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The Physics of Energy Flow - Boundary Determination and High-Speed Transport Corridors

2026-03-17

# 219. Boundary Determination and High-Speed Transport Corridors The earlier appendices establish two ingredients that can now be combined. First, passive Maxwellian transport in a region is governed by local source-free closure. Second, the local transport speed is a property of the region itself and may vary from place to place. This appendix draws two consequences: - passive transport in a bounded region is strongly constrained by complete boundary transport data, - relative unloading of a region raises its local transport speed and can create a faster transport corridor. The second point is not a claim of super-causal propagation. It is only a relative statement: a more lightly loaded region transports faster than a more heavily loaded one. ## 219.1 Passive Interior Determination Consider a bounded spatial region $\Omega$ with smooth closed boundary $\partial\Omega$. For passive source-free Maxwellian transport, the local state in $\Omega$ is governed by the transport closure together with whatever data are fed across the boundary. So for a passive region, complete transport data on the enclosing boundary over the relevant causal interval determine the interior evolution. The interior is not an independent second ontology. It is the continuation of the same transport constrained by the boundary history. This is the right sense in which the picture is boundary-determined. One does not need a primitive substance hidden behind the surface. One needs the full transport data on that surface and the closure law of the same substrate. ## 219.2 Passive Regions and Active Loops This boundary-determined picture applies cleanly only to passive regions. If a region contains a persistent causal loop carrying internally retained organization, then one boundary slice is not enough to exhaust what that region can do next. The loop can reorganize incoming transport using structure it already carries. That distinction matters later for living or imprint-sensitive organization. But for inert transport without such internal steering, the passive boundary-determined picture is the correct one. ## 219.3 Relative Loading and Local Transport Speed Appendix 214 already fixed the constitutive relation $$ k(\mathbf r)=\frac{1}{\sqrt{\varepsilon(\mathbf r)\mu(\mathbf r)}}. $$ In the symmetric constitutive class used there, $$ \varepsilon=\varepsilon_0\alpha, \qquad \mu=\mu_0\alpha, \qquad k=\frac{c}{\alpha}. $$ So a more heavily loaded region has larger $\alpha$ and therefore smaller local transport speed $k$. A more lightly loaded region has smaller $\alpha$ and therefore larger $k$. This is the precise sense in which unloading a region speeds transport there. ## 219.4 Faster Transit Through a Lower-Loading Tube Consider a tubular region $\Gamma$ joining two endpoints $A$ and $B$. Let $s\in[0,L]$ denote arclength along its axis, and suppose its local transport speed is $$ k_\Gamma(s). $$ For a narrow radiative packet constrained to follow that tube, the travel time is $$ T_\Gamma = \int_0^L \frac{ds}{k_\Gamma(s)}. $$ Now compare this with another route through a more heavily loaded region, with speed $$ k_{\mathrm{ext}}(s). $$ If $$ k_\Gamma(s) > k_{\mathrm{ext}}(s) \qquad \text{for all } s, $$ then $$ T_\Gamma < \int_0^L \frac{ds}{k_{\mathrm{ext}}(s)}. $$ So the less-loaded tube is a faster transport corridor. This is the exact sense in which one may speak of a high-speed communication tube. It is not faster than the tube's own local causal speed. It is faster than transport through neighboring more heavily loaded regions. ## 219.5 Guidance and Turning Are Engineering Problems The speed advantage does not by itself fix how the corridor turns or guides a packet. That is a separate design problem. For a narrow radiative packet in a static background, appendix 214 gives $$ \dot{\mathbf p}=-U\,\nabla\ln k. $$ So passive static gradients bend rays toward lower $k$, not toward higher $k$. Therefore, if a tubular region has larger $k$ than its surroundings, then: - transport through it is faster once the packet is kept in the tube, - but the desired routing is not supplied automatically by the speed contrast alone. Making such a corridor turn, branch, or remain tightly guided is an engineering problem. It requires additional structure, for example: - boundary shaping, - reflective closure, - or active transduction along the path. So the exact derivational statement is: - lower loading gives faster transport in the corridor, - controlled routing of that transport requires engineered guidance. ## 219.6 Final Statement Passive source-free regions are boundary-determined in the sense that complete transport data on the enclosing boundary determine the passive interior evolution. Within that same framework, lowering the relative electromagnetic loading of a region raises its local transport speed. A suitably maintained tubular region of lower loading is therefore a faster transport corridor relative to more heavily loaded surroundings. Appendix 221 derives the corresponding lensing and guidance laws for such field-shaped transport profiles, and appendix 222 derives boundary superposition as one fundamental unloading mechanism.
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