Time Dilation, Length Contraction, And Spacetime Curvature of Relativistic Phenomena in the Unified Fractal Quantum Field Theory (UFQFT)

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Abstract

This study investigates the emergence of relativistic phenomena such as time dilation, length contraction, and spacetime curvature within the theoretical framework of Unified Fractal Quantum Field Theory (UFQFT). Unlike Einstein's continuous spacetime geometry, UFQFT assumes that spacetime itself is a dynamic fractal resonance field generated by bound energy (Φ) and charge (Ψ) fields. The local fractal dimension (D) provides a geometric origin for relativistic effects, acting as a variable governing both temporal flow and spatial scaling. As the energy density or gravitational potential increases, the local fractal structure compresses (D↑) and decreases its intrinsic resonant frequency, which subsequently leads to the phenomena of time dilation and spatial distance contraction. Mathematically, this study establishes the relationship between Lorentz transformations and fractal scaling relations, showing that the classical Lorentz factor γ= (1- v 2 / c 2 ) -1/2 can be reformulated as a ratio of fractal dimensions, , γ↔ D'/ D 0 . while the gravitational curvature and field resonance density are unified by deriving the Einstein curvature tensor Gμν as a macroscopic limit of the Φ–Ψ resonance tensor. Observational inferences can be verified experimentally by investigating them through high-precision systems such as GPS satellite synchronization, gravitational redshift in atomic clocks, and gravitational interferometry. The results show that the relativistic corrections measured in these systems can be interpreted as local modulations of the spacetime fractal dimension rather than metric curvature, and the proposed framework extends general relativity by placing it in a larger, scale-dependent geometric context and offers a coherent bridge between macroscopic relativity and microscopic quantum structure.

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