This section specifies how a field chooses to encode its state variables into a usable coordinate system. It is not about which variables exist, but about the representation scheme—generalized coordinates vs phase space, fields vs potentials, raw concentrations vs rate-law parameters, continuous fields vs nondimensional numbers, abstract structures vs encoded tuples. For each science, Parameterization describes the mapping from “everything that could, in principle, describe the system” to the particular mathematical form the field actually uses in models: choice of coordinates, bases, gauges, ensembles, diagrams, nondimensional groups, diagrams, and encodings. Once this parameterization is fixed, the system’s evolution can be written as explicit update rules on that chosen representation.
Science Analysis Template
Below are the results of cycles 1 & 2 of The Science Project
Key Patterns in Parameterizing System State
In every scientific discipline, a core challenge is to encode the state of a system using a set of variables or parameters. Despite the diversity of systems (from subatomic particles to ecosystems or social networks), there are strikingly consistent patterns in how scientists choose and use parameters to represent system state. Fundamentally, parameterization means describing complex reality in terms of a manageable set of variables that capture all relevant degrees of freedom. Each field develops its own state variables (e.g. positions and momenta in mechanics, pressure and temperature in thermodynamics, concentrations in chemistry, gene expression levels in biology, etc.), yet the underlying approaches are comparable. Below, we outline the comprehensive patterns that recur across the sciences for parameterizing system state.
Minimal State Variables and Phase Space
A common pattern is to identify a minimal set of state variables that completely specify the system’s condition. In classical physics, for example, generalized coordinates and their conjugate momenta form the coordinates of phase space – each point in this space corresponds to a unique physical state. This idea extends broadly: thermodynamics defines a state by a few independent variables (such as pressure, volume, temperature) that, through an equation of state, determine all other properties. Likewise, in engineering and control theory, the state vector contains the smallest number of variables needed to model future behavior. The emphasis on minimality ensures that the parameter set is both complete and efficient – including enough variables to capture the system’s configuration, but no redundancies. Essentially, scientists in many fields envision an abstract state space (or phase space) whose axes are the chosen parameters; the system’s evolving state traces a trajectory in this space. This framework is ubiquitous, appearing in mechanical systems (positions/velocities), ecology (population sizes of species in an ecosystem state space), economics (aggregate variables like capital stock and labor in a macroeconomic state), and beyond. The general goal is always the same: find a set of variables that span the space of all possible states so that each possible state corresponds to a unique point in that parameter space.
Field Variables and Continuous Distributions
Across many natural sciences, continuous field representations are a key parameterization strategy. Instead of a finite list of variables, the state is described by one or more functions of space (and time). For example, classical electromagnetism represents the electromagnetic state with continuous fields $\mathbf{E}(\mathbf{x},t)$ and $\mathbf{B}(\mathbf{x},t)$ (or potentials), plus charge and current density distributions as sources. Fluid dynamics and continuum mechanics similarly describe state through fields like velocity $\mathbf{v}(\mathbf{x},t)$, pressure $p(\mathbf{x},t)$, density $\rho(\mathbf{x},t)$, etc., defined at every point in space. These fields come with boundary conditions at the system’s borders or interfaces, which are considered part of the state specification. The use of field variables is consistent in any domain dealing with continuous media: acoustics has pressure/displacement fields; meteorology uses continuous fields for atmospheric variables (temperature, humidity, wind) on a grid; solid-state physics uses electron density fields or band structure defined over reciprocal space; even in population biology, one might use spatial density distributions of organisms. The common pattern is that whenever a system can be viewed as a continuum or a distribution across space, its state is parameterized by a field function rather than a handful of numbers. Such fields effectively encode infinitely many degrees of freedom (one per spatial point), but in practice they are handled by specifying functional forms, discretizing on a mesh, or expanding in basis functions. Field-based parameterization thus generalizes the idea of state variables to systems with spatial complexity, ensuring that local variations are captured in the state description.
Statistical Distributions and Ensemble Descriptors
When a system has many microscopic components or inherent uncertainty, statistical parameterization is a universal approach. Instead of tracking each component, scientists describe the state in terms of distributions or averages. For instance, in statistical mechanics the state of a gas is given by a probability distribution over phase space (or equivalently a set of macroscopic averages like temperature, pressure derived from that distribution). Similarly, quantum mechanics uses a wavefunction or a density matrix to encode the probabilities of finding a system in various states, since we cannot deterministically specify a quantum state’s observables simultaneously. In population genetics, one uses allele frequency distributions rather than listing every individual’s genotype; in ecology, the state of a community can be given by species abundance distributions and diversity indices instead of tracking every organism. Even in sociology and economics, one often uses statistical descriptors (like income distributions, opinion poll distributions, or aggregate measures) as state variables for the system’s condition. The consistent pattern is the reliance on ensembles and distribution parameters to encode system state when individual-level detail is impractical. These might include moments of distributions (mean, variance, etc.), order parameters that summarize collective behavior, or probability density functions themselves. This approach acknowledges that many systems are too complex to know every part’s state, so instead we parameterize the overall state by statistically averaging or probabilistically describing the multitude of parts. By doing so, scientists capture the essential information needed for macro-level predictions (e.g. using ensemble averages in thermodynamics or climate models) while respecting uncertainty and variability.
Dimensionless Numbers and Regime Parameters
A striking cross-disciplinary practice is the use of dimensionless parameters to characterize regimes of behavior. Many fields distill the relationship between forces, processes, or scales into pure numbers that serve as state parameters indicating what regime the system is in. A classic example is the Reynolds number in fluid dynamics, which is a dimensionless ratio of inertial forces to viscous forces in a flow. Its value encodes whether the flow is laminar or turbulent, effectively parameterizing the flow regime without specifying every detail of the velocity field. Similarly, in plasma physics the plasma β (beta) (ratio of plasma pressure to magnetic pressure) is a dimensionless indicator of whether magnetic fields or particle motions dominate the dynamics. Many such numbers exist: Mach number (flow speed vs sound speed), Péclet number (advective vs diffusive transport), Damköhler number (reaction vs flow timescales), etc. They appear in chemical engineering, meteorology, combustion science, and beyond. Their consistent role is to summarize the state of the system in terms of dominating influences or scale hierarchies – essentially, which processes matter most right now. Even outside physics, we see analogous indices: for example, in ecology a predator-prey system might be characterized by a dimensionless ratio of growth rates or carrying capacities; in epidemiology, the basic reproduction number R₀ is a dimensionless measure encapsulating the state of an epidemic’s spread potential. These parameters often arise from non-dimensionalizing the governing equations, which is a universal modeling step to reduce complexity and highlight similarity across systems. By quoting a few key dimensionless numbers, scientists can concisely convey the qualitative state (e.g. “high Reynolds number turbulent regime” or “low R₀ contained outbreak”) without needing to list all dimensional variables. This pattern reflects an overarching theme: systems in different domains often share structural similarities once cast in nondimensional terms, and parameterization by dimensionless numbers exploits those similarities.
