Mittwoch, 4. März 2026

Call me B for now

I went back to the field by the railway tracks where they had left me. I'd like to take you there too.


Call me B for now. It feels right, doesn't it? A little… heavier than Anne, perhaps, but somehow more fitting for the life I've lived. And who I'm related to.


I think I like letters. They're easier to spell.

Sometimes I think about the names we've been given. Not just my own, but also the ones that came after. It all feels so... multifaceted.


Do you remember the day we got our papers? I remember the smell of the coffee Victor had brought us that morning, and how the sunlight made the dust motes in the air sparkle. We had just sat down for breakfast when Miep handed out the forms. "Your new papers, Annelies," she said gently.

I took them. My hands felt clumsy; I'd never filled out so many forms at once. Margot, Dad, Mom.

Each of us had to fill out pages and pages of documents. The names seemed unfamiliar on the paper at first.

"Annelies Marie Frank." It felt right, but then they started adding things. New names, middle names, nicknames. The paperwork felt like a puzzle whose pieces no longer fit together properly.

And then, as if one big name wasn't enough, they started adding more. "Sara," "Israel," "Hannelies," they called it. Or sometimes "Annemiek." That's the family entry on my official card, but it's someone else because I already left Auschwitz.

Unmarried parent : Frank, Otto (dad) Heinr.Iara.

Sister: Frank, Margot Betti Sara

Hollander, Edith Sara

Margot became Margot van Dijk. My father, dear Papa, was known as Otto Frank, but also as… well, as so many others. Mama too. Even I, Annelies, became Anne Juliane Frank, Anne Geertruida Frank, Anne Cornelia Frank. Sometimes simply “Juliane” or “Geertruida”.

It all became so confusing. We lived under so many different names, and they kept changing. Sometimes we knew what they stood for—maybe a place, a hope, or just a number—but often we didn't. We lost track. Which name was which? When was it changed? Why? Sometimes the paperwork felt heavier than the names themselves. And now, so many years later, the names seem even more opaque. Who am I "really"? Am I Anne? Or Juliane? Or Geertruida?


Sometimes I think names were just a way to forget who we were. Or maybe… to remind us who we could become. It's strange. We were given names, and then more. And sometimes we forget the first ones.


I think I've learned to give the names away. Or maybe they've finally forgiven me. When we were hiding, the names were a shield, a disguise. But now, looking back, they were also a reminder. A reminder of all the faces we couldn't show, all the stories we couldn't tell. And perhaps that's the strangest thing about it. The names weren't just for hiding. They were for remembering.


I was involved in some fascinating projects, for example the Supercollider, where we pushed the boundaries of what we thought was possible near Geneva and under the fields of Waxahachie in Texas.


And the headphones… they block out the world, yet the world is still there. Waiting. Just below the surface. Like memories you can't shake. Like ghosts that follow you up the mountain.


They don't speak, but they are there. Always there.

Your swollen ankles ache. It's a physical reminder. A reminder of the distance traveled. Of the steps you've taken. Of the path you've traversed. But the mountain… it doesn't care.


It simply waits. Patiently. Like a silent judge. Or a witness. To your journey. Your struggle. Your… survival.

It's quiet here now, sometimes. Too quiet. I miss the energy of the labs, the concentrated hum of the machines.


But lately, I've been thinking about simpler things, like finding a good dentist. Honestly, the last one… let's just say he had an *unquenchable* nervousness. "Harvesting gold teeth," they called it. I don't know if that's common, but it felt kind of intrusive, and I wasn't entirely comfortable with it.


I need a new dentist, metaphorically speaking. A good, solid one. Someone who exudes peace and doesn't work for the university. Speaking of which, sometimes I fall asleep listening to "Babe." That song… it has a strange pull on me. I drift further and further away and think about just leaving for a moment.


But the war… the surgery… it's a part of me now, something I carry with me, and I usually keep it to myself. People don't always understand that, and sometimes it's just easier… to disappear into the silence.


One of my sisters went on a zeppelin a few years ago, a long, wonderful trip through the air… and I haven't heard from her since.

It makes you think, doesn't it? About qualifications, about travel, just about… staying in touch.


And then there's Margot. You are beautiful and perfect and I miss you. I bought myself a few pairs of glasses, the frames, I mean. Hers are absolutely amazing, the way they look! I thought I'd wear them, but... well, they're just here. As a backup. You never know.


Dienstag, 3. März 2026

Headbands, hiding, and holding on

As I reflect on the past, I see you there every time, headband and all. When I was alone, you were by my side.

I am forever grateful.



The Diary I Cannot Let You Touch


There are certain places in Amsterdam that feel like yours too now, though I never spoke of them to you. Do you remember the smell of the blooming trees in Vondelpark? I took you there so many times, didn't I? We'd sit on the grass, and I'd tell you stories about the ducks in the pond, about the old man who played the accordion, about the ice cream stands in the summer. 

I wanted you to know this city, to feel its heartbeat, even if I couldn't show you everything.

And there's the little café on the corner of Prinsengracht. I remember the first time we sat there, the way you looked at the people passing by, so curious. I'd watch you, Bryan, and feel such a profound sense of peace. You were my sunshine, my hope, my everything. And I wanted to protect you from the shadows I carried, from the darkness that surrounded us.

