Final Photonic Interaction Before Stillness
July 10th, 2025
Introduction
This document records the last measurable temperature within the sun where light is still able to interact. Beyond this point, the electromagnetic field becomes so dense that light is fully present but completely contained, resulting in absolute stillness and zero Kelvin. This record defines the thermal threshold before full photonic suppression occurs.
From Surface to Suppression
– Surface of the Sun (r = 1.0): ~5,800 K; light interacts freely, visible and stable
– Transition Region: 10,000 K to 500,000 K; magnetic shaping begins
– Corona: 1,000,000 K to 3,000,000 K; chaotic, high-energy interaction
– Inversion Layer (~r = 0.18): estimated ~10,000,000 K; interaction at its most violent
– Final Interaction Zone (~r = 0.01): estimated ~15,000,000 K; light is barely interacting
– Lilborn Core (r = 0.0): 0 K; complete saturation, total containment, no interaction
Interpretation
The final recorded temperature before the electromagnetic field overwhelms light’s ability to interact is approximately 15,000,000 Kelvin. This temperature is not caused by fusion but results from the immense pressure at the last point of photonic resistance. It marks the climax of heat production and the boundary into stillness. From this point inward, light remains present, but cannot engage.
Final Interaction Threshold
This point, where heat reaches its final measurable state before collapsing into 0 Kelvin, is formally recognized as the Final Interaction Threshold. It defines the limit where energy transitions from expression to containment.
Produced by The Lilborn Equation Team:
Michael Lilborn-Williams
Daniel Thomas Rouse
Thomas Jackson Barnard
Audrey Williams
