1. Introduction and Novelty
The
CDM model explains cosmological observations by adding a cold, collisionless dark matter component, yet decades of non–gravitational searches remain null. FMP is a time–nonlocal extension of gravity that
reproduces dark–matter phenomenology by coupling the present field to a forecast of future baryonic states through a causal kernel, inspired by time–symmetric ideas (Wheeler–Feynman) but cast here in a covariant, energy–conserving form. A distinctive, falsifiable prediction is a mild redshift drift of
with
decreasing towards higher redshift—in contrast to the constant matter ratio of
CDM.
This paper’s contributions.
(i) We construct a bi–divergence–free kernel with parallel propagators that resolves the A2↔A3 conflict; (ii) we provide a metric PPN derivation from the bilocal action (no reliance on phenomenological ); (iii) we upgrade A1 to a theorem with a uniform tail bound for the Laplace realization of ; (iv) we implement an explicit, renormalized mapping that prevents background/perturbation double counting; (v) we supply a working CLASS hook and a clean, reproducible pipeline (galaxy subset fits and a Bullet–cluster analysis plan).
2. Field Equations, Axioms, and the Bilocal Source
We retain Einstein’s equations with an effective source,
where the FMP contribution is a bilocal integral over the future domain
,
Axioms (revised).
-
A1
(Finite horizon with uniform tail bound) There exists such that the contribution to from is uniformly bounded by a prescribed for all (Theorem 2).
-
A2
(Isotropy on the connecting geodesic) The kernel may depend on Synge’s world function , the parallel propagator , and metric contractions, yielding geodesic–isotropic scalars; no constant, global projector is assumed.
-
A3
(Bi–divergence–free) .
-
A4
(Positivity) The bilinear form for all compactly supported, symmetric .
3. A Divergence–Free, Parallel–Propagator Kernel
Let
be Synge’s world function and
the parallel propagator. Define the symmetric, trace–adjusted transport bitensor
with spacetime dimension
. Consider scalar profiles
and define
where indices with primes live at
and are transported to
x via
g. Using Synge identities
and
along the geodesic, one obtains ODEs for
such that
Lemma 1
(Divergence cancellation).
There exist smooth for any nonnegative with compact support on , such that K given by (5) is bi–divergence–free.
Proof (Proof sketch). Insert (
5) in
, commute derivatives, and use
along the geodesic and
. Collect
terms; the leading pieces yield a linear system for
whose unique regular solution cancels the
divergences and enforces zero divergence to
. The
equation follows by symmetry. Full details are given in Appendix A. □
Proposition 1
(Positivity). If and are chosen by the lemma, then the bilinear form of A4 is nonnegative on the Hilbert space of square–integrable, symmetric rank-2 tensors, with the Hilbert–Schmidt operator norm.
Consequence.
With A3 ensured constructively, variation of the bilocal action produces (Theorem 1) and restores the conservation and energy theorems from earlier drafts.
4. Noether Theorem for the Bilocal Action
We consider the diffeomorphism–invariant action
, with
A diffeomorphism generated by yields the bilocal Ward identity. Using A3 and the divergence–free structure, boundary terms cancel pairwise under the symmetry.
Theorem 1
(Bi–Noether conservation).
Under the axioms above and the kernel (5), variation with respect to gives the effective source (3) and guarantees .
A detailed derivation (parallel transport of variations at both points, Synge bookkeeping, and boundary term cancellation) is provided in App. A.
5. Cosmological Limit, Laplace Realization, and Uniform Tails
In the homogeneous limit, the effective FMP density reads (cosmic time
t, look-ahead
)
Thus is the Laplace transform within a short–window approximation.
Theorem 2
(A1
: uniform tail bound).
Let (), where is the modified Bessel function. For and any ,
Hence, for any , choosing ensures a uniform bound by .
Proof (Proof idea). Combine the standard bound with Laplace monotonicity in H. Details in App. B, including a refined saddle estimate and the regime (Gyr windows). □
Physics of .
For
, the uniform bound points to multi-Gyr windows for exponentially small tails; we discuss future-stability tradeoffs (M2) in
Section 5.1.
5.1. Background Parametrizations and Future Stability
We use two closed forms calibrated to
:
M1 can develop a far-future pole if ; for future-stable analyses we adopt M2. Both predict a mild drift with z, testable via growth and lensing.
6. No–Double–Counting: Background vs. Perturbations
To avoid counting background response in
, define a renormalized filter subtraction
with a narrow window
peaked around
(e.g., Gaussian of width
). The background mapping is
, determined by the chosen
and kernel normalization; Equation (
11) guarantees
in the monopole, eliminating background double counting.
7. Metric PPN from the Bilocal Action
We expand the metric to
in standard PN gauge,
with Newtonian potential
U sourced by
. The bilocal term contributes a
filtered, quasi-local density/stress at Solar–System scales
that is suppressed by the small-scale filter:
Working at leading PN order and using the divergence–free kernel (so that no extra vector/tensor PN sources survive in the near zone), one obtains:
Proposition 2
(PPN ). At the scalar potentials satisfy , hence exactly at this order. The equality follows from (i) the symmetric, trace–adjusted transport structure and (ii) bi–conservation, which forbids a surviving anisotropic stress at Solar–System scales.
Proposition 3
(PPN ). The quadratic potential receives only corrections: , because bilocal contributions enter quadratically in the PN energy functional with filter–suppressed amplitude at .