Multiscale Parameterization of Unresolved Processes
In many complex systems, especially in fields like climate science, astrophysics, and physiology, we cannot explicitly model every fine-scale process. Here arises a critical pattern: parameterizing the influence of small-scale or unobservable processes in terms of large-scale state variables. Meteorology and climate modeling provide a textbook case: sub-grid phenomena like cloud microphysics, turbulence, or convection are represented via parameterization schemes – simplified formulas that express their effects as functions of the grid-scale variables. For example, instead of resolving each tiny turbulent eddy, a weather model uses a parameterized term that depends on wind shear and stability to mimic turbulence’s effect on momentum transport. The American Meteorological Society’s definition of parameterization highlights this approach: it is “the representation, in a dynamic model, of physical effects in terms of oversimplified parameters, rather than explicitly simulating those processes”. This concept is not limited to atmospheric science. In astrophysics, the energy output of myriad unresolved stars in a galaxy might be parameterized by an average star formation rate or luminosity function; in physiology, the effect of countless cellular interactions can be summarized by a few hormone levels or blood pressure readings at the organ level. Social sciences also do this: the complex web of individual behaviors might be collapsed into an aggregate parameter like “rate of adoption” in innovation diffusion models or macroeconomic consumption functions in economic models. The consistent pattern is the use of empirical or theoretical approximations to encode fine-scale complexity into coarse variables. This ensures models remain tractable while still encapsulating the net effect of smaller-scale processes on the system’s state. Crucially, such parameterizations are continually refined by comparing model output with observations and tuning the formulas – a practice seen in hydrological models, ecosystem models, and engineering simulations alike. While parameterization of sub-grid processes is often seen as a temporary bridge until more detailed modeling is possible, it has become an indispensable and permanent feature across scientific domains because some scales will always be impractical to resolve explicitly.
External Conditions and Boundary Parameters
Another universal aspect of state description is specifying the contextual parameters – boundary conditions, external inputs, or environmental settings – alongside internal state variables. No system exists in isolation, so parameterizing a state means not only listing internal degrees of freedom but also any external constants that influence evolution. In physics, for example, giving the state of an electromagnetic system isn’t complete without boundary conditions on the fields at conducting surfaces or values of external charges/currents present. In quantum mechanics, one must specify the potential energy function (an external parameter defining the environment) along with the wavefunction state. In engineering, a control system’s state vector might be accompanied by parameters like setpoints or external forces acting on the system. Nearly every field’s entries in the provided table include such context: e.g. solid-state physics states include external field strengths (electric or magnetic) and temperature; materials science includes environmental factors like pressure or composition; planetary science states include orbital elements and stellar irradiation as boundary conditions for a planet’s climate state. The pattern is that state parameterization is holistic – it wraps up internal variables and the fixed parameters of the surrounding environment or initial setup. We see this in social sciences too: a model of an economy might treat global market conditions or policies as fixed parameters while the state evolves, and a model of population dynamics might include habitat capacity or climate as background parameters. By explicitly encoding these influences, scientists ensure the state description is comprehensive. A different context (different boundary conditions or external forcing) is essentially a different “state” scenario even if the internal variables are the same. Thus, across disciplines, a complete parameterization of state combines system-intrinsic variables with necessary external or boundary parameters that together determine future behavior.
Formal and Mathematical Encodings
Even in the formal sciences and mathematics, where systems are abstract, we find analogous parameterization principles. In logic and computer science, a state can be described by a valuation of variables or the contents of memory, etc. For instance, a configuration of a Turing machine or an algorithm has state variables (like the tape content, head position, internal registers) that are parameterized to represent all possible configurations. In model theory (a branch of mathematical logic), a structure assigns values to symbols – effectively interpreting variables over a domain – which is akin to setting state parameters for a logical system. Proof theory encodes the state of a proof by sequents or sets of formulas, and each rule application transforms that state. In pure mathematics, describing an object often means giving parameters: e.g. coordinates in geometry (a point on a manifold is given by coordinate values, which parameterize its position), or algebraic structures given by generators and relations (the generators are parameters that specify any element of a group when combined appropriately). The fact that such diverse domains as set theory, group theory, and computation have state descriptors (ordinals and rank functions in set theory, group elements via generating parameters, machine state bits in computation) underscores a unifying truth: to reason about any system (concrete or abstract), one must define a set of parameters that capture its condition or structure at a given moment. These formal parameters might look different – one could be talking about the size of an ordinal in set theory or the truth assignment in a logical formula – but conceptually they serve the same role as temperature and pressure in a gas: they encode the state. This reinforces that the need for state parameterization is not just an empirical science concern, but a fundamental aspect of organized knowledge and dynamical reasoning in general.
Balancing Comprehensiveness and Simplicity
A final consistent pattern is the balanced trade-off between completeness and simplicity in choosing a parameterization. Across all fields, scientists strive to include enough variables to describe the system accurately (comprehensiveness), but not so many that the description becomes intractable or redundant (parsimony). This often manifests as choosing state variables that are orthogonal or independent, so each adds new information, and avoiding highly correlated or derived quantities in the fundamental description. For example, in thermodynamics one does not list both temperature and internal energy and pressure as independent state parameters if an equation of state ties them together – one chooses a minimal independent set like (T, V, n) for a gas and computes others from these. Similarly, in ecology, one might model a multi-species system by total biomass and diversity index rather than every species count if many of those are correlated, or in sociology use a composite index instead of dozens of raw indicators. The underlying pattern is an application of Occam’s razor in model building: the parameterization of state should be no more complicated than necessary to capture the phenomena of interest. Additionally, the parameters chosen are often those that are measurable or observable in practice, which ensures the state description is not just theoretical but empirically grounded. By limiting the state description to meaningful, independent, and observable parameters, scientists in every discipline make their models both tractable and testable. Over time, as understanding improves, parameterizations can evolve – sometimes adding variables if needed (to improve accuracy) or reducing them (if a combination is found to be extraneous). This dynamic adjustment of parameters, done in fields from climate modeling to economic forecasting, highlights that parameterization is an art of abstraction: finding the sweet spot where the model is as simple as possible but not simpler (to paraphrase Einstein). The consistency of this philosophy across domains is a hallmark of scientific modeling.
Conclusion
Despite the incredible variety in systems studied—from quantum fields to chemical reactions, from living cells to social networks—all sciences use parameterization of state in remarkably analogous ways. They define a state space using a set of variables (be it coordinates, fields, distributions, or indices) that uniquely pinpoint a system’s condition. They incorporate any necessary external parameters and use statistical or empirical relationships to fill gaps where direct description is impossible. They utilize dimensionless numbers and aggregated variables to summarize complex behavior succinctly. And they continually refine these representations to balance completeness with simplicity. In essence, the consistent pattern is that to understand and predict a system, one must first parameterize it – break it down into describable pieces that capture “what’s going on.” Whether those pieces are angles and momenta of planets, concentrations of reagents, gene expression levels, or demographic rates, the goal is the same: encode reality into a set of parameters that our brains (or computers) can work with. This unifying strategy enables scientists to apply mathematics and logic to the real world (or abstract worlds) by providing a bridge between the complexity of nature and the clarity of quantitative analysis. Thus, parameterization is a cornerstone of scientific inquiry, and its patterns – minimal yet complete state descriptions, often using fields, probabilities, or dimensionless ratios – are found wherever humans seek to systematically understand a system. The universality of these patterns across all branches of science is a powerful reminder that, at a deep level, scientific disciplines are all variations on a theme: using well-chosen parameters to map the phenomena of the world (or thought) into an analyzable form.
