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arxiv: 1907.10715 · v1 · pith:JYP2OQARnew · submitted 2019-07-15 · 🌌 astro-ph.HE

The electromagnetic radiation whose decay violates the inverse-square law: detailed mathematical treatment of an experimentally realized example

Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 21:31 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌌 astro-ph.HE
keywords electromagnetic radiationpolarization currentsuperluminal motioninverse square lawtransient radiationpulsarsgamma-ray bursts
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The pith

An experimentally realized polarization current with superluminal rotation produces radiation whose flux density decays with distance to a power between 1 and 2.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper establishes that the radiation generated by a polarization current whose rotating distribution pattern moves faster than light in vacuum has a flux density that falls off as the distance d raised to minus alpha, where alpha is between 1 and 2. This differs from the standard inverse-square law decay. The emission is transient, with the time-averaged change in radiation energy density being negative at certain points, balancing the power flux differences across concentric spheres. These properties are relevant to astrophysical sources like pulsars and to potential communication technologies.

Core claim

The flux density of the resulting emission has a dominant value and is linearly polarized within a sharply delineated radiation beam, and decays with the distance d from the source as d to the power of minus alpha where alpha lies between 1 and 2 across the beam. The emission is intrinsically transient because the temporal rate of change of the energy density has a time-averaged value that is negative at points where the envelopes of the wave fronts are cusped. The difference in the fluxes of power across any two spheres centred on the source is balanced by the change with time of the energy contained inside the shell bounded by those spheres.

What carries the argument

The rotating distribution pattern of an electric polarization current that moves with linear speeds exceeding the speed of light in vacuum.

If this is right

  • The radiation beam's orientation and polar width are set by the range of linear speeds of the source distribution.
  • The emission is linearly polarized within the beam.
  • The difference in power fluxes across any two spheres is balanced by the change with time of the energy inside the shell between them.
  • The results apply to long-range transmitters and to emissions from rapidly rotating neutron stars.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • This decay law could alter energy calculations for sources at cosmological distances such as radio and gamma-ray bursts.
  • Experimental setups realizing the superluminal polarization current might be used to test long-distance signal propagation.

Load-bearing premise

The rotating distribution pattern of the polarization current moves with linear speeds exceeding the speed of light in vacuum and this configuration can be realized experimentally.

What would settle it

Direct measurement of the exponent in the distance dependence of the flux density from a laboratory realization of the described polarization current source, which would show whether it equals 2 or lies between 1 and 2.

read the original abstract

I analyse and numerically evaluate the radiation field generated by an experimentally realized embodiment of an electric polarization current whose rotating distribution pattern moves with linear speeds exceeding the speed of light in vacuum. I find that the flux density of the resulting emission (i) has a dominant value and is linearly polarized within a sharply delineated radiation beam whose orientation and polar width are determined by the range of values of the linear speeds of the rotating source distribution, and (ii) decays with the distance $d$ from the source as $d^{-\alpha}$ in which the value of $\alpha$ lies between $1$ and $2$ (instead of being equal to $2$ as in a conventional radiation) across the beam. In that the rate at which boundaries of the retarded distribution of such a source change with time depends on its duration monotonically, this is an intrinsically transient emission process: temporal rate of change of the energy density of the radiation generated by it has a time-averaged value that is negative (instead of being zero as in a conventional radiation) at points where the envelopes of the wave fronts emanating from the constituent volume elements of the source distribution are cusped. The difference in the fluxes of power across any two spheres centred on the source is in this case balanced by the change with time of the energy contained inside the shell bounded by those spheres. These results are relevant not only to long-range transmitters in communications technology but also to astrophysical objects containing rapidly rotating neutron stars (such as pulsars) and to the interpretation of the energetics of the multi-wavelength emissions from sources that lie at cosmological distances (such as radio and gamma-ray bursts). The analysis presented in this paper is self-contained and supersedes my earlier works on this problem.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript provides a self-contained mathematical treatment and numerical evaluation of the electromagnetic radiation from an experimentally realized electric polarization current whose rotating distribution pattern moves with linear speeds exceeding c. It claims that the flux density decays as d^{-α} with 1<α<2 across a beam whose properties are determined by the speed range, that the emission is transient with negative time-averaged energy density change at cusped wavefronts, and that power flux differences are balanced by temporal energy changes inside spherical shells. Applications to communications technology, pulsars, and cosmological bursts are discussed.

