DarkMatterDrive.com — ArcSecs Relational Propulsion Atlas DarkMatterDrive.com — ArcSecs Relational Propulsion Atlas

Start Here

Read the site as a reviewable research interface

DarkMatterDrive.com is a public ArcSecs companion site for explaining distance-time kernels, multi-messenger event reasoning, framework claim status, source contracts, and export contracts. It is a speculative research visualization, not proof of a real engine.

Read the site as a reviewable research interface - Dark Matter Drive schematic

Orientation

What this is / what this is not

Use this page to choose the right path before reading the deeper technical sections.

Public research lane

What this is

A human-readable and machine-readable research atlas for ArcSecs-inspired ideas: distance without lightyear dependence, light as a secondary messenger, gravity-first event comparison, framework claims, evidence maps, and export contracts.

Trust boundary

What this is not

It is not a claim that a working dark matter engine exists, not a peer-reviewed proof source, not a generic dark matter encyclopedia, and not an instruction manual for building propulsion hardware.

Navigation guide

A clean path through the framework

Start broad, then move into claims, evidence, source contracts, and export readiness.

Reviewer checklist

What to look for on every serious page

The strongest pages should make their assumptions, evidence basis, caveats, tests, and next routes obvious.

Sources

Evidence basis

Look for source cards, event anchors, public JSON endpoints, and source/evidence links tied to the specific claim being made.

Caveats

Speculative boundary

Language should say hypothesis, model, visualization, comparison, validation, or falsification path instead of proof.

Contracts

Export readiness

Contract and dashboard pages should describe active scenario, event, telemetry, validation rows, quality gate status, sources, caveats, and UTC timestamp fields.

Falsification paths

What would weaken the interpretation

The framework becomes more trustworthy when it states what would break or reduce confidence in its claims.

Timing test

Messenger timing fails

If multi-messenger data consistently shows no separable source, environment, or propagation residual where the model predicts one, the propagation claim weakens.

Distance test

Distance anchors disagree

If geometry-first anchors and standard-siren style distances fail to align with the model’s non-lightyear distance assumptions, the distance contract must be revised.

Source test

Source matrix contradicts claims

If a source is being used outside its real scope, the associated claim should be downgraded to needs source, speculative, or deprecated.

Export test

Exports lack traceability

If simulator exports cannot carry scenario, event, telemetry, validation, quality gate, caveats, falsification paths, source references, and UTC timestamps, reviewer confidence drops.