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Other literature type . 2026
License: CC BY
Data sources: Datacite
ZENODO
Other literature type . 2026
License: CC BY
Data sources: Datacite
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Why the Periodic Table Has Gaps: A Structural Account from Zero Up

Authors: Bloggs, Joe;

Why the Periodic Table Has Gaps: A Structural Account from Zero Up

Abstract

Abstract The periodic table is usually treated as a catalogue of matter, with its absences explained as historical, experimental or astrophysical contingencies. This work argues instead that the table encodes a deeper structural reality, it records which configurations of matter the universe permits to persist. Certain absences and limits, including the lithium–beryllium–boron bottleneck, the lack of stable isotopes at atomic numbers 43 and 61, the iron binding maximum and the enforced nature of elements beyond atomic number 94, are not anomalies but direct evidence of underlying structural constraints. By organising physical structure as a ladder of discrete permission levels extending from non-existence upward, this paper distinguishes directly structural facts from minimally inferred entities and model dependent descriptions. Gaps and walls are treated as primary data rather than secondary curiosities. The result is a constraint first, less inferred account of the periodic table, supported by an accompanying dataset that explicitly separates structural limits from permitted outcomes and enforced existence. Introduction The periodic table is one of the most successful organising tools in science, yet it is commonly presented in a way that obscures its most informative features. Attention is typically focused on the elements that exist, while absences, instabilities and hard limits are explained away as by-products of nuclear models or stellar histories. This paper adopts the opposite perspective, it treats those absences and limits as the primary signal. Rather than asking why particular elements exist, the framework presented here asks a more fundamental question, what kinds of structure does the universe allow to persist? From this viewpoint, the periodic table is not merely an inventory of matter, but a record of structural permissions and vetoes enforced across scales. Configurations that cannot retain memory or require continuous external enforcement do not persist and their absence is as meaningful as the presence of stable elements. To make this distinction explicit, the paper introduces a structural ladder extending from non-existence through discrete permission levels to atomic matter and beyond. Each rung on this ladder represents a threshold at which a new class of survivable structure becomes possible. Directly structural constraints, such as Planck-scale limits, nuclear stability gaps, the iron binding maximum and the natural synthetic boundary, are separated from empirically permitted outcomes and from model dependent constructs. This separation allows the periodic table’s gaps to be read not as failures of synthesis or discovery, but as enforced features of physical reality. The accompanying dataset makes these distinctions concrete by organising all elements and structural regimes according to survivability, alignment stress, magnetic alignment, resonant coupling and inference level. Together, the paper and dataset present a less inferred, constraint first reading of the periodic table, in which persistence, not composition, is the organising principle.

Keywords

physical ontology, survivability, periodic table, iron peak, quantum interpretation, nuclear stability, matter persistence, memory in physics, epistemology of physics, synthetic elements, physical limits, atomic structure, stability gaps, element stability, ontology vs inference, structural constraints, structural emergence, constraint-based physics, Planck scale

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selected citations
These citations are derived from selected sources.
This is an alternative to the "Influence" indicator, which also reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically).
BIP!Citations provided by BIP!
popularity
This indicator reflects the "current" impact/attention (the "hype") of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network.
BIP!Popularity provided by BIP!
influence
This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically).
BIP!Influence provided by BIP!
impulse
This indicator reflects the initial momentum of an article directly after its publication, based on the underlying citation network.
BIP!Impulse provided by BIP!
0
Average
Average
Average
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