Significance. If the result holds and the source is realizable, the work would be significant for long-range communication technologies and for reinterpreting emissions from rapidly rotating neutron stars and cosmological sources. The self-contained analysis superseding prior works is a noted strength.

major comments (2)
  1. [Source model] The source model (described in the section introducing the polarization-current distribution) asserts an experimentally realized superluminal rotating pattern, but does not explicitly demonstrate that the effective source cannot be reduced to a conventional subluminal current distribution; without this verification the non-standard decay exponent may follow by construction from the model rather than being independently derived.
  2. [Numerical evaluation] In the numerical evaluation of the radiation integrals, the treatment of retarded-time integration over the superluminal source and the resolution of cusped wavefront envelopes lacks reported error analysis or convergence tests; this is load-bearing for confirming that 1<α<2 is robust and not a numerical artifact.
minor comments (1)
  1. The abstract states the analysis supersedes earlier works but does not specify what new elements (e.g., updated numerics or transient-energy balance) are added; a brief comparison paragraph would improve clarity.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their thoughtful review and for highlighting these points. We respond to each major comment below and indicate the revisions that will be incorporated.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Source model] The source model (described in the section introducing the polarization-current distribution) asserts an experimentally realized superluminal rotating pattern, but does not explicitly demonstrate that the effective source cannot be reduced to a conventional subluminal current distribution; without this verification the non-standard decay exponent may follow by construction from the model rather than being independently derived.

    Authors: The model employs a physical polarization current whose rotating distribution pattern has linear speeds exceeding c, as realized in the referenced experiment. The superluminal phase velocity of the pattern is intrinsic to the source and produces the observed radiation properties through the retarded-time integration; a purely subluminal current distribution cannot generate an equivalent moving pattern with the same phase speeds. The non-standard decay is derived from the mathematics of the retarded potentials rather than imposed by construction. To strengthen the presentation we will add a short clarifying paragraph in the source-model section addressing this distinction. revision: partial

  2. Referee: [Numerical evaluation] In the numerical evaluation of the radiation integrals, the treatment of retarded-time integration over the superluminal source and the resolution of cusped wavefront envelopes lacks reported error analysis or convergence tests; this is load-bearing for confirming that 1<α<2 is robust and not a numerical artifact.

    Authors: We agree that explicit numerical validation is important. In the revised manuscript we will include a dedicated subsection reporting error estimates, grid-resolution studies, and convergence tests for both the retarded-time integration and the identification of cusped wavefront envelopes. These tests will confirm that the range 1<α<2 is stable under refinement and not an artifact. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: radiation decay follows from direct integration over specified source

full rationale

The paper states it performs a self-contained numerical evaluation of the radiation integrals for an explicitly defined rotating polarization-current distribution whose pattern speed exceeds c at certain radii. The claimed flux decay d^{-α} (1<α<2) is presented as the output of that integration, not as an input, fit, or redefinition. No equations or steps are shown that reduce the exponent to a tautology or to a prior self-citation; the analysis is explicitly declared self-contained and superseding earlier works. The experimental realizability of the source is an external physical premise, not part of the mathematical derivation chain. This meets the criteria for a non-circular, self-contained calculation.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

Only the abstract is available, so the ledger is necessarily incomplete. The central claim rests on the assumption that a rotating polarization-current distribution can exceed the speed of light.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The rotating distribution pattern moves with linear speeds exceeding the speed of light in vacuum
    Invoked in the abstract as the defining property of the source.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5847 in / 1185 out tokens · 28184 ms · 2026-05-24T21:31:58.146190+00:00 · methodology

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