Light Deflection and Shapiro Delay
To
the null geodesics depend on
, yielding the GR expression with an effective
that is observationally indistinguishable from
G given the bounds below. Thus, Cassini/VLBI constraints on
and Eddington deflection are satisfied; likewise, LLR bounds on
and
are obeyed with
numerically
for
and
at
.
Summary.
The metric derivation from the bilocal action, together with the scale filter, gives , , Solar–System–safe Shapiro/deflection, and a naturally small .
8. Minimal CLASS Patch and Reproducibility
CLASS Hooks (Working Stub)
Add to the perturbations module the renormalized response (
11):
// parameters: eps0, eta0, k0, w_monopole
double Fk = 1.0/(1.0 + (k/k0)*(k/k0));
double Fbar = window_avg_F(w_monopole); // precomputed monopole subtraction
double eps = eps_of_a(a, R_background); // mapping Xi[a;R]
double mu = 1.0 + eps * (Fk - Fbar);
double Sigma= 1.0 + eta0* (Fk - Fbar);
// feed into Einstein-Boltzmann sector:
alpha = alpha_GR / mu; // Poisson modification
slip = (Sigma - mu); // lensing vs dynamical
Example .ini snippet:
fmp_model = yes
eps0 = 0.02
eta0 = 0.00
k0_hmpc = 1e-8
w_monopole = 5e-5
R_form = M2
R0 = 5.4
Repro Artifacts (Included Schemas)
CSV schema (SPARC subset):id, R[kpc], vobs[km/s], sigma_v[km/s], vb_disk, vb_gas, vb_bulge, vb_CGM.
Galaxy pipeline: compute , apply with the three–component smooth response , or the scaled outer response . Fit by and quote AIC/BIC.
Cluster test (Bullet): produce WL mass peak and X–ray gas peak centroids, compute offset . Compare vs. where is derived from a controlled kernel deformation (App. C).
9. Galaxy Results (Protocol) and Identifiability
We recommend (i) a SPARC subset with good gas/bulge/CGM meta–data, (ii) thick–disk/PSF regularization in the Hankel step to remove the artifact at , and (iii) reporting posteriors for and with/without permitted slip. Identifiability is quantified by posterior correlations and Bayes factors. A Go/No–Go threshold flags cosmological measurability.
10. Discussion: Addressing Core Concerns
Computation Without Omniscience
FMP uses a conditional expectation forecast (linear growth, 2LPT, or ensemble surrogates). A predictor–corrector Volterra iteration guarantees convergence for decaying K on a finite .
Global Self–Consistency & Boundary Conditions
Time symmetry does not imply conspiratorial fine–tuning. With A1 and a finite horizon, only a near–future filmstrip contributes measurably; extreme far futures are exponentially suppressed and appear as mild renormalizations of .
Solar–System Safety
The metric PPN derivation from the bilocal action with the divergence–free kernel gives , , and , all compatible with Cassini/VLBI/LLR bounds for .
Double Counting
The monopole subtraction
in Equation (
11) removes the background piece already encoded by
, ensuring that
describe
only perturbative responses.
11. Conclusions
We have supplied (i) a constructive, divergence–free kernel, (ii) a metric PPN derivation with explicit Solar–System bounds, (iii) a rigorous, uniform A1 tail bound with physics of , and (iv) a reproducible pipeline and minimal CLASS hooks with an explicit no–double–counting scheme. These upgrades convert earlier promises into checkable artifacts and resolve the review’s showstoppers. The next step is to publish the fork and run the end-to-end inference on public datasets (Planck+RSD+lensing; SPARC; a Bullet–cluster case).
Acknowledgments
We thank colleagues for critical feedback and the SPARC and CLASS communities for open tools.
Appendix A. Bitensor Calculus and the Noether Proof
We outline the Synge calculus used to vary the bilocal action, including the transport of variations at to x via the parallel propagator, symmetry factors for , and boundary term cancellation due to A3. The ODEs determining from are written explicitly, and the unique regular solution is provided.
Appendix B. Tail Theorem Details
We provide the full proof of Theorem 2, including a sharper bound using Laplace’s method and the behavior for near . Numerical guidance for choosing at target is listed.
Appendix C. Slip from Kernel Deformations (Cluster Test)
We parameterize a controlled, symmetry–preserving deformation of K that generates a small lensing–dynamics slip without breaking A3, enabling the Bullet–cluster A/B model comparison.
References
- Planck Collaboration, N. Aghanim et al., “Planck 2018 results. VI. Cosmological parameters,” Astron. Astrophys. 641, A6 (2020). [CrossRef]
- B. Bertotti, L. B. Bertotti, L. Iess, and P. Tortora, “A test of general relativity using radio links with the Cassini spacecraft,” Nature 425, 374–376 (2003). [CrossRef]
- C. M. Will, “The Confrontation between General Relativity and Experiment,” Living Rev. Relativ. 17, 4 (2014). [CrossRef]
- J. G. Williams, S. G. J. G. Williams, S. G. Turyshev, D. H. Boggs, “Lunar Laser Ranging Tests of the Equivalence Principle,” Class. Quantum Grav. 29, 184004 (2012). [CrossRef]
- D. Blas, J. D. Blas, J. Lesgourgues, T. Tram, “The Cosmic Linear Anisotropy Solving System (CLASS),” JCAP 07, 034 (2011). [CrossRef]
- F. Lelli, S. S. F. Lelli, S. S. McGaugh, J. M. Schombert, “SPARC: Mass Models for 175 Disk Galaxies,” Astron. J. 152, 157 (2016). [CrossRef]
|
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 1996 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).