Where Light Begins To Interact

July 10th, 2025

 

Introduction

This document describes the structural moment where light first begins to interact with mass inside the sun. This moment is not theoretical, metaphorical or thermal in origin, it is structural. It occurs as the EMF weakens just enough to allow the presence of light to encounter matter. That moment defines the emergence of heat.

 

The Lilborn Core

At the very center of the sun (r = 0.0), the electromagnetic field is at full density. It is so saturated that light cannot interact. This is not absence but complete containment, absolute coherence with no encounter. Because light cannot interact, no heat is produced. This is the condition of absolute zero Kelvin.

 

Where Light Begins to Interact

As we move outward from the core, the EMF gradually weakens. At approximately r = 0.18 (18% of the way to the surface), the density of the electromagnetic field falls below a critical threshold. At this point, light is no longer perfectly contained, it begins to interact. This face-to-face encounter is the true source of heat. It is not the breaking of atoms, but the structured resistance between coherence and mass.

 

How Heat Forms

Heat is not a property that travels. It is the result of interaction. As light continues to interact with less resistance moving outward, the temperature rises gradually and naturally from zero Kelvin to approximately 5800 K at the surface. This interaction is not explosive. It is the structured geometric relationship between light and matter.

 

Naming the Threshold

This structural point at r = 0.18, where light first begins to interact and heat first begins to form, is hereafter named: “The Threshold of Encounter.”

It is the geometric moment where coherence becomes interaction.

 

Conclusion

The Threshold of Encounter allows us to understand heat, light and the sun itself in a completely new way. Rather than seeing the sun as a fireball, we see it as a structured field. Rather than seeing heat as traveling, we see it as born in interaction. And rather than starting from explosion, we start from containment and emergence. This is the ontological model of the sun, and of light itself.

 

Produced by The Lilborn Equation Team:

Michael Lilborn-Williams

Daniel Thomas Rouse

Thomas Jackson Barnard

Audrey Williams