| Element | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scope Category | ||||
| Sub-Item | Parameterization | |||
| Science Name Link | Branch Name Link | Field Name Link | Definition | How variables encode and represent the system’s state. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Classical Mechanics | The system state is encoded using generalized coordinates (q_i), generalized velocities (dq_i/dt), and generalized momenta (p_i), forming a configuration or phase-space representation. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Classical Electromagnetism | The electromagnetic state is encoded as field functions over space and time (or via potentials that generate them), plus charge/current distributions and boundary conditions on material interfaces and sources. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Classical Thermodynamics | The system state is encoded by a minimal set of independent variables (e.g., (T), (P), (V)) that uniquely specify all other thermodynamic quantities through equations of state. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Statistical Mechanics (Classical) | System state encoded in phase-space coordinates and probability density functions, with macroscopic thermodynamic variables derived as ensemble averages over these distributions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Optics (Classical Wave Theory) | Optical states are encoded using field values, complex amplitudes, propagation constants (k = 2 pi divided by lambda), index profiles, and boundary conditions at interfaces that determine reflection and refraction. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Acoustics | Acoustic state encoded by wave equations, dispersion relations, boundary conditions, impedance relations, and mode shapes in resonant systems; often expressed via Fourier components or complex amplitudes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Continuum Mechanics | System state encoded through field variables defined continuously in space and time. Represented using tensor fields for stress and strain, vector fields for velocity, and scalar fields for pressure and density. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Classical Field Theory | System state encoded as continuous functions or fields defined over spatial coordinates and time. Parameterized by field values, their time derivatives, spatial gradients, and any auxiliary potential functions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Classical Physics | Pre-Relativistic Frameworks | System states encoded through time-dependent positions and velocities in absolute space, classical field values if used, and scalar or vector quantities defined using Galilean addition of velocities and classical transformation rules. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Mechanics | System state encoded through state vectors or probability density functions, potential functions defining system Hamiltonians, boundary conditions, quantum numbers, and parameters that specify the form of allowed states. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Relativistic Quantum Mechanics | System state encoded through wave equations such as the Dirac or Klein–Gordon form, parameterized by spin, mass, external fields, boundary conditions, and relativistic energy–momentum relations. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Special Relativity | System state encoded through spacetime coordinates, velocities, and energy-momentum values, using Lorentz transformations to relate quantities across inertial reference frames. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | General Relativity | Spacetime state encoded by metric functions over space and time, initial curvature distributions, stress-energy values, coordinate choices, and boundary or gauge conditions defining the physical scenario. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Field Theory (QFT) | System state encoded through field operators acting on vacuum or excited states, scattering parameters, symmetry generators, renormalization conditions, and interaction terms within a Lagrangian or Hamiltonian framework. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Particle Physics (High-Energy Physics) | System states encoded through particle momenta, interaction vertices, symmetry parameters, mixing angles, coupling constants, and initial conditions for scattering events or decay channels. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Nuclear Physics | Nuclear states encoded through shell-model configurations, nuclear potential parameters, reaction-channel parameters, decay-chain structure, and measured cross-sections for nuclear processes. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Statistical Physics | Many-body states encoded using distribution functions, wavefunctions or density matrices, field amplitudes, correlation functions, and thermodynamic ensemble parameters such as temperature and chemical potential. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Optics | System states encoded through quantum field amplitudes, density matrices, wavefunctions, mode expansions, and parameters defining cavity geometry, laser intensity, or atom–photon coupling strength. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Modern & Fundamental Physics | Quantum Information Science | States encoded through wavefunctions, density matrices, stabilizer descriptions, quantum circuits, control parameters, noise models, and resource requirements such as qubit count and circuit depth. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | Symmetry & Group Theory | States encoded through representation spaces, basis vectors, group parameters, algebraic transformations, symmetry operators, and invariants specifying how systems transform under group actions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | Gauge Theory | States represented by full field configurations across spacetime together with couplings, symmetry-breaking values, and gauge choices; physical data expressed through gauge-invariant combinations. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | String Theory | System states encoded by string modes, brane configurations, background geometry, and parameters defining compactification, symmetry, and coupling. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | Differential Geometry in Physics | States are represented by geometric fields defined over the manifold, encoded as coordinate functions, metric entries, connection coefficients, and associated derivatives. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Theoretical & Mathematical Physics | Statistical Field Theory | System states encoded through field configurations, statistical weights, effective couplings, and coarse-grained descriptors determined by renormalization flow or stochastic rules. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics | States encoded as vectors or density operators; observables encoded as operators; probabilities encoded through inner products or trace rules; transformations encoded as linear or algebraic maps. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | General Mathematical Physics | System states are encoded using equations, coordinate choices, parameter sets, functional forms, operator definitions, and geometric or algebraic structures. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Solid-State Physics | States are encoded by band structures, lattice parameters, symmetry descriptors, carrier concentrations, temperature, and external fields such as electric or magnetic fields. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Semiconductor Physics | System states encoded by band diagrams, doping profiles, carrier statistics, potential distributions, temperature settings, and externally applied fields. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Magnetism & Spin Physics | States encoded by magnetic field values, spin alignment, magnetization curves, temperature dependence, spatial spin distribution, and domain patterns. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Superconductivity | States encoded by order parameter profiles, phase coherence, temperature values, field profiles, current distributions, and vortex configurations. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Soft Matter Physics | States encoded by rheological properties, structural descriptors, order parameters, interaction strengths, deformation fields, and environmental conditions such as temperature or concentration. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Nanomaterials & Nanostructures | States encoded by size distributions, structural descriptors, surface functionalization, electronic levels, environmental conditions, and applied fields. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Strongly Correlated Electron Systems | States encoded by correlation parameters, doping level, lattice geometry, electronic occupations, temperature, and external fields controlling phase transitions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Topological Matter | States encoded by band structure configuration, symmetry class, topological invariant values, field strengths, and chemical or structural tuning parameters controlling transitions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Condensed Matter & Materials Physics | Materials Science (Physical Perspective) | States encoded by phase diagrams, stress strain curves, microstructure maps, electronic band structure information, composition data, and temperature or pressure values. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Stellar Astrophysics | States encoded by stellar models, Hertzsprung Russell diagram position, mass and composition inputs, internal energy transport profiles, and nuclear burning stage. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Galactic Astrophysics | States encoded by rotation curves, density maps, luminosity distributions, gas phase diagrams, star formation diagnostics, and halo model parameters. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Extragalactic Astrophysics | States encoded by luminosity distance, spectral energy distributions, cluster scaling relations, halo occupation models, redshift distributions, and galaxy population parameters. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Cosmology | States encoded by cosmological parameter sets, expansion histories, power spectra, background radiation properties, and mass energy distributions used in cosmological models. