Resolution of the Einstein Photon Box Paradox via the Modified Einstein Spherical Universe Model

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Abstract

What is time? The century-long debate over the compatibility of quantum mechanics and general relativity centers on foundational paradoxes such as the Einstein photon box experiment. We resolve these paradoxes within the Modified Einstein Spherical (MES) Universe Model, an idealized geometric framework unifying quantum nonlocality, cosmic-scale entanglement, and chaotic spacetime dynamics. By introducing novel geometric corrections—Zaitian Quantum Power, Nonlinear Symmetry and Chaotic Power—the MES Universe Model achieves joint Energy-Time precision ( ∆Εtotal ∆t ≈ 0), challenging the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. A key conceptual innovation is the redefinition of time as a Chaotic Phase-Locked Variable, time emerges as a parameterized oscillatory phase of spacetime geometry, synchronized globally through entanglement networks, potentially allowing for Planck temporal precision. The MES framework not only reconciles Einstein’s vision of a deterministic universe with quantum mechanics but also provides a geometric pathway to macroscopic quantum coherence and cosmic-scale communication. In essence, the MES Universe model reveals that the topology and global structure of spacetime can critically influence local quantum measurements, a concept that could have implications for quantum gravity and cosmology and offer a novel time hole toward unifying quantum and relativistic physics.

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