We derive the emergence of nuclear-like composite structure from Time-Scalar Field Theory (TSFT), in which time is promoted to a physical scalar field Θ (x, t) and matter arises from coherence-stable eigenmodes of the scalar-time operator. Building on the previously derived particle spectrum, closure condition, and interaction hierarchy, we show that confined multi-fermion bound states arise naturally from composite coherence locking without introducing new fundamental postulates. Starting from the scalar-time field, the coherence eigenvalue problem, and the closure condition 3n + 2q + h ≡0 (mod 6), we construct admissible three-fermion composite states and derive the conditions under which integer-charged spin-1 2 nucleon-like structures emerge. In particular, we show that the minimal closure-preserving confined composites built from admissible fractional-charge fermionic modes yield a positively charged proton-like state and a neutral neutron-like state as the first nontrivial nuclear-scale bound structures of the theory. We further show that mass-energy equivalence is recovered directly from scalar-time eigenfrequency structure, without invoking General Relativity, through the identification of rest mass as the intrinsic coherence frequency of a stable mode. This yields the relativistic rest-energy relation E= mc² as a consequence of scalar-time wave dynamics and provides the natural energetic framework for composite nuclear binding. The resulting formalism supplies a self-contained derivation of nucleon-like bound states, composite confinement, and the first layer of nuclear structure directly from scalar-time coherence dynamics. This extends TSFT from particle and interaction emergence into the nuclear domain and provides a structural bridge from temporal resonance to matter architecture.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Jordan Gabriel Farrell
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Jordan Gabriel Farrell (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e1cfe05cdc762e9d858f07 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19583602