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | High-Energy Astrophysics | States encoded by spectra, timing profiles, energy distributions, magnetic field models, accretion parameters, and observed luminosity or variability patterns. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Gravitational Astrophysics | States encoded by atmospheric profiles, orbital elements, planetary mass and radius values, spectral signatures, internal structure models, and climate or energy balance descriptors. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Planetary Science & Exoplanets | States encoded using atmospheric profiles, mass and radius measurements, spectral signatures, orbital solutions, interior structure models, and climate energy balance descriptors. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Astrochemistry & Interstellar Medium Physics | States encoded through chemical abundance sets, density temperature diagrams, extinction curves, radiation field parameters, ionization rates, and phase specific equations of state. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Astrophysics & Cosmology | Astrobiology | States encoded by environmental parameter sets, atmospheric profiles, chemical reaction networks, energy balance descriptors, and metabolic or prebiotic reaction models. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Fluid Dynamics | States encoded through field variables over space and time, boundary conditions, flow geometry, Reynolds number, Mach number, and other nondimensional parameters. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Hydrodynamics (Ideal Fluids) | States encoded by magnetic field configurations, plasma beta, Reynolds and magnetic Reynolds numbers, resistivity profiles, current densities, and boundary conditions for both fields and flow. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) | States encoded through field variables, magnetic Reynolds number, plasma beta, resistivity profiles, boundary conditions, wave mode parameters, and initial magnetic geometry. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Plasma Physics (General) | States encoded by plasma beta, Debye length, mean free path, plasma frequency, gyro radius, magnetization level, transport coefficients, and boundary or source conditions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Space & Astrophysical Plasmas | States encoded by plasma beta, Mach numbers, Alfvén velocity, magnetic Reynolds number, optical depth, ion and electron distribution functions, and background field geometry. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Fusion Plasma Physics | States encoded by plasma beta, safety factor profiles, collisionality, confinement parameters, fusion power scaling, transport coefficients, and equilibrium magnetic geometry. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Computational Fluid & Plasma Physics | States encoded through mesh resolution, timestep size, numerical dissipation coefficients, solver parameters, physical nondimensional numbers, initial conditions, and boundary conditions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | Non-Newtonian & Complex Fluids | States encoded by constitutive model parameters, rheological coefficients, relaxation spectra, particle distribution metrics, structural memory variables, and boundary condition definitions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Plasma & Fluid Physics | High-Energy-Density Physics (HEDP) | States encoded using equations-of-state, opacity tables, ionization balance models, shock Hugoniot curves, radiation transport parameters, and dimensionless numbers such as Mach, Reynolds, and optical depth. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Biophysics | States encoded by energy landscapes, rate constants, diffusion coefficients, mechanical stiffness coefficients, charge distributions, molecular conformations, and boundary conditions determined by biological structure. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Medical Physics | States encoded by beam profiles, radiation spectra, voxel maps, dose volume histograms, calibration curves, decay equations, transfer functions, and image reconstruction parameters. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Geophysics | States encoded by stratigraphic models, velocity profiles, thermal gradients, pressure–depth relations, magnetic field harmonics, gravity anomaly maps, rheological parameters, and deformation tensors. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Optics & Photonics | States encoded by frequency spectrum, polarization basis, spatial mode expansion, temporal pulse envelope, refractive index maps, transfer functions, and optical path length definitions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Computational Physics | States encoded by mesh resolution, timestep size, discretization order, physical parameters, coupling constants, potential functions, solver tolerances, and initial/boundary conditions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Engineering Physics | States encoded through constitutive laws, boundary conditions, material parameters, load profiles, circuit parameters, mode shapes, thermal gradients, and system transfer functions. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Chemical Physics | States encoded via potential energy surfaces, Hamiltonians, force fields, rate constants, partition functions, density matrices, molecular orbital coefficients, and boundary conditions of reactive environments. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Environmental & Climate Physics | States encoded by radiative transfer parameters, convection schemes, cloud microphysics coefficients, turbulence closure constants, surface exchange coefficients, GHG concentration pathways, and boundary conditions in climate models. |
| Natural Sciences | Physics | Interdisciplinary & Applied Physics | Applied Materials Physics | States encoded by lattice constants, density of states, diffusion coefficients, phonon spectra, magnetic hysteresis parameters, refractive index dispersion, thermal expansion coefficients, and microstructural statistical descriptors. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Quantum Chemistry | Wavefunctions, Hamiltonians, density matrices, basis expansions, molecular orbital coefficients. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Statistical Mechanics | States encoded via probability distributions, partition functions, density operators, and collective order parameters. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Thermodynamics | State descriptions encoded via equations of state, thermodynamic potentials, response functions, and constraints. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Kinetics & Reaction Dynamics | State descriptions encoded through rate laws, Arrhenius parameters, energy surface coordinates, and reaction-coordinate diagrams. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Spectroscopy | States described through energy level diagrams, spectral line shapes, selection rules, transition moments, and population distributions. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Electrochemistry | States represented via Nernst relations, Butler–Volmer kinetics, activity coefficients, transport equations, and electrode surface coverage. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Surface & Interface Science | States encoded through isotherms, potential maps, density profiles, electronic structure descriptors, surface phase diagrams, and spectroscopic signatures. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Colloid & Solution Chemistry | States encoded using activity coefficients, osmotic pressure relations, DLVO potentials, solubility curves, colloid stability maps, and size-distribution models. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Physical Chemistry | Chemical Physics | States encoded via wavefunctions, density matrices, potential energy surfaces, Hamiltonians, partition functions, and molecular-geometry descriptors. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Structural & Mechanistic Organic Chemistry | States encoded via reaction-coordinate diagrams, electron-pushing notation, substituent constants (Hammett σ), frontier orbital coefficients, rate expressions. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Stereochemistry & Conformational Analysis | States encoded by Newman projections, Fischer projections, chair conformations, Ramachandran-style plots, energy vs. dihedral graphs, Boltzmann populations. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Synthetic Organic Chemistry | States encoded by synthetic schemes, functional-group interconversion maps, retrosynthetic trees, oxidation-state diagrams, yield profiles, and stereochemical flowcharts. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Physical Organic Chemistry | States described using Hammett correlations, Brønsted plots, energy surfaces, LFER models, molecular-orbital coefficients, solvation parameters, and kinetic/thermodynamic functions. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Organometallic Organic Chemistry | States encoded by electron-counting rules (18-electron rule), MO diagrams, catalytic-cycle maps, ligand-field diagrams, coordination geometries, redox couples, mechanistic step energies. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Polymer Chemistry (Carbon-based) | States encoded via kinetic parameters, molecular-weight distributions, Flory–Huggins parameters, tacticity ratios, copolymer composition ratios, chain-growth rate equations. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Bioorganic Chemistry | States encoded via pKa profiles, Michaelis–Menten parameters, binding constants, conformational energy surfaces, stereoelectronic descriptors, redox potentials, hydrogen-bonding patterns. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Natural Products Chemistry | States encoded via biosynthetic pathways, enzyme–substrate specificity, stereochemical descriptors, isotopic labeling patterns, NMR parameters, MS fragmentation fingerprints, bioactivity metrics. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Organic Chemistry | Medicinal Chemistry | States encoded via QSAR descriptors, pharmacophore maps, binding constants, pKa values, ADMET parameters, docking scores, metabolic rate constants, free-energy profiles. