This paper consolidates the structural development of the Dodecahedron Linear String Field Hypothesis (DLSFH) into a minimal and internally complete framework. The admissible internal operator class is defined as the finite-dimensional A 5-equivariant self-adjoint algebra End A5 (H V). An invariant quartic variational functional selects a nontrivial stationary operator O V = µP , where P is a central projector onto a maximal isotypic component. The stationary solution is determined up to overall sign and, when the maximal rank is unique, is unique up to overall scale. The nonzero spectral magnitude exhibits rigidity, with eigenvalues fixed by the algebraic relation µ 2 = −α/(2β). The internal algebra generated by O V is shown to be two-dimensional, A int = span{Id, O V }, and closed under multiplication. Equivariance, algebra closure, and compatibility with the lifted Dirac structure jointly imply a classified coupling form C = A 0 ⊗ Id + A 1 ⊗ O V , eliminating independent portal freedom. Within the declared perturbative regime and at one-loop order, radiative corrections generate only polynomial functions of O V , which collapse back into A int. The internal operator direction and its admissible coupling structure are therefore radiatively stable within the minimal framework. An explicit internal reduction yields the low-energy effective external theory, whose interaction coefficients are determined solely by the spectral scale µ and projector rank. Parameter transparency, gravitational compatibility scope, and falsifiability conditions are stated explicitly. The resulting structure is algebraically constrained rather than phenomenologically arranged, completing the minimal DLSFH architecture.
This paper presents a comprehensive theoretical and experimental framework review probing the dark sector through Higgs boson decay events (H → γγ) at the ATLAS detector, interpreted within the Superluminal Graviton Condensate Vacuum (SGCV) model. The SGCV framework suggests the existence of superluminal, massless dark photons-transient imprints of displaced vacuum gravitons-that traverse spacetime faster than light (v DP > c) before converting into observable Standard Model photons. These transitions give rise to measurable time-of-flight anomalies (∆t) and spatial origin displacements (∆x) in detector systems. To empirically test these predictions, we propose an experimental configuration featuring sub-picosecond Timeof-Flight (ToF) instrumentation and synchronized vertex timing to identify such anomalies with high statistical confidence. A simulation framework modeling the distribution of ToF deviations is developed, and detector sensitivity thresholds are analyzed across a range of plausible path geometries. The SGCV model also connects to the Dodecahedron Linear String Field Hypothesis (DLSFH), enabling a scalehybrid description of vacuum structure that incorporates both chaotic graviton dynamics and compactified string field behavior. Our results suggest that the detection of dark photon intermediaries in collider environments would provide compelling evidence for non-luminal propagation signatures and a quantized vacuum structure testable through collider-based precision timing experiments. This work opens a new frontier in experimental quantum gravity, linking collider anomalies, vacuum topology, and high-energy astrophysical observations within a unified phenomenological framework. Disclaimer: All phenomenological results and figures presented in this work are derived from theoretical modeling and simulation. No actual detector data from ATLAS, SHiP, or other experiments are used in this paper.