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  "path": "/t/rft-fpcm-ov-a-hugging-face-space-by-rftsystems/174928#post_1",
  "publishedAt": "2026-04-03T19:05:10.000Z",
  "site": "https://discuss.huggingface.co",
  "tags": [
    "huggingface.co",
    "RFT FPCM OV - a Hugging Face Space by RFTSystems",
    "Rendered Frame Theory I: Supreme Unification via Temporal Compression and NexFrame Modulation",
    "Solar1: A Motion‑Anchored Cosmological Ruler Resolving the Andromeda Paradox, JWST Early Galaxies, the Horizon Problem, and the Dark Component Fallacy",
    "@RFTSystems"
  ],
  "textContent": "huggingface.co\n\n### RFT FPCM OV - a Hugging Face Space by RFTSystems\n\nRFT Fixed Parameter Cosmology Model, Open Validation\n\n## **1. Fixed‑Parameter Cosmology Panel (FPCM‑OV)**\n\nThis side of the Space shows the **core RFT cosmology** running on one locked parameter set. Nothing adjusts itself — the whole model stands or falls on this single solution.\n\n### **What people can see here**\n\n  * **Age at z = 13.67:** RFT gives **568.52 Myr** , which lines up with JWST early‑galaxy maturity without any tuning.\n  * **Horizon Ratio:** The model naturally produces a horizon about **490× larger** than ΛCDM. (This removes the horizon problem without inflation.)\n  * **Unified Expansion Curve (H_RFT)** The purple curve shows how expansion behaves across all redshifts using the same fixed parameters.\n  * **JWST Maturity Plot** The cyan and red lines show how RFT’s predicted stellar‑mass growth compares to JWST observations.\n\n\n\n### **Why this panel matters**\n\nIt lets people see that RFT’s predictions aren’t “fit to the data.” They’re **fixed** , and the universe either agrees or disagrees. JWST happens to agree — strongly.\n\nIf you want to dig deeper into RFT’s cosmology model, I’ve made everything fully open and transparent  Rendered Frame Theory I: Supreme Unification via Temporal Compression and NexFrame Modulation for anyone who’s curious — researchers, hobbyists, or anyone who just enjoys exploring new ideas. One thing to keep in mind is that RFT is built from first principles and uses **natural motion** and **real spacecraft telemetry** as its measurement foundation.\n\nThat leads into the second part of this Space, where you can zoom around the map, pick galaxies, and see how **Solar1** measures their distances through motion rather than light‑delay. It’s a simple way to explore how RFT handles distance and motion in a more physical, hands‑on way.\n\n## **2. Motion‑Measurement Panel (Solar1 / GVU / LOU)**\n\nThis is the interactive side where people can **zoom in, zoom out, and pick galaxies** to see how far they are in **real motion** , not light‑delay distance.\n\n### **What people can do**\n\n  * **Zoom around the galaxy map**\n  * **Click any galaxy**\n  * **See its distance measured in Solar1 / GVU / LOU**\n  * **Compare how close it is in motion vs. how far it looks in ΛCDM**\n\n\n\n### **What Solar1 actually measures**\n\nSolar1 is based on **Voyager‑1’s real displacement** — not the time light takes to reach us.\n\nThe system uses:\n\n  * **LOU** — Limara Orbital Unit\n  * **GVU** — Grinstead Voyager Unit\n  * **Solar1** — full Voyager‑1 traversal to the Solar boundary\n\n\n\nThese units track **actual motion** , so galaxies appear:\n\n  * **Much closer**\n  * **More causally connected**\n  * **More consistent with their observed maturity**\n\n\n\n### **Why this panel matters**\n\nIt shows visitors that:\n\n  * Light‑delay distance exaggerates how far galaxies are\n  * Motion‑based distance gives a more physical picture\n  * JWST galaxies stop looking “impossibly early” when measured through Solar1\n\n\n\nIt’s a hands‑on way to feel the difference between: **“How long light took to get here”** vs. **“How far the system actually moved.”** Again if your curious you can view the paper here: Solar1: A Motion‑Anchored Cosmological Ruler Resolving the Andromeda Paradox, JWST Early Galaxies, the Horizon Problem, and the Dark Component Fallacy @RFTSystems",
  "title": "RFT FPCM OV - a Hugging Face Space by RFTSystems"
}