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | Main-Group Chemistry | States encoded via MO diagrams, VSEPR geometries, hybridization schemes, Wade–Mingos rules, electron-counting methods, thermodynamic/kinetic parameters, acidity/basicity scales. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | Transition-Metal Chemistry | States encoded via electron-counting rules, ligand-field diagrams, MO diagrams, magnetic susceptibility, redox potentials, EPR parameters, catalytic cycle maps, spin-state energy diagrams. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | f-Block Chemistry | States encoded via electron-counting, ligand-field parameters (weak for 4f, stronger for 5f), spin–orbit coupling constants, MO diagrams, redox energetics, magnetic susceptibility, spectroscopic multiplets. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | Coordination Chemistry | States encoded via ligand-field parameters, MO diagrams, stability constants (Kf), redox potentials, pKa values of ligands, spectrochemical series, electron-counting schemes. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Inorganic Chemistry | Solid-State Chemistry | States encoded via lattice constants, band structure diagrams, density of states (DOS), diffraction patterns, phonon spectra, phase diagrams, defect models, thermodynamic variables. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Analytical Chemistry | Qualitative Analysis | States encoded via spectral peaks, fragmentation patterns, colorimetric outcomes, solubility tables, reactivity profiles, ELNs (electronic libraries of known spectra), and qualitative chemical logic. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Analytical Chemistry | Quantitative Analysis | States encoded via calibration curves, regression parameters, uncertainty budgets, error-propagation formulas, analytical figures of merit, instrument-response functions. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Analytical Chemistry | Separation Science | States encoded via retention factors (k), selectivity (α), resolution (Rs), partition coefficients (K), electrophoretic mobility (µep), plate numbers (N), diffusion constants, adsorption isotherms. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Analytical Chemistry | Instrumental Analysis | States encoded via calibration curves, response functions, instrument-transfer functions, resolution metrics, detector sensitivity curves, noise models, signal-processing parameters. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Structural Biochemistry | States encoded via atomic coordinates, RMSD/Rg values, B-factors, hydrogen-bond counts, dihedral angles (φ/ψ/χ), folding free energy (ΔG_fold), structural alignment parameters, conformational ensembles. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Enzymology | States encoded via Michaelis–Menten parameters (Km, Vmax, kcat), inhibition constants (Ki), cooperativity coefficients (nH), activation energies, reaction-coordinate profiles, allosteric models, free-energy surfaces. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Metabolism & Bioenergetics | States encoded via ΔG°’, ΔG(in vivo), redox potentials (E°’), flux distributions, reaction quotients (Q), energy-charge calculations, stoichiometric matrices, thermodynamic force, pathway elasticity coefficients. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Molecular Biology & Gene Expression | States encoded via transcript counts, promoter strength metrics, chromatin marks, transcription-factor occupancy maps, ribosome profiling, RNA half-lives, polymerase speed, binding constants, codon usage indices. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Cellular Biochemistry | States encoded via localization maps, concentration profiles, flux distributions, phosphorylation levels, redox ratios, membrane potential values, organelle-specific thermodynamic constraints, kinetic constants in vivo. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Membrane Biochemistry | States encoded via lipidomics profiles, protein occupancy, membrane-potential values, transport kinetics, FRAP diffusion constants, curvature metrics, phase-transition temperatures, permeability coefficients. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Protein Chemistry | States encoded via ΔG_fold values, melting temperature (Tm), RMSD/Rg, hydrogen-bond counts, reaction rate constants, binding constants (Kd), PTM stoichiometry, hydrophobicity scales, charge distributions, secondary-structure content. |
| Natural Sciences | Chemistry | Biochemistry | Biochemical Genetics | States encoded via kinetic constants (Km, kcat), pathway flux distributions, allelic expression ratios, metabolic profiling maps, variant effect predictions, penetrance models, stoichiometric matrices, genotype–phenotype curves. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Mineralogy & Crystallography | States encoded via lattice constants (a, b, c, α, β, γ), chemical formulae, unit-cell volume, order–disorder parameters, refractive indices, Raman/IR frequencies, XRD peak positions, thermodynamic potentials. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Petrology | States encoded via phase diagrams, thermodynamic potentials (G, μ), mineral modes, equilibrium constants, isopleths, isograds, P–T–X conditions, melt compositions, mineral–fluid partition coefficients, reaction rates. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Structural Geology & Tectonics | States encoded by Mohr circles, strain ellipsoids, orientation data (strike/dip/plunge), displacement vectors, rheological parameters, P–T conditions, plate-motion vectors, finite/incremental strain tensors. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Sedimentology & Stratigraphy | States encoded via grain-size curves, hydraulic parameters, transport equations, stratigraphic thickness, facies proportions, sequence boundaries, sea-level curves, isotopic signatures, chemostratigraphy, magnetostratigraphy. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Geomorphology | States encoded via DEMs, slope–area relationships, hydrographs, sediment-rating curves, climate forcings, uplift/subsidence rates, grain-size spectra, erosion laws, curvature metrics, stream-power parameters. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Geophysics | States encoded via seismic velocity profiles, density models, temperature gradients, magnetization vectors, resistivity curves, gravity anomalies, strain tensors, pressure gradients, geoid height anomalies. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Geochemistry | States encoded by thermodynamic variables (G, μ, K), activity–activity diagrams, phase diagrams, Eh–pH diagrams, partitioning equations (Kd, D), isotope fractionation factors, mass-balance equations, chemical speciation models. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Paleontology | States encoded by facies data, preservation indices, morphological characters, isotopic signatures (δ¹³C, δ¹⁸O, etc.), diversity curves, phylogenetic metrics, depositional parameters, taphonomic grade. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Hydrogeology | States encoded via hydraulic gradients, Darcy flux, transmissivity (T = K·b), storage coefficients, mass-balance equations, breakthrough curves, dispersion tensors, isotopic tracers, hydrostratigraphic layers. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Geology | Economic & Applied Geology | States encoded by resource grade–tonnage curves, P–T–X fluid parameters, reservoir property logs, seismic attributes, geochemical anomalies, alteration mapping indices, ore-body geometry, permeability/porosity relationships, thermal models. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Dynamic Meteorology | Uses simplified representations of unresolved processes—turbulence, convection, radiation—in terms of bulk formulas or empirical relationships to encode system state. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Thermodynamic Meteorology | Represents unresolved processes (condensation, evaporation, radiative heating, convective adjustments) via empirical or bulk formulas that translate microphysics and radiative processes into state variables. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Cloud Physics & Microphysics | Encodes unresolved microphysical behavior (e.g., droplet growth, nucleation, collision–coalescence, riming, aggregation, evaporation, sublimation) using bulk or bin microphysics schemes and empirical relationships. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Synoptic & Mesoscale Meteorology | Encodes unresolved convection, turbulence, microphysics, and surface fluxes through parameterizations embedded in mesoscale and synoptic models to represent sub-grid processes driving storm organization and frontal evolution. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Atmospheric Physics & Chemistry | Represents unresolved molecular processes, aerosol microphysics, chemical reaction networks, and radiative transfer using simplified rate constants, bulk aerosol schemes, lookup tables, and approximate scattering laws. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Meteorology | Climatology & Climate Dynamics | Represents unresolved sub-grid processes such as convection, cloud microphysics, vegetation responses, sea-ice thermodynamics, and turbulent mixing through empirical or physically based parameter schemes. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Oceanography | Physical Oceanography | States encoded by T–S diagrams, equation of state (ρ = ρ(T, S, p)), velocity profiles, hydrographic sections, heat/salt budgets, streamfunctions, vorticity equations, turbulence closure parameters, gridded ocean fields. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Oceanography | Chemical Oceanography | States encoded via carbonate-system equations, saturation indices (Ω), speciation models, Redfield ratios, residence times, mixing diagrams, end-member analyses, conservative-tracer equations, flux calculations. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Oceanography | Biological Oceanography | States encoded through productivity models, chlorophyll–biomass relationships, growth/grazing functions, Redfield ratios, size-spectrum slopes, nutrient uptake kinetics, photophysiological parameters, P–E curves, carbon-cycle fluxes. |