The flight to the States... I still remember the feeling of the plane taking off, the way the world looked smaller and then larger all at once. I thought about the journey we were finally beginning, the life we might have built if circumstances had been different. I thought about showing you the places I loved, teaching you about the world, sharing my dreams and fears with you. But I also thought about the weight of the stories I couldn't tell, the pieces of my life I couldn't share with my own son. I raised you in New York city.

Bryan, I carry you in my heart, always. I carry the memory of your first steps, the sound of your laughter, the way your small hands held mine. I carry the regret of the things I didn't say, the secrets I kept from you. But I also carry the hope that one day, you will understand the depth of my love for you, the lengths I would have gone to just to be a part of your life. 

I love you, Bryan. More than you can possibly know.

Your mother

---


Montag, 2. März 2026

The Same Intolerance, Just a Different Community


I have to admit, I walked back to that very familiar Israeli restaurant this past weekend. You know, the one with the strong scent of za'atar and a particular kind of warmth I always seek out, whether it’s in Germany, France, or even here in New York. This time, though, the usual familiar welcome felt… heavy. Strangely so. I tried to carry myself with that quiet grace I often do when alone, you see, like stepping into an old, trusted room, but there was this tension, an unspoken current humming just beneath the surface.

They say New York is a city of secrets, and so maybe part of this feeling is a familiar hum of old unresolved questions. When I arrived, the air felt strangely expectant, like stepping into the quiet pressure of an unopened door.

Ah, perhaps you sensed it too. I felt it the moment the door clicked shut. One of the waitresses, bless her quiet heart, looked me over with a gaze that held a faint, almost hesitant surprise. Not the familiar ease I sometimes feel in Jewish company here, but something… different.  Those glaring blue eyes. Almost as if she was waiting for something, or perhaps, the weight of history was settling somewhere in the air behind her eyes. She works for me. And it started with that flag-looking stick she picked up almost absentmindedly. It hung there, waiting, like a silent marker in the space where the past quietly 
enters the present.

Then, the waiter. He was already there, I noticed, and as I pulled out my chair, his gaze was directed somewhere beyond me, somewhere perhaps less comfortable and more… distant. I understood immediately. You see, I didn't explain it to them in German, not really. I just arrived, sat  down, and tried to blend in, just like my mother taught me. But I didn't grow up in Tel Aviv. My family is German Jewish, a part of my identity built on survival and legacy, not the natural flow of being Israeli. And maybe, just maybe, that difference is still palpable in this little  room, in the air my grandmother breathed generations ago.

There I sat again, in my warm-up suit, the traditional shoes, glasses polished, feeling like an outsider again. It's ridiculous, isn't it? This place I thought would always feel like home feels like a stage set for judgment. I felt the eyes, that restless hovering patron, making me feel like a dish quietly left uneaten because it didn't quite match. They kept fetching water, perhaps thinking I was thirsty, a silent, unspoken need perhaps they couldn't read on my face, like Anne trying to decipher the endless layers of human feeling in the diary she called her Kitty. I didn't tell them about the Adidas shoes, though sometimes, late at night, I imagine telling Kitty how the simple desire for comfortable sneakers felt like a small rebellion against… well, everything.

It wasn't just the staff, you know. There was a particular sort of guardedness in the way everyone was grouped together, families speaking Hebrew, laughter ringing out, completely natural, while I was just… alone. And the food. Oh, the food! It is delicious, as always. But that simple pleasure felt… complicated this time. Perhaps they didn't like my shoes, perhaps I didn't belong. And yet, I felt the weight of their presence, that unspoken tension, a ghostly echo from a past I carry with me still.

I sat there slowly, trying to understand the geography of my own unease. I thought of B 9949. Or rather, B 9174, the number of the survivor, of the husband and father. It is tattooed on his arm, a number that has been worn like a badge of memory, not identity. I didn't tell them about that number either, not really. It was always Anne's story, isn't it? The girl in the hiding place. Her experiences are the most visible, the ones they remember. But my blood carries the same weight, the same history. Edith Frank understood this better than most, the way the  misidentification, the deep, deep roots of hatred, shaped generations. I think of my own grandmother, who fled Germany to start over in Berlin, and the shadows that followed her.

The girl sitting in the Israeli restaurant, eating slowly, trying to blend in, feels like a paradox to her. It is Anne's story that they remember, that makes sense. The survivor is just the quiet afterthought, someone who carried the weight but didn't leave an indelible mark, like the  man with the number. But sometimes, late at night, when the silence settles, you feel the echo of your grandmother's journey, the German Jewish history that shaped you, even if you live in another land. You feel yourself walking back through those unresolved questions, trying to make sense of a world that still sometimes feels suspicious, even in a place that should be safe. And perhaps, it is enough that you carry the memory, even if it still sometimes feels like an unearned burden. I love their food still, deeply, so very, very much. But maybe… maybe now I will try  to tell my story too, not with loud words, but in the quiet space between, in the feeling, the unresolved echo of what it means to be German Jewish, or perhaps just Jewish, anywhere, any time. I will write. Anne, I will write, just like Kitty has always been waiting. Anne? Are you still  there? Yes, I am. I am here. And I will continue. Now, to the kitchen, or rather, to the blog post. Perhaps