We construct the first full results atlas of the bridge-closed late finite-capacity latency–erasure program by converting the empirical outputs of the first end-to-end real-data execution into a unified visual and tabular synthesis. Earlier stages of the program established the reduced and true global corridor, the Hubble interface, the imaging interface, the four-arena constitutional tribunal, the first populated numerical confrontation, the microphysical derivation of the shell–cosmology bridge coefficient , the bridge-hardened deep survival grammar, the full posterior architecture with MCMC-grade workflow, and the first executed real-data posterior verdict. What remained absent was the atlas paper: the article that gathers the posterior marginals, confrontation-spine densities, corner plots, ridge maps, posterior-island structure, bridge-compression diagnostics, cross-arena tension summaries, and verdict figures into one coherent empirical cartography of the mature program. The present paper provides that missing step. The paper proceeds in five stages. First, we define the atlas objects of the mature FCLET program and organize them into figure and table families. Second, we construct the principal posterior maps of the executed bridge-hardened run, including confrontation-spine marginals, multidimensional corner plots, and highest-posterior-density projections. Third, we visualize the ridge, island, and failure geometry of the real-data posterior and identify the empirical topology of the surviving or collapsing branch. Fourth, we assemble quantitative compression, survival, and arena-tension summaries into a unified table architecture. Fifth, we compress the entire mature execution into a final atlas-level verdict synthesis spanning structural, posterior, and empirical layers. The result is decisive. The late FCLET program is no longer only a theory with a mature execution paper. It now possesses a full visual and tabular atlas of its bridge-closed empirical posterior structure. In this sense, Article 98 is the first comprehensive cartography paper of the mature FCLET sequence.
Ali Caner Yücel (Fri,) studied this question.