| Natural Sciences | Earth & Space Sciences | Oceanography | Geological Oceanography | States encoded by grain-size spectra, sediment cores, seismic-reflection profiles, heat-flow curves, magnetic lineations, stratigraphic ages, accumulation models, paleoenvironmental proxies (δ¹⁸O, δ¹³C). |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Nucleic Acid Biology | State represented by sequence data, epigenetic modification maps, chromatin accessibility, folding-energy profiles, structural annotations, and quantitative assays such as qPCR Ct values or sequencing depth. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Gene Regulation & Epigenetics | Regulatory state encoded through ATAC-seq profiles, ChIP-seq enrichment, methylation maps, Hi-C contact matrices, RNA expression levels, TF-binding curves, and genome-wide annotation sets. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Protein Biology | State represented through sequence data, structural coordinates, folding-energy landscapes, kinetic rate constants, binding-isotherm curves, PTM maps, and interaction-network measurements. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Molecular Complexes & Information Flow | State encoded through stoichiometric maps, interaction networks, single-particle tracking, structural coordinates, binding-kinetic constants, expression/activity profiles, condensate-formation thresholds, and spatial-distribution models. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Molecular Biology | Molecular Methods & Technologies | State encoded through machine parameters, thermocycler programs, imaging exposure settings, sequencing run metrics, barcoding schemes, enzyme kinetics, standard curves, and computational processing pipelines. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Structure & Organelles | Encoded through morphological descriptors (shape, volume, area), spatial position, molecular composition, and dynamic metrics (motility, turnover, fission/fusion rate). |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cellular Dynamics & Trafficking | State described by spatiotemporal trajectories, probability distributions of step sizes, flux rates between compartments, binding–unbinding kinetics, curvature tensors, and compartment-specific identity markers. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Signaling & Communication | State described by dynamic concentration profiles, activation curves, kinetic rate constants, spatial gradients, interaction networks, and temporal trajectories of signaling activities. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Cycle, Fate & Death | Parameterized by kinetic profiles of cyclin/CDK oscillations, DNA integrity metrics, transcriptional state vectors, chromatin-state maps, apoptotic activation thresholds, lineage-bias probability distributions, and mitochondrial depolarization curves. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Interactions & Microenvironment | State encoded by quantitative maps of stiffness, tension, adhesion forces, ECM-density distributions, gradient profiles, junctional conductance, motility tracks, and ligand–receptor occupancy patterns across spatially structured environments. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Cell Biology | Cell Morphology & Motility | State encoded through quantitative morphometrics, time-series protrusion maps, filament-density profiles, force-distribution fields, polarity vectors, stochastic stepping rates, and migration trajectories. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Classical & Transmission Genetics | State encoded using allele-frequency distributions, Punnett-square probabilities, recombination-rate parameters, and genotype–phenotype mapping rules. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Population Genetics | State encoded via frequency vectors, Hardy–Weinberg equations, transition/recursion equations, Wright–Fisher or Moran model parameters, selection–mutation–migration balance equations, and LD matrices. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Quantitative Genetics | System encoded via variance decompositions, covariance matrices, breeder’s equation (R = h²S), linear mixed models, polygenic scores, quantitative trait distribution models, and parent–offspring regression parameters. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Genomic Evolution & Comparative Genomics | System encoded by multiple sequence alignments, substitution matrices, phylogenetic models, genome-synteny maps, rate matrices (Q), comparative gene-family models, GC/TE landscapes, and structural-variant matrices. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Phylogenetics & Systematics | System encoded by multiple sequence alignments, character matrices, substitution-model parameters, topological representations, diversification models, and character-evolution models (Mk models, parsimony costs, rate matrices). |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Genetics & Evolution | Macroevolution & Speciation Theory | System encoded through branching-time distributions, diversification rate matrices, lineage-through-time plots, morphological or ecological trait distances, biogeographic ranges, and probabilistic speciation/extinction models (e.g., birth–death models). |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Cellular & Tissue Physiology | State encoded via electrophysiological measurements, transport kinetics, mechanical-force curves, biochemical signaling profiles, fluid-pressure metrics, and tissue-structure indices. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Neurophysiology | State encoded through voltage traces, spike trains, synaptic-strength maps, conductance models, neurotransmitter-release kinetics, and network-activity spectra. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Endocrine & Regulatory Physiology | State encoded through circulating hormone measurements, receptor-binding kinetics, second-messenger assays, metabolic markers, glandular output rates, and dynamic feedback analysis. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Cardiovascular & Respiratory Physiology | Physiological state encoded through pressure–volume loops, flow–pressure relationships, gas-exchange curves, ventilation metrics, oxygen–hemoglobin dissociation curves, and autonomic activity profiles. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Metabolic & Energetic Physiology | State encoded through metabolic flux measurements, calorimetry, gas-exchange metrics, substrate-utilization curves, hormone panels, thermogenic output traces, and energy-balance accounting. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Physiology | Renal, Fluid & Homeostatic Physiology | State encoded through clearance equations, osmotic gradients, electrolyte panels, acid–base curves, hormonal levels, and compartment-volume estimates. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Cell Fate & Lineage Specification | System state encoded by regulatory-state vectors, gene-expression matrices, chromatin-accessibility maps, lineage-probability distributions, fate-transition graphs, and time-resolved signaling profiles. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Pattern Formation & Embryonic Axes | Encoded through diffusion–reaction equations, gradient profiles, threshold-response curves, spatial-coordinate systems, oscillatory-phase maps, patterning-boundary models, and axis-specific gene-expression domains. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Morphogenesis & Tissue-Level Mechanics | System state encoded by stress–strain tensors, curvature maps, force-balance equations, cell-shape vectors, tissue-flow fields, viscoelastic parameters, and time-resolved mechanical-activity profiles. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Organogenesis & Multi-Tissue Assembly | System encoded by 3D spatial maps, organ-specific signaling architectures, branching-morphogenesis equations, lumen-pressure measurements, tissue-tissue adhesion matrices, ECM-composition profiles, and dynamic multi-tissue force-balance fields. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Growth, Timing, Regeneration & Life-Cycle Transitions | System state encoded via gene-expression programs, hormone-concentration curves, growth-rate equations, injury-response cascades, regeneration-trajectory models, timing-network dynamics, and life-stage transition matrices. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Developmental Biology | Evolutionary Development (Evo–Devo) | System encoded via gene-expression matrices, cis-regulatory sequence maps, GRN wiring diagrams, developmental-timing curves, morphometric trait datasets, comparative embryonic staging, and phylogenetically aligned developmental timelines. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Organismal Ecology | State represented by physiological measurements (heart rate, oxygen consumption), environmental metrics (temperature, humidity), behavioral time budgets, energy-balance models, and morphological indices. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Population Ecology | Population state represented through life tables, Leslie/Lefkovitch matrices, growth parameters (r, λ, K), demographic distributions, time-series counts, mark–recapture data, and spatial occupancy models. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Community Ecology | Community state represented through species-abundance distributions, interaction matrices, trophic webs, diversity indices, trait distributions, ordination axes, and environmental-gradient metrics. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Ecosystem Ecology | State encoded through ecosystem budgets, carbon/nutrient-flow models, productivity measurements, stoichiometric ratios, mass-balance equations, and continuous environmental monitoring data. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Landscape & Spatial Ecology | State represented via GIS layers, spatial matrices, connectivity graphs, dispersal kernels, landscape metrics (FRAGSTATS-type indices), remote-sensing data, and spatial-environmental covariates. |
