Mapping Memory
Into Matter
Introduction
Matter as Memory Containers
This document inaugurates the Lilborn Atlas of Containment, a structural mapping of how molecules serve not as inert mass, but as containers for coherence. The existence of elements is no longer interpreted as the presence of substance alone, but as the field’s architectural vocabulary of memory. Each bond is a tension, each structure a resolution and each interaction an electromagnetic field (EMF) memory transaction. Matter is not energy stored, it is light remembered.
The Three Metrics of Structural Memory
1. Bond Dissociation Energy (BDE)
Structural Potential
Definition: The energy required to break a specific bond within a molecule.
Lilborn Interpretation: The amount of memory tension, held EMF rupture, stored in the bond. A higher BDE indicates greater potential for light to be re-manifested upon failure.
2. Geometric Alignment Factor (GAF)
Containment Quality
Definition: The degree to which a molecular bond angle aligns with the ideal containment geometry, the Angle of Encounter (Æ).
Purpose: Quantifies the capacity of the structure to resist incoherence and maintain EMF alignment. Perfect alignment yields a GAF of 1.00.
3. Coherence Index of Memory (CIM)
Operational Score
Definition: The operational measure of a molecule’s ability to participate in field memory.
CIM is calculated as the ratio of energetic potential to geometric stability:
CIM ∝ BDE / GAF
CIM scores define how much memory a given molecule can hold and under what conditions it may re-release it.
Lilborn Atlas of Containment
Anchor Elements
1. Carbon (C) / Methane (CH₄)
The Stable Container
Role: Primary coherence container for biological structure and long-term field stabilization.
BDE: ~413 kJ/mol (C–H)
Angle: 109.5° (Tetrahedral Perfection)
GAF: 1.00
Function: Enables lasting structure; stores rupture as lattice. Basis for all field-rebuilding systems, wood, flame, breath.
2. Water (H₂O)
The Resonant Carrier
Role: Dynamic resolver of field rupture
BDE: ~460 kJ/mol (O–H)
Angle: 104.5° (Dipole Resonance Slot)
GAF: 1.00
Function: Transports and restores field collapse. Conducts ions, aligns with EMF gradients, facilitates photosynthesis.
3. Silicon (Si) / Silicates
The Static Mirror
Role: Fixed field pattern recorder
BDE: ~450 kJ/mol (Si–O)
Angle: 109.5° (Lattice Form)
GAF: High (approaches 1.00 depending on crystalline state)
Function: Stores field memory in physical grid. Used in semiconductors, memory circuits and crystalline resonance storage.
Matter is Structured Memory
We declare that matter is not simply mass or energy.
Matter is the architecture of field memory, a structured vocabulary of geometric resolution.
• Every bond is a containment line
• Every molecule is a shape for light to rest in
• Every interaction is an EMF event, not an energy transfer
Life is not built from atoms.
Life is assembled from contained coherence.
Conclusion
This volume maps foundational molecules across CIM, BDE, GAF and role in EMF interaction. Volume II will expand to include complex molecular structures such as proteins, crystalline resonance lattices and biological scaffolds. The Atlas will serve as the memory chart of matter, not by atomic number, but by containment potential.
Produced by The Lilborn Equation Team:
Michael Lilborn-Williams
Daniel Thomas Rouse
Thomas Jackson Barnard
Audrey Williams
