105 Multiple Integrals in Multi-Origin Curvature (MOC) Geometry
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2026/04/24
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Published: 2026/04/24 - Updated: 2026/05/16
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Multiple Integrals in Multi-Origin Curvature (MOC) Geometry
(Including the Mathematical Definition of “Integrate First, Then Couple”)
Core Thesis:
The classical multiple integral in a single‑origin Euclidean space is a degenerate special case of the MOC multiple integral when there is only one origin, constant curvature, and no coupling.
In MOC, a multiple integral = each element integrates independently first, then they are coupled together.
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I. Limitations of Classical Multiple Integrals (Brief Review)
· Single global coordinate system, one origin, flat space.
· Fixed infinitesimal volume element dx_1 dx_2 \dots.
· Integration is merely a computational tool; it neither modifies nor describes the spatial structure.
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II. Multiple Integrals in MOC: Integrate First, Then Couple
Assume the MOC space contains N origins O_1, O_2, \dots, O_N. Each origin O_i possesses:
· A dominion \Omega_i (may partially overlap with others)
· A local measure d\mu_i(x) (dependent on the curvature field of that origin)
· A local integrand (e.g., a field quantity) \rho_i(x)
Step 1: Independent integration of each element
Define the local integral for each origin:
I_i \;=\; \int_{\Omega_i} \rho_i(x) \; d\mu_i(x)
This represents the “self‑accounting” of the physical quantity within the sphere of influence of the i-th origin.
Step 2: Mutual coupling
Combine the local integrals into a global total through coupling coefficients:
\mathcal{I}_{\text{MOC}} \;=\; \sum_{i=1}^{N} w_i \, I_i \;+\; \sum_{i \neq j} \lambda_{ij} \; \mathcal{F}(I_i, I_j)
where
· w_i are single‑domain weights (can be set to 1),
· \lambda_{ij} are coupling strengths between origins (depending on curvature, distance, etc.),
· \mathcal{F}(I_i, I_j) is a coupling function. The simplest form is I_i \cdot I_j; other choices such as \min(I_i, I_j) or nonlinear forms are also possible.
If we take \mathcal{F}(I_i, I_j) = I_i I_j, the global integral becomes:
\mathcal{I}_{\text{MOC}} = \sum_{i=1}^{N} I_i \;+\; \sum_{i \neq j} \lambda_{ij} \, I_i I_j
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III. Degeneration to the Classical Multiple Integral
When the MOC conditions are gradually “switched off”:
· Only one origin remains, N = 1;
· Space becomes flat, curvature \to 0 \Rightarrow d\mu_1 = dx_1 dx_2 \dots;
· No coupling, \lambda_{ij} = 0;
· The dominion \Omega_1 degenerates to a fixed integration region D.
Then:
\mathcal{I}_{\text{MOC}} \;\longrightarrow\; \int_D \rho(x) \, dx_1 dx_2 \dots
which is exactly the classical multiple integral.
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IV. Geometric and Physical Implications (Concise)
· Domain autonomy: The integral of each origin reflects the total effect of local curvature / field.
· Coupling superposition: The results of different origins interact to produce a global structure – this embodies the “multi‑origin game” of MOC.
· Total as structure: The final integral value is no longer a mere number; it is a compressed representation of the global configuration of the multi‑origin space (curvature distribution, dominion ranges, coupling strengths).
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V. Conclusion
Through the two‑step process of “each origin integrates independently, then cross‑origin coupling”, the MOC multiple integral elevates the classical multiple integral from a mechanical accumulation tool to an intrinsic measure that describes the structure of a multi‑origin, high‑dimensional geometry. The classical multiple integral is merely the trivial case where N = 1 and there is no coupling.