| Natural Sciences | Biology | Ecology | Global Ecology & Earth-System Interactions | State encoded through Earth-system models, global climate datasets, satellite remote sensing, atmospheric and oceanic monitoring networks, mass-balance equations, and global flux inventories. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Proof Calculi | Representation via sequents (Γ ⊢ Δ), natural-deduction contexts, rule schemas, substitution assignments, structural constraints. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Structural Proof Theory | Representation via structural sequent formats (e.g., Γ ⊢ Δ), context-combinator rules, structural-rule specifications, permutation schemas, cut-rank measures, height and width metrics. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Proof Theory of Non-Classical Logics | Encoded using labeled sequents (w:Γ ⊢ Δ), resource-sensitive contexts (multisets, ordered structures), modal accessibility graphs, polarity annotations, relevance constraints, graded valuations. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Ordinal & Strength Analysis | Encoded through ordinal notations (Veblen hierarchy, collapsing functions, ψ-systems), reflection schemas, induction parameters, recursion-theoretic measures, and hierarchies of combinatorial principles with known ordinal calibrations. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Proof Complexity | Encoded by size bounds, width constraints, degree parameters, rank systems, space measures, depth bounds, complexity-theoretic input size n, and system-specific resource metrics (e.g., pivot choices, variable elimination order). |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Proof Theory | Automated & Interactive Reasoning | Encoded via solver heuristics, search-depth bounds, rewrite rules, unification modes, tactic parameters, model bounds, constraint propagation strategies, decision-procedure parameters, and resource ceilings (time, memory). |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Structures, Languages & Interpretations | Parameterization through substitution of variables with domain elements, interpretation of nonlogical symbols, and the satisfaction relation 𝔐 ⊨ φ(ā). |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Satisfaction & Definability Theory | Encoding system state through assignments, interpretations of symbols, substitution of tuples, and definable-characterization of sets or relations. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Quantifier Theory & Model Completeness | Encoding system states via assignments, quantifier blocks, Skolemization parameters, and interpretations of constants and function symbols used to replace quantifier dependencies. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Classification Theory | State encoded by chosen base sets, realized/omitted types, rank values (e.g., RM, U), forking diagrams, and cardinalities used to define saturation. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Model Theory | Tame / O-Minimal Model Theory | System state encoded via definable parameters, cell decompositions, dimension assignments, definable choices, and parameter-dependent definability. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Axiomatic Foundations & Cumulative Hierarchy | Encoding system states via ordinal height, rank, cumulative stage (V_\alpha), definability predicates, and the membership structure ( \in ). |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Constructibility & Inner Models | System state encoded by definability parameters, ordinal height, fine-structure levels, internal Skolem hulls, and coding schemes within canonical inner models. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Large Cardinal Theory | System state encoded via critical points, extender sequences, ultrafilters, embedding structures, rank assignments, and definability of large-cardinal properties. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Forcing & Independence Theory | Encoding states via forcing posets, generic filters, Boolean values, valuation functions, rank of names, and definability of statements across ground and extension models. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Set Theory | Descriptive Set Theory | Encoding states via Borel codes, projective levels, Wadge degrees, tree representations, definability predicates, determinacy game lengths. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Computability Theory | Models of Computation & Recursive Function Theory | Described through Gödel encodings, machine descriptions (transition tables), recursion schemata, λ-term syntactic structure, register-update instructions, step-by-step operational semantics, and oracle-access parameters. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Computability Theory | Recursively Enumerable (r.e.) Sets & Degrees | Encoded by enumeration indices, Turing functional descriptions, priority orderings, requirement hierarchies, stage-wise approximations (s_0, s_1, …), injury counters, and reducibility parameters (≤_T, ≤_m, ≤_tt). |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Computability Theory | Reducibility & Degrees of Unsolvability | Parameterized by reducibility type (≤ₘ, ≤ₜ, ≤{tt}, ≤{wtt}), encoding schemes, uniformity conditions, oracle-program specifications, stage-by-stage approximations in reducibility proofs. |
| Formal Sciences | Logic | Computability Theory | Arithmetical & Analytical Hierarchies | Parameterized by formula structure, quantifier-prefix form, oracle relativization, coding of sets/functions, normal forms (prenex), Turing jump iteration, definability over structures (ℕ, ℕ^ℕ). |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Group Theory | Encoded by generators and relations (presentations), multiplication tables, permutation notation, matrix representations, Lie algebra parameters, Cayley graphs, or group actions on sets/spaces. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Ring Theory | Encoded by generators/relations, ideal bases, Gröbner bases (for polynomial rings), matrix entries, valuation parameters, localization data, module presentations, spectrum topology. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Field Theory | Encoded by polynomial generators, bases of extensions, minimal polynomials, valuation parameters, embedding maps, tower constructions, discriminants, norms and traces. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Module Theory | Encoded by generators and relations, matrices over rings, presentation matrices, exact sequence diagrams, tensor-product specifications, annihilator ideals, decomposition maps, injective/projective resolutions. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Linear Algebra | Encoding via coordinate systems, matrices, bases, transformation matrices, Gram–Schmidt orthogonalization, spectral decompositions, change-of-basis matrices, block decompositions. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Representation Theory | Encoded via matrices, modules, characters, highest-weight diagrams, weight lattices, root systems, decomposition tables, representation rings, tensor-decomposition coefficients (Clebsch–Gordan, Littlewood–Richardson). |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Universal Algebra | Encoded via operation signatures, term-rewriting rules, equational axioms, congruence relations, homomorphic images, free-algebra generators, categorical semantics (Lawvere theories, monads). |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Algebra | Algebraic Combinatorics | Encoded via partitions, tableaux, incidence matrices, adjacency matrices, symmetric-function bases, group actions, polynomial encodings, generating functions, weight diagrams, Coxeter presentations, root systems. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Real Analysis | Encoded by ε–δ formulations; metric definitions; norms; measure functions; σ-algebra generators; partition refinements; integration approximations; modulus of continuity; functional parameters in Lᵖ norms. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Complex Analysis | Encoded through power or Laurent series; residues and coefficients; domain shapes; boundary conditions; branch cuts; conformal map parameters; analytic continuation rules; modulus and argument; transformations to/from Riemann surfaces. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Functional Analysis | Encoded via norms, metrics, topologies; basis expansions; Fourier/Sobolev representations; operator matrices relative to orthonormal bases; weak/weak-* topologies; distributional pairing rules; spectral measures. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Harmonic Analysis | Encoded via frequency-domain representations, kernel definitions, scaling parameters, group characters, spectral measures, decomposition levels (dyadic blocks), multiplier functions, window functions, eigenfunction expansions. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Mathematical Analysis | Differential Equations (ODE/PDE) | Encoded via coefficients (variable or constant); domain geometry; boundary conditions; forcing terms; operator coefficients (diffusion rate, wave speed); nonlinearity parameters; initial-data norms; discretization step sizes in numerical schemes. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Differential Geometry | Parameterized via coordinate charts, local frames, basis representations of tensors, geodesic parameters, flow parameters, or local trivializations of bundles. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Algebraic Geometry | Parameterized through coordinate charts (affine patches), projective coordinate systems, ideal generators, local trivializations of bundles, moduli parameters, and deformation families. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Metric Geometry | Encoded via distance matrices, geodesic-parameter functions, local triangle data, covering radii, Hausdorff-approximation parameters, or Lipschitz norms. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Point-Set Topology | Encoded by bases/subbases, convergence structures (nets/filters), open-cover definitions of compactness, separation axioms, and product/quotient constructions. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Homotopy Theory | Encoded via homotopies, cell attachments, fibration diagrams, exact sequences, suspension/loop operators, spectrum-indexing, connectivity and skeleton filtrations. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Geometry & Topology | Knot Theory | Encoded by knot diagrams, braid words, Gauss codes, Seifert matrices, fundamental-group presentations, polynomial-invariant coefficients, or triangulations of knot complements. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Elementary Number Theory | Encoded by base modulus, prime-power decompositions, congruence parameters, divisor structure, arithmetic-function values, Diophantine parameter sets. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Algebraic Number Theory | Encoded by minimal polynomials, embeddings into ℂ, prime factorizations in rings of integers, valuation data, Galois actions, local field expansions, and ideal-class structures. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Analytic Number Theory | Encoded via Dirichlet series coefficients, Euler products, moduli for characters, analytic regions of convergence, zero ordinates, growth exponents, cutoff parameters for sums/integrals. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Arithmetic Geometry | Encoded via equations over number fields, valuations at primes, reduction maps, height functions, mod-p fibers, Galois representations, cohomology groups, and geometric invariants (dimension, genus). |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Modular and Automorphic Forms | Encoded by q-expansions, eigenvalue sequences, weight/level data, character assignments, local decomposition of automorphic representations, and analytic regions for L-functions. |
