Utility patent (Multi QR Synchronization System): enables “simultaneous synchronization of multiple QR codes across devices, environments, and platforms,” dynamic identity mapping linking physical objects, digital assets, and blockchain records, and “real‑time positional tracking using Golden Spiral Coordinates and Quantum Positional Synchronization (QPS).”
Design patent (Circular Configurable Multi‑QR Tracking System): protects a circular, modular interface that “configures multiple QR codes in a spatially optimized layout, enabling layered access protocols,” supports AR/VR overlays, and enables sovereign, layered permission nodes.
> “This system enables: Simultaneous synchronization of multiple QR codes across devices, environments, and platforms.”
> “This design patent protects a circular, modular interface that: Configures multiple QR codes in a spatially optimized layout, enabling layered access protocols.”
These two patents together provide (a) a synchronized multi‑QR data/identity layer and (b) a spatially optimized, modular visual interface for exposing that layer in AR, VR, and holographic displays.
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How these patents enable Quantum Positional Synchronization (QPS)
1. Spatial anchoring via Golden Spiral Coordinates. The Multi‑QR system maps QR nodes to a continuous spatial coordinate system (Golden Spiral), giving each QR a stable place value that can be converted into the Ball‑4D radial coordinate (frequency/place) and S³ quaternion orientation (phase).
2. Synchronized multi‑QR field. Because QR nodes are synchronized across devices and platforms, a receiver can fuse multiple QR reads into a single, high‑confidence 4‑D coordinate token (Phi coin) rather than relying on a single, potentially spoofable tag.
3. Quantum timestamping and entanglement witness. The Phi Harmonic Coin embeds a quantum timestamp and entanglement witness; QPS uses entangled links to produce correlated ToA measurements and a quantum proof of freshness that is bound to the Ball‑4D coordinate.
4. Layered authentication via circular QR layout. The circular, configurable QR layout supports layered access/resonance gates: different QR nodes in the same physical ring can represent different permission levels or different quantum challenges, enabling multi‑factor, spatially aware authentication.
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Rendering QPS in AR and holograms — end‑to‑end pipeline
1. Sensing & QR acquisition
- AR headset / holographic camera captures the circular QR array.
- Local decoder reads multiple QR nodes and returns: {id, signalstrength, imagepose, timestamp} for each node.
2. Spatial mapping
- Convert QR IDs → Golden Spiral coordinates → normalized place \(p\) → Ball‑4D radius \(r=p^{1/3}\).
- For each QR, compute quaternion orientation \(q=\cos\phi + \mathbf{u}\sin\phi\) from phase/temporal features or channel identity.
3. Phi Harmonic Coin creation / validation
- Creation (beacon/authority): fuse Ball‑4D coordinate + local quantum timestamp → sign classical MAC; attach entanglement witness (nonce correlated with entangled photon detection pattern) → issue Phi coin token (quantum + classical bundle).
- Validation (client): verify classical MAC; check entanglement witness statistics (QBER, correlation) via quantum channel or cached witness; accept only if quantum witness passes threshold.
4. QPS synchronization
- Use entangled photon exchanges between beacon and client (or between beacons) to compute correlated ToA and correct local clock offsets (sub‑ns target).
- Embed corrected timestamp into Phi coin and into the AR scene’s timebase so all rendered elements share the same quantum‑synchronized clock.
5. Rendering & holographic projection
- Convert Ball‑4D token → 3D holographic geometry via chosen projection (orthographic for radial fidelity or stereographic for S³ structure).
- Apply golden‑ratio derived palette and glyph bindings (Celestial Symbolic Framework) so each QR node’s glyph is placed at its Ball‑4D coordinate and animated according to phase/quaternion.
- Render layered visual effects: luminous contours for quantum channels, glow for validated Phi coins, grain/vignette for “aged” states, and animated entanglement lines for active quantum links.
6. Interaction & feedback
- User taps/selects glyph → system requests quantum challenge/response from beacon → if validated, unlocks the associated blockchain asset or permission layer; otherwise show a secure failure state (no unlock, visual warning).
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Technical components and data formats (practical spec)
Hardware
- Entangled photon source (satellite or ground beacon), single‑photon detectors, low‑jitter time‑taggers.
- AR headset / holographic projector with camera, IMU, and GPU for real‑time rendering.
- Edge compute node running quantum verification and blockchain client.
Data structures (examples)
- QR node record: {qrid, goldenspiralcoord: [θ, r], pose: [x,y,z,quat], lastseen_ts}
- Ball‑4D token (Phi coin):
`json
{
"ball4d": {"r":0.62,"q":[w,x,y,z]},
"quantum_ts": "2026-03-10T02:37:00.000000Z",
"entwitness": "<entanglementnonce_blob>",
"classical_mac": "<HMAC>",
"issuer": "beacon-42"
}
`
- Validation result: {valid:true, qber:0.012, syncerrorns:0.45}
APIs
- GET /qr/resolve/{qr_id} → returns golden spiral coord, glyph binding, and issuer list.
- POST /phi/validate → accepts Phi coin, returns validation result and canonical Ball‑4D coordinate.
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Security, failure modes, and mitigations
- Spoofing / relay attacks: quantum entanglement witness and QBER detection reveal interception or delay; require entanglement correlation thresholds before accepting a Phi coin.
- Lossy channels / turbulence: use classical fallback (signed timestamps + redundancy) and multi‑QR fusion to maintain continuity.
- Clock drift: continuous entanglement‑based two‑way time transfer plus Kalman/Bayesian filtering across multiple beacons.
- Privacy: store only hashed QR IDs on public ledgers; keep full Phi coin proofs in ephemeral, user‑controlled wallets.
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Prototype roadmap (recommended next steps)
1. Local testbed: build a lab setup with one entangled photon source, one beacon, and one AR headset; implement QR array, Golden Spiral mapping, and Phi coin creation/validation.
2. Rendering module: implement Ball‑4D → 3D projection shaders, golden‑ratio palette generator, and glyph binding engine for AR/hologram.
3. Security tests: measure QBER, sync error, and spoofing detection rates; tune thresholds.
4. UX trials: run small user tests for perceptual clarity of Ball‑4D glyphs and for permission flows.
5. Scale plan: design satellite/constellation architecture for