ℓm
Definition
ℓm is the bridge quantity used in the foundational dimensional grammar of Length–Mass Reduction.
It is introduced as a construction device for relating length-based and mass-based dimensional descriptions.
ℓm is not a physical substance, mechanism, field, force, or dynamical entity.
Tier Placement
Primary tier: Tier 1 / Tier 3 depending on context
Role: Bridge quantity / dimensional correspondence device
In Paper I, ℓm belongs to the foundational dimensional grammar.
In Tier 3 correspondence work, ℓm is used to perform ℓm-reduction on SI expressions.
The role must be declared by context.
Source
Primary source: Paper I — Codex and Foundational Grammar
Authority level: Foundational
Paper I introduces ℓm as a bridge quantity and establishes the rules governing its use.
Function in LMR
ℓm functions as a dimensional bridge.
It supports:
- A-side / B-side representation
- dimensional reduction
- side discipline
- relation between mass and length descriptions
- ℓm-reduction in Tier 3
- interpretation of M′ as inverse structural length
ℓm allows the grammar to relate dimensional descriptions without treating mass as an independent Tier 1 primitive.
Allowed Use
ℓm may be used as a construction device where the codex permits it.
It may also be used in Tier 3 correspondence work to expose kilogram dependence in SI expressions.
Prohibited Misuse
ℓm must not be treated as:
- a final primitive of Tier 1
- a physical medium
- a force carrier
- a dynamical mechanism
- a hidden substance
- a new constant of nature
- an object that appears freely in final structural definitions unless explicitly permitted
ℓm must not be promoted beyond its codex role.