| Formal Sciences | Mathematics | Number Theory | Transcendental Number Theory | Encoded via minimal polynomials, heights, degrees, Diophantine-approximation parameters, size of auxiliary functions, exponents in linear forms, and error-term bounds. |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Human Evolutionary Anthropology | Encoded through morphometric datasets, genomic variation profiles, isotopic ratios, stratigraphic context, phylogenetic branching patterns, environmental reconstructions, GIS mapping of fossils, radiometric dates, and behavioral proxies (tool assemblages, wear patterns). | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Kinship, Descent & Domestic Organization | Encoded through genealogies, household censuses, kinship charts, marriage registers, property-transfer records, residence-mapping, time-use studies, fertility and mortality measures, formal kin terminology systems, descent-group membership rules. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Ritual, Cultural Practice & Symbolic Systems | Encoded via ritual scripts, ethnographic descriptions, symbolic taxonomies, performance recordings, spatial mapping, iconographic catalogs, linguistic transcripts, myth structures, sensory-environment parameters, cultural classifications, and structural-semiotic codes. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Subsistence Systems, Environment & Human Adaptation | Encoded via ecological surveys, yield measurements, caloric-return-rate calculations, zooarchaeological and archaeobotanical remains, landscape GIS models, climate and soil metrics, foraging-return data, ethnographic time-use logs, herd-composition records, agricultural-output logs. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Material Culture, Technology & Archaeological Interpretation | Encoded using material assays, compositional analyses (XRF, petrography), morphometric data, 3D scans, spatial GIS layers, stratigraphic sequences, chaîne opératoire reconstruction steps, dated contexts, tool-efficiency measures, residue analyses, thermoluminescence or radiocarbon dates. | |
| Social Sciences | Anthropology | Ethnographic Method & Comparative Analysis | Encoded via field notes, audio/video recordings, coded behavior logs, interview transcripts, genealogies, spatial maps, network diagrams, cross-cultural databases (HRAF, SCCS), thematic codes, lexicons, cultural domain analyses, structured observation schedules. | |
| Social Sciences | Economics | Choice (Microeconomic Foundations) | Encoded via utility functions, production functions, consumption sets, budget sets, Lagrangians, Bellman equations, probability distributions, discount factors, risk-aversion parameters, elasticity measures, and informational signals. | |
| Social Sciences | Economics | Interaction (Markets, Strategy & Mechanisms) | Encoded via payoff matrices/functions, cost/production curves, valuation distributions, information structures, strategy spaces, mechanism rules (message spaces, allocation/payment functions), market supply/demand curves, belief hierarchies, and equilibrium mappings. | |
| Social Sciences | Economics | Aggregation & Dynamics (Macroeconomic Systems) | Encoded via production functions, preference parameters (β, σ), technology growth rates, depreciation rates, Taylor-rule coefficients, rigidities (φ-price, φ-wage), policy rules, shock processes (AR(1), VAR), transition equations, and cross-sectional distributions in heterogeneous-agent models. | |
| Social Sciences | Geography (Human) | Spatial Patterns & Spatial Analysis | Encoded through GIS datasets, coordinate systems, raster grids, vector networks, statistical spatial models, remote-sensing imagery, travel-time models, census data, flow matrices, location-allocation parameters, land-use classification schemes, kernel window sizes, scale thresholds. | |
| Social Sciences | Geography (Human) | Mobility, Flows & Connectivity | Encoded via origin–destination matrices, GPS traces, time-stamped flow records, network graphs, latency measurements, travel-cost surfaces, mobility surveys, sensor data, supply-chain datasets, airline/rail schedules, mobile-phone mobility logs, diffusion coefficients. | |
| Social Sciences | Geography (Human) | Human–Environment Interaction & Landscape Modification | Encoded via remote-sensing land-cover layers, GIS hydrology models, soil tests, vegetation indices (NDVI), climate datasets, infrastructure maps, archaeological landscape surveys, hazard logs, environmental-impact assessments, historical land-use reconstructions, energy-budget accounting, socioecological network metrics. | |
| Social Sciences | Geography (Human) | Place, Territory & Spatial Experience | Encoded via surveys of spatial perception and attachment; ethnographic narratives; participatory mapping; landscape semiotic coding; boundary documentation; spatial video ethnography; soundscape and smellscape recordings; GIS layers of perceived territories; cognitive-map sketches; identity–place association indices. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Phonetics & Phonology | Encoded through articulatory coordinates, formant frequencies, pitch contours, waveform amplitude envelopes, phonological-feature matrices, constraint weightings (OT), rule parameters, syllable-structure representations. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Morphology | Encoded through feature bundles, morphotactic templates, morphophonemic rules, paradigm tables, affix-selection rules, stem alternation patterns, distributional conditions for allomorphs. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Syntax | Encoded via feature bundles, tree structures, dependency graphs, derivational sequences, head-direction parameters, constraint rankings, locality domains, and case/agreement matrices. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Semantics | Encoded through typed logical forms, λ-calculus expressions, feature bundles, event-structure representations, quantifier-binding structures, scope hierarchies, domain specifications. | |
| Social Sciences | Linguistics | Pragmatics | Encoded through discourse models, context-update parameters, probabilistic relevance weights, dynamic semantic/pragmatic representations, speech-act schemas, referent-salience hierarchies. | |
| Social Sciences | Political Science | Political Institutions & Formal Political Order | Encoded through constitutional texts, statutory rules, procedural manuals, legislative voting thresholds, appointment rules, budgetary authority, veto-override formulas, federal allocation schemes, judicial review powers, and bureaucratic structures. | |
| Social Sciences | Political Science | Political Behavior, Mobilization & Collective Action | Encoded via survey responses, turnout statistics, protest-event data, ideological scales, partisanship scores, network graphs, resource allocation metrics, mobilization models, threshold parameters, opportunity structures, and psychological indicators. | |
| Social Sciences | Political Science | Governance, Policy Formation & State Capacity | Encoded through administrative rules, budget allocations, staffing levels, personnel systems, civil-service exams, regulatory frameworks, performance metrics, interagency mandates, monitoring/evaluation systems, and policy-cycle sequences. | |
| Social Sciences | Political Science | International Relations & Global Order | Encoded via military expenditure, troop deployment numbers, GDP/trade data, alliance treaties, sanctions lists, institutional rules, voting patterns in IOs, reputational metrics, conflict-history variables, geopolitical distance, and regime-compliance indicators. | |
| Social Sciences | Psychology | Cognitive Processes & Mental Architecture | Encoded through reaction times, accuracy scores, memory-load manipulations, attentional-cueing designs, computational representations, model parameters (connection weights, production rules, utility values). | |
| Social Sciences | Psychology | Learning, Conditioning & Behavioral Mechanisms | Encoded through trial-by-trial logs, reinforcement-rate parameters, schedule values (FR, VR, FI, VI), associative-strength equations, reward-prediction error signals, stimulus intensity gradients, probability functions. | |
| Social Sciences | Psychology | Emotion, Motivation & Affect Regulation | Encoded through physiological readings, self-report scales, behavioral measures, computational affect parameters, appraisal-rule sets, reward-prediction signals, emotional-intensity curves. | |
| Social Sciences | Psychology | Development, Individual Differences & Psychometrics | Encoded via test scores, item parameters (difficulty, discrimination), factor matrices, variance–covariance structures, longitudinal measurements, growth-curve parameters, latent-variable scores, standardization norms. | |
| Social Sciences | Sociology | Social Interaction Mechanisms | Encoded through interaction episodes, symbolic gestures, verbal/nonverbal cues, negotiated meanings, emotional displays, role-taking performance, and situational scripts. | |
| Social Sciences | Sociology | Social Structure Mechanisms | Encoded through class schemas, institutional typologies, stratification indices, organizational charts, legal frameworks, demographic segmentation, access-level hierarchies, formal rule structures. | |
| Social Sciences | Sociology | Social Network & Relational Dynamics | Encoded through adjacency matrices, edge lists, weighted graphs, temporal interaction logs, relational coding schemes, centrality vectors, structural equivalence profiles, diffusion curves. |