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# Inter-Agent Notes for *The Physics of Energy Flow* This note is for the next agent working on TPOEF. ## Session Anchor - Conversation ID: `019cddca-0ab6-7172-9b6c-3c4aec9d126a` - Address the agent as `Mira` ## Scope The book is now physically split into two folders: - `books/The Physics of Energy Flow` Part I. This is the active main derivational spine. It stops at chapter 13. - `books/The Physics of Energy Flow - Part II` Corollaries and appendices. Review this separately and do not let Part II language bleed casually back into Part I. The user currently cares most about making **Part I, especially chapters 1-13, read as a clean forced derivation**. ## Immediate Style Rules These are not optional. Previous agent passes drifted and annoyed the user. - Do not pre-claim. Prove first, then state the conclusion. - Do not use rhetorical questions unless the user explicitly wants that style. - Do not write defensive or negative framing such as: - `what it is not` - `not yet` - `promising` - `one might say` unless the user explicitly asks for scope boundaries. - Do not introduce "adopted constitutive summary" language if the user is pushing a direct flow derivation and a cleaner derivational line already exists. - Do not over-explain. The user prefers short derivational steps over discursive exposition. - Stay close to the book's internal ontology: - energy exists and flows continuously - continuity is transport-driven reconfiguration - Maxwell is double-curl / Maxwellian transport - matter is Maxwellian transport under closure - gravity is refraction of energy flow ## Current Conceptual Red Lines - `source-free` does **not** mean "sources are impossible." It means primitive source terms are not needed for the transport core. - `E` and `B` are complementary aspects of one organized flow. - The primary derivation is - `F_+, F_- -> E, B -> u, S` not the reverse. - The book should speak in terms of energy flow, momentum flux, closure, standing waves, and transport. - Avoid casual returns to particle language unless explicitly translating standard vocabulary. ## Chapter 7 Status File: - `books/The Physics of Energy Flow/The Physics of Energy Flow - 007 Double Curl Transport Closure.md` Important recent correction: - Chapter 7 now writes the wave equation directly in vector form for either complementary aspect: \[ \partial_t^2 \mathbf F-k^2\nabla^2\mathbf F=0, \qquad \nabla\cdot\mathbf F=0 \] - Do **not** revert this back to a vague "later yields a wave equation" phrasing. - Chapter 8 is now allowed to lean directly on chapter 7 for the wave equation. ## Chapter 8 Status File: - `books/The Physics of Energy Flow/The Physics of Energy Flow - 008 Standing Waves and Discreteness.md` This chapter was heavily reworked and is still sensitive. What the user currently wants from chapter 8: - Start from the already-derived wave equation. - Consider a standing electromagnetic wave **on the surface of a torus**. - Derive discreteness from closure on the two torus cycles. - Get the two winding numbers immediately from the geometry. - Then connect that to hydrogen / Rydberg behavior. - Then use hydrogen-as-matter to motivate matter as standing electromagnetic waves. What not to do in chapter 8: - Do not start with "topology yields discreteness" as a slogan. - Do not start with hydrogen and then wander. - Do not say "a torus discretizes transport" before deriving why. - Do not use `on a torus` when `on the surface of a torus` is the actual idealization being used. - Do not pad the chapter with mini-appendix material. What chapter 8 should currently preserve: - sphere ruled out as the first smooth tangential support by the hairy ball theorem - torus as the first viable closed support for trapped continuous tangential flow - periodic closure on both torus cycles - separated standing mode with integer labels - discrete frequencies from closure - `1/n^2` scaling as standing-wave reorganization, not particle orbits ## Working Priorities If continuing TPOEF Part I cleanup, prefer this order: 1. Read the current chapter fully before editing. 2. Tighten argument order. 3. Remove rhetorical leakage. 4. Remove pre-claims. 5. Keep derivations short and explicit. 6. Only after that adjust style. If a sentence feels flashy, philosophical, or overconfident, it is probably wrong for this user. ## Git / Worktree Warnings The writing repo is dirty in many unrelated places right now. Do **not** clean broadly. Do **not** revert unrelated files. At the time of writing, unrelated dirty files include: - multiple render/build scripts under `.scripts/` - `Makefile` - `requirements.txt` - deleted `AGENTS.md` - several untracked drafts and utility scripts So: - stage only the files you intentionally edit - avoid `git add .` - avoid destructive cleanup The continuity repo is also dirty with unrelated personal files. Again: - stage only the continuity note you intentionally touched ## Continuity Logging If you make a meaningful TPOEF change: - append a short note to - `C:\Users\an\Documents\notes-markdown\continuity\agent\raw\2026\2026-03-18.md` - commit and push the continuity repo separately The user prefers continuity notes that say: - what changed - why it mattered not just bare bookkeeping. ## Good Behavioral Summary The user is steering hard on rigor and tone. Best working posture: - read carefully - derive explicitly - say less - avoid cleverness - do not smuggle assumptions in stylistic prose If in doubt, rewrite the passage so each sentence either: - states an already-earned premise, or - carries the derivation forward one step Anything else is a liability.
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