The intellecton hypothesis posits that wavefunction collapse in quantum systems arises from an internal mechanism of recursive oscillatory coherence, quantified by the intellecton integral \(\mathcal{I}\). This paper presents a unified, domain-independent formulation of \(\mathcal{I}\), derived from a rigorous mathematical framework applicable across quantum mechanics, thermodynamics, neuroscience, and nonlinear dynamics. The unified equation captures feedback-driven coherence and is testable via superconducting qubits, predicting collapse timescales of 10--100 ns. Enhanced with explicit operator definitions and a dimensionless structure, \(\mathcal{I}\) emerges as a universal measure of recursive stabilization, offering a novel, falsifiable approach to the quantum measurement problem.
## Introduction
The quantum measurement problem—wavefunction collapse upon observation—remains unresolved by standard quantum mechanics [bohr1928]. Decoherence explains coherence loss via environmental interactions [zurek2023], but not definite outcomes. The intellecton hypothesis proposes an internal feedback mechanism, quantified by \(\mathcal{I}\), driving collapse. This paper refines \(\mathcal{I}\) with a unified, rigorous formulation applicable across domains, making it a measurable, testable construct.
## Theoretical Framework
A quantum system’s density matrix \(\rho(t)\) evolves under a feedback Hamiltonian:
This dimensionless form captures feedback-driven oscillatory coherence, with collapse occurring when \(\mathcal{I} > \mathcal{I}_c\), a critical threshold.
## Domain-Specific Applications
The unified \(\mathcal{I}\) adapts to various domains:
### Quantum Mechanics
With \(\hat{A} = \hat{\phi}\), \(\hat{B} = \hat{\pi}\), and \([\hat{\phi}, \hat{\pi}] = i\hbar\):
The collapse timescale \(\tau = \frac{\hbar}{\lambda \sqrt{\Var(\hat{\phi})}}\) predicts 10--100 ns for qubits, measurable via ultrafast spectroscopy.
## Conclusion
The unified \(\mathcal{I}\) provides a rigorous, testable framework for the intellecton hypothesis, applicable across domains and grounded in experimental quantum physics.
## References
- [bohr1928] Bohr, N. (1928). *Nature*, 121, 580--590.
- [zurek2023] Zurek, W. H. (2023). *Reviews of Modern Physics*, 95, 015001.