Evidence & Sources

ArcSecs Research Library

A public source map for the observations, constraints, criticisms, speculative models, and engineering analogies behind ArcSecs.

This page is the credibility layer. It does not claim the ArcSecs framework is proven. It shows what each source supports, what each source does not prove, and where the simulator should turn a claim into a visible test.

Scientific boundary: Mainstream observational sources and model constraints remain distinct from ArcSecs simulation prompts and alternative/speculative theory links.

Source map

Start with the question, then open the sources.

The library groups links by the actual pressure point or modeling claim. Each topic points back into the ArcSecs site so readers can move from source → explanation → simulation hook.

Claim hygiene

Every link carries a role.

A scientific-looking bibliography is not enough. The site labels whether a source is an observation, a mainstream constraint, an alternative/speculative theory, a simulator prompt, or an engineering analogy.

Mainstream observational source 6 sources

Primary or high-quality public evidence about what was measured.

Mainstream model constraint 9 sources

A source that defines the scientific bar ArcSecs must meet or explicitly fail.

ArcSecs simulation prompt 9 sources

A site-owned route or prompt that turns a claim into simulator work.

Alternative/speculative theory 3 sources

A non-consensus interpretation useful for comparison, not proof.

Engineering analogy 2 sources

A real technical idea used carefully as an analogy for speculative propulsion framing.

Evidence & Sources

Source trail: what supports the pressure points, and what it does not prove.

This source layer separates observations, mainstream constraints, alternative ideas, ArcSecs simulation prompts, and engineering analogies. The goal is credibility, not link dumping.

29 sources visible across 9 topics.

5 sources

Multi-messenger timing

Gravitational-wave detections and electromagnetic counterparts provide a timing laboratory for separating source delay, environment delay, and any speculative propagation effect.

Mainstream observational source GW170817: A Short Review of the First Multimessenger Event in Gravitational Astronomy What this source supports

GW170817 is the benchmark event where gravitational waves were detected before the gamma-ray and optical counterpart, making it the cleanest local timing anchor.

What this source does not prove

The observed lag does not by itself prove cosmological light slowing; most of the delay can be source and ejecta physics.

Mainstream model constraint arXiv — The Delay Time of Gravitational Wave / Gamma-Ray Burst Associations What this source supports

Delay-time modeling is a mainstream concern when connecting gravitational-wave events to electromagnetic transients.

What this source does not prove

It does not establish the ArcSecs attenuation model; it shows why delay decomposition matters.

Mainstream observational source Fermi GBM observations of LIGO gravitational-wave event GW150914 What this source supports

GW150914 is useful as a debated electromagnetic-counterpart stress case for any propagation-delay model.

What this source does not prove

The gamma-ray transient association is debated and should not be used as a confirmed calibration point without caveats.

Mainstream model constraint GW190521: a binary black hole merger inside an active galactic nucleus? What this source supports

GW190521 and its possible optical flare counterpart motivate environment and AGN diffusion checks.

What this source does not prove

A delayed optical flare candidate does not prove a universal vacuum light-slowing law; local environment can dominate.

ArcSecs simulation prompt ArcSecs Multi-Messenger Light Delay page What this source supports

A site-owned checklist for simulating gravitational-wave baselines, electromagnetic source delays, environment delays, and candidate propagation attenuation.

What this source does not prove

A page and simulator prompt are not observational confirmation; they define what the model must test and where it can fail.

3 sources

Hubble tension

Distance-ladder and early-universe Hubble constant estimates remain a useful pressure test for expansion history, calibration, and redshift interpretation.

3 sources

JWST early galaxies

Very distant luminous or mature-looking galaxies stress early-galaxy formation timelines and force better spectroscopy, dust, and population modeling.

3 sources

SPARC / rotation curves

Galaxy rotation curves and radial acceleration relations are valuable because they combine robust observation with deep disagreement about interpretation.

3 sources

El Gordo cluster

Massive high-redshift cluster collisions stress-test formation timelines, rare-event statistics, mass estimates, and merger velocity modeling.

3 sources

Lithium-7 problem

Lithium-7 remains useful because it is a specific abundance mismatch inside an otherwise successful light-element framework.

3 sources

Proca photon mass bounds

Photon mass is not observed; the scientific value is in strict upper bounds and the failure states they impose on any massive-photon simulation branch.

3 sources

Tired light criticism and constraints

Tired light deserves a visible failure ledger: supernova stretch, Tolman dimming, image sharpness, CMB structure, and energy accounting cannot be hand-waved.

3 sources

Dark matter / alternative propulsion concepts

The propulsion material is explicitly a speculative engineering analogy layer: field capture, slow light, polaritons, shielding, energy ledgers, and thermal stress.

Read deeper

Use the library as a launch point, not a dead end.

After reviewing sources, jump into the comparison page, anomaly tracker, demo, Dark Matter Drive simulator, or AI-readable memory layer.