Research program · openly in progress

Spacefoam Experiments

Proving the matrix beneath spacetime.

Progress toward demonstrating the spacetime-foam matrix — the structure set out across the books — starting with 1/x = y/1 — As Above, So Below. It's the substrate the Tree of Life navigates and the lattice the reciprocal law, X · Y = 1, describes. Findings, experiments and evidence will be posted here as they come.

01

The claim

Physicists have long suspected that at the smallest scales spacetime isn't smooth — it foams. The books go one step further: it proposes that the foam has structure — a matrix — organised by a single reciprocal law, X · Y = 1. This program is the work of moving that from a claim in a book to something you can measure.
02

The matrix, as proposed

Four propositions from the books — the things these experiments set out to test.

Proposition

A structured substrate

Not random fluctuation, but an ordered lattice underlying spacetime — the matrix.

Proposition

Reciprocal geometry

Every relation paired with its inverse. X · Y = 1 is the rule the matrix is built on.

Proposition

Navigable in 4D

If the lattice is real and ordered, it can be traversed — the premise behind the Tree of Life and L⁴M.

Proposition

Observable signatures

The goal: predicted, repeatable signatures that would let the matrix show itself in data.

03

Research log

June 2026 · status

The program is underway

The full framework is laid out across the author's books. This page is the open notebook for the work that follows it — experiment designs, methods, data and results will be posted here as each is completed.

Next · coming soon

First experiment write-up

The first results are in preparation. Check back, or follow along below for updates as they land.

The whole framework is in the books.

The matrix, the reciprocal law, and where the experiments are headed — all of it is set out in the books.

© 2026 Knight Industries — Spacefoam Experiments. Open, in-progress research.
The claims here are working hypotheses drawn from the author's books, shared as the work develops — not peer-reviewed or settled results. Findings will be posted as they're completed and should be read as such.