# Spectral Storage and Capacity
If recognition is realized through selective resonance, and if encoding is not
copying but induced reorganization, then one concrete question follows.
Where is the organization kept?
And how many such organizations might a resonant structure hold?
This chapter does not claim to finish the biology. It states the storage model
more clearly: a pattern may be stored, not as a miniature duplicate of the
world, but as a spectral organization in a resonant cavity.
## Storage Need Not Mean Static Copy
Once encoding has been distinguished from copying, storage must also be
distinguished from archiving an exact picture.
A resonant structure does not need to hold one frozen image of an encounter. It
may instead hold a revisitable organization of modes:
- which frequencies are occupied,
- with what amplitudes,
- in what relative phases,
- under what coupling relations,
- across what persistence window.
That is enough to define a spectral state.
So the relevant idea is:
> a pattern may be stored as a structured spectral occupation, not as a static
> duplicate.
This is a much better fit for a resonance-based theory of recognition.
## A Stored Pattern Is More Likely a Family Than a Note
One exact frequency is too simple.
Real biological cavities are damped, coupled, retuned, and noisy. So the
stronger storage idea is not that one perfect note is held forever, but that a
recognizing cavity can sustain and revisit a structured family of modes.
That family may include:
- dominant resonances,
- subharmonics or overtones,
- relative phase relations,
- transient lock windows,
- and repeatable paths by which one occupied state returns to another.
This matters because recognitional storage should be robust under slight
deformation. The same recognized pattern need not reappear as one rigid
frequency value. It may reappear as the same organized spectral neighborhood.
## Microtubules as Resonant Cavities
Microtubules are a natural place to ask this storage question.
They are hollow cylindrical structures with a regular geometry, embedded in an
ionic and electrically active biological environment. That makes it physically
intelligible to treat them as resonant cavities rather than as inert
scaffolding.
If they participate in recognition, the natural storage picture is therefore
not "a thought is inside one tubulin molecule" but rather:
- a pattern perturbs the cavity,
- the cavity settles into a structured spectral organization,
- that organization is revisitable,
- and later coupling can reactivate or read part of it.
That is the storage hypothesis in its cleanest form.
## Capacity Depends on Distinguishable Spectral Structure
The right capacity question is not:
> how many bits does one molecule have?
but:
> how many distinguishable spectral organizations can the recognizing system
> reliably write, retain, and read?
At the most abstract level, if a cavity offers `M` independently usable modal
degrees of freedom, and the `m`-th degree of freedom has `N_m` reliably
distinguishable states, then the rough storage capacity is
\[
C \sim \sum_{m=1}^{M} \log_2 N_m.
\]
This is only a schema, but it is the right one. Capacity grows with:
- the number of independently usable modes,
- the number of distinguishable states per mode,
- and the reliability of writing and reading those states.
It does not grow merely because a structure is small or numerous.
## What Controls the Real Capacity
For a real biological resonant cavity, `N_m` is not arbitrary.
It is constrained by:
- damping,
- thermal noise,
- linewidth or effective `Q`,
- coupling to neighboring structures,
- write precision,
- read precision,
- state persistence,
- and the biological accessibility of the stored organization.
So a huge theoretical state space may still yield a much smaller usable state
space.
This is the main reason capacity arguments need discipline. The question is not
what is mathematically imaginable, but what is biologically writable, readable,
and revisitable.
## Storage May Be Distributed Across Many Cavities
Another mistake should be avoided.
The theory does not require one microtubule to hold one pattern, or one pattern
to reside in one place.
A recognitional pattern may be distributed across:
- many microtubules,
- many cells,
- many timescales,
- and many coupled oscillatory loops.
That means capacity is likely compositional.
A stored organization may depend on:
- local cavity states,
- relations among cavities,
- larger-scale bodily rhythms,
- and the routes by which one part of the system can reactivate another.
This is another reason spectrum is the better image than fixed symbolic slotting.
## A Plausible but Unfinished Theory
So is the theory plausible?
Yes, in the following sense:
- resonant cavities can store structured states;
- microtubules are resonant cavities;
- recognitional patterns could therefore be stored as spectral organizations in
microtubular and larger coupled resonant systems.
But it is unfinished in the stronger biological sense:
- which exact modal families are used,
- over what timescales,
- with what write/read mechanism,
- and how large the usable capacity really is,
all remain open.
That is not a flaw in the conceptual picture. It is the empirical program
opened by the picture.
## Why This Matters for Recognition
The storage question matters because recognition is not just momentary match.
A loop can recognize again only if some prior organization has been retained in
some revisitable way.
So a theory of recognition needs a theory of storage.
The spectral picture gives one:
- recognition writes by reorganizing resonance,
- storage retains that organization in revisitable spectral form,
- later recognition reads by partial re-entry into that organized state.
This is much closer to the living case than the image of dead symbols stored in
isolated slots.
## What This Chapter Commits To
This chapter commits only to the following:
- storage in a resonance-based theory should be thought of spectrally, not as
static copying;
- a stored pattern is more plausibly a family of organized modes than one exact
frequency;
- microtubules are resonant cavities in which such storage may occur;
- usable capacity depends on distinguishable, writable, readable, and
persistent spectral organization;
- any real storage is likely distributed across many coupled cavities and
bodily loops.
That is enough for now.
The next step is then how loops share, borrow, imitate, and correct one
another's encodings across different bodies and different histories.