We present a unified formulation of the qdRIS framework based on a single fundamentaloperator Q, the Relative Rotation Operator, defined as the generator of relative rotationsbetween two quaternionic copies of spacetime. In this construction, the classical geometry isdescribed by a smooth quaternionic manifold H1, while its spectral dual H2 emerges througha Quaternionic Laplace Transform (QLT) with finite resolution set by a fundamental constanth0.The operator Q acts as the infinitesimal generator of the QLT, and its square Q2 definesthe observable spectral content of the theory. Physical evolution is governed by the exponential operator QLT(τ) = exp− τh0 Q2 , where τ is an internal time parameter associatedwith the exploration of the spectral fiber. This leads to a natural emergence of time as aderived quantity rather than a fundamental variable.We show that particle properties arise from the spectral structure of Q2. Masses areobtained from exponential projections of its eigenvalues, while the three generations correspond to the intrinsic triadic structure of the underlying su(2) algebra. A key result is theidentification of a conserved quantity qτ = F, interpreted as a topological invariant equal tothe accessible volume of the internal fiber. This relation explains charge quantization anddistinguishes leptons, which explore the full S3 fiber, from quarks, which are confined to areduced effective volume, leading to an emergent SU(3) symmetry as a spectral degeneracy.Furthermore, we show how Lorentzian dynamics, the invariant speed c, and Dirac fermionsemerge naturally from the structure of Q and its algebra. In this framework, spacetime remains fundamentally smooth, and all apparent discreteness arises from the finite resolutionof the observer, modeled as a projection onto the tangent space Im(H).This approach provides a minimal and parameter-free pathway to unify general relativity, quantum mechanics, and the Standard Model as different aspects of a single spectralgeometric structure.
Guillaume André Louis Seguin (Thu,) studied this question.