Search for a command to run...
What is the physical distinction between a photon and an electron? Standard physics assigns them to separate theoretical frameworks with no common derivation of this difference. We show that the distinction is a topological property of the field’s phase: radiation has open phase topology, in which the phase θ advances uniformly without winding; massive particles have closed phase topology, in which θwinds around closed spatial paths with a quantised winding number. Born’s probabilistic interpre- tation treats this phase winding as physically inert—the operation ψ →|ψ|2 strips it from the formalism, not because the mathematics requires it but because the onto- logical decision to assign probability rather than physical content to the wavefunction renders it invisible. It is the origin of spin, angular momentum, and the magnetic mo- ment. The Poynting energy circulation is its electromagnetic consequence; the formal theorems are stated in Poynting topology language because that criterion is precisely falsifiable. For null electromagnetic fields, Poynting closure is impossible [1], making the massive/massless bifurcation a Lorentz invariant topological theorem. Within a wave-realist ontology where quantum entities are spatially extended elec- tromagnetic standing waves, the closed topology yields spin-1 2 from the half-winding homotopy class π3(S2) = Z, the electron magnetic moment µ= µB with g = 2 from the Belinfante angular momentum theorem, and Pauli exclusion from chirality-enforced antisymmetry. These results carry no free parameters. The helium singlet–triplet split- ting (2K = 0.80 eV) and the hydrogen Lyman series (five lines to 0.054%) provide quantitative confirmation. The same topological framework applied to the lepton mass spectrum recovers the muon and tau masses to within 4% using torus knot invari- ants [2]. The 6N-dimensional configuration space of standard quantum mechanics is a de- rived mathematical encoding of 3D+T field dynamics, not a physical necessity. The measurement problem dissolves: detection is wave–wave energy transfer, and the Born rule emerges from electromagnetic coupling proportional to |ψ|2. All mathematical content of standard quantum mechanics is preserved.