Independent dev's physics code stuns PhysicsSE admin(physics.stackexchange.com)
physics.stackexchange.com
Independent dev's physics code stuns PhysicsSE admin
https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/872398/self-organizing-acceleration-and-stability-in-a-lattice-independent-field
6 comments
No one got "stunned" here, apparently the moderator made an edit with a comment "tried to make title/question better" and the OP took it as some sort of endorsement?
An independent software engineer with no physics background wrote a minimalist cellular automaton. Using simple, non-linear local rules on a discrete grid, the system spontaneously generates continuous physical phenomena: self-organizing acceleration, stable quantized vortices, and spacetime quantum foam behavior.
Link to the discussion and simulation:
https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/872398/self-orga...
The story took an unprecedented turn when Qmechanic—Physics SE's legendary, ultra-strict, and anonymous top moderator—stumbled upon it. Instead of nuking the post for "personal theory" or self-promotion, he manually polished the author's text, allowed a direct link to the author's LinkedIn, and pushed it straight into the Hot Network Questions list.
When the gatekeeper of theoretical physics breaks his own lifetime rules for a regular dev's code, you know the emergence under the hood is doing something extraordinary.
Would love to hear your thoughts on the underlying mathematics.
Link to the discussion and simulation:
https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/872398/self-orga...
The story took an unprecedented turn when Qmechanic—Physics SE's legendary, ultra-strict, and anonymous top moderator—stumbled upon it. Instead of nuking the post for "personal theory" or self-promotion, he manually polished the author's text, allowed a direct link to the author's LinkedIn, and pushed it straight into the Hot Network Questions list.
When the gatekeeper of theoretical physics breaks his own lifetime rules for a regular dev's code, you know the emergence under the hood is doing something extraordinary.
Would love to hear your thoughts on the underlying mathematics.
You wrote a sloppy "question" promoting your own work and an admin cleaned it up.
That's not "stunning".
That's not "stunning".
without a clear statement of phenomenology (which "velocity" and what "acceleration" is the question about? numerous similar effects can be known but no reasonable answer can be given without stating the system update rules...
For example to me this is reminiscent of Regge Calculus on some 2D patch of surface. Like what is the question?