At its heart, the universe is simple.

That might sound bold in an age of billion-dollar experiments and increasingly abstract models. But it’s the starting point for everything you’ll find here. This site explores a new approach to one of the biggest questions in physics: What is matter made up of? And can it be explained, completely, as a form of light?

Modern particle physics has achieved extraordinary technological feats, but in its complexity, it may have strayed from one of the oldest principles in science — Occam’s Razor: the simplest explanation is usually the best. While today’s theories often require sprawling institutions, massive teams, and obscure mathematics, the work presented here comes from a different place. One person’s long, independent pursuit of a theory that unifies matter and light through the concept of the soliton.

This isn’t science by committee. It’s science by curiosity. Backed by decades of engineering experience, a deep knowledge of physics, and a stubborn belief that big ideas don’t always need big budgets.

Whether you’re an academic, researcher, student, or simply someone fascinated by the workings of the universe, you’re invited to explore the ideas presented here with an open mind and a critical eye. The goal isn’t to replace established physics, but to offer a fresh, technically grounded perspective. One that may help illuminate what lies at the very core of reality.