary rotations
transport.
This is the simplest transport closure built from two complementary closed
turns.
In its local ideal form it gives the plane-wave idealization of transport: the
same organized advance repeated from point to point, without yet requiring
helical closure. Such an idealization already picks out a local axis of
advance, but because it extends everywhere it does not yet describe a bounded
from-here-to-there transfer. One may picture the transverse frame as
precessing about that local axis, so that the forward projection remains
nonzero while the transverse orientation oscillates. Helical and toroidal
forms are global closures of the same local geometry.
Only at this stage, after choosing conventional scale factors and absorbing
them into the electromagnetic normalization, are the two aspects named
$$
\mathbf{E} \equiv k_{+}\,\mathbf{F}_{+}, \qquad
\mathbf{B} \equiv k_{-}\,\mathbf{F}_{-}.
$$
They are not two substances. They are two complementary aspects of the same
organized flow $\mathbf{F}$. Their cross relation fixes the local direction of
transport:
$$
\mathbf{E}\cdot\mathbf{B}=0,\qquad
\mathbf{E}\times\mathbf{B}\parallel\mathbf{S}.
$$
The scale choices are then absorbed into the usual constitutive constants
$\varepsilon_0$ and $\mu_0$, and the energy flow can be written in Maxwell
form:
$$
\mathbf{S}=\frac{1}{\mu_0}\,\mathbf{E}\times\mathbf{B}.
$$
Maxwell theory appears here as the minimal two-aspect closure of source-free
rotational transport.
Minimal does not mean unique. It means the weakest local closure that actually
propagates source-free flow.
The vacuum Maxwell equations are symmetric under the duality rotation
$$
\mathbf{E} \to c\mathbf{B}, \qquad c\mathbf{B} \to -\mathbf{E}.
$$
This reflects the complementary status of the two fields within one transport
relation. The symmetry does not collapse
$\mathbf{E}$ and $\mathbf{B}$ into a single field, and it does not erase
their distinct roles in a given solution. In a propagating configuration they
remain two transverse aspects of the same organized flow $\mathbf{F}$, whose
cross relation determines the direction of transport.
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