How Horizons Store Information in HDIF — Understanding what “memory” means physically.
- Chaim Zeitz
- Nov 13
- 1 min read
Updated: Nov 16

What Is a “Horizon” in HDIF?
A horizon is any interface where information, tension, or curvature undergoes a discontinuity.
Examples:
event horizons
Rindler horizons
Casimir plates
wavefront boundaries
coherence surfaces in quantum systems
The New Concept: Memory-Bearing Horizons
HDIF asserts that horizons do not simply “block” information — they store it.
They record:
the curvature leading into them
energy flux across them
tension accumulated over time
This recorded information slowly re-emerges, shaping later curvature.
Why This Solves Multiple Problems
Memory-bearing horizons naturally explain:
dark energy as accumulated cosmological tension
quantum coherence decay
anomalous gravitational responses
phase-lag effects in precision optics
It gives a single mechanism for both cosmic and quantum behavior.






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