applications
plain-language theorem explainer
The declaration supplies a four-item list of applications for Bose-Einstein condensates obtained from the even-phase ledger in Recognition Science. Experimental physicists and quantum-metrology groups would cite it when mapping the 8-tick thermal derivation to concrete devices. It is realized as a direct list definition that enumerates standard uses without additional computation.
Claim. Applications of the Bose-Einstein distribution derived from the even-phase ledger constraint are atom interferometry for gravitational-wave detection, quantum simulation of condensed-matter systems, atomic clocks with improved timekeeping, and tests of the equivalence principle.
background
The Bose-Einstein module derives the distribution g(E) = 1/(exp((E-μ)/kT)-1) from the even-phase ledger where integer-spin bosons obey exp(2πi)=+1, permitting multiple occupancy of a state. This follows from maximizing entropy subject to fixed average energy and particle number under the Recognition Composition Law. Upstream, EightTick.phase supplies the periodic 8-tick phases kπ/4, while PhiForcingDerived.of and DAlembert.LedgerFactorization.of calibrate the J-cost whose minimum sets the thermal equilibrium.
proof idea
The definition is a direct enumeration of four strings taken from the module doc-comment. No lemmas are applied; the body simply lists the items aligned with the even-phase derivation.
why it matters
It supplies concrete experimental contexts for downstream lists such as NoetherTheorem.standardModelConservation and Quantum.ZenoEffect.applications. The entry completes the THERMO-010 target of obtaining quantum statistics from the 8-tick structure (T7), linking the even-phase ledger to precision measurements and the patent potential noted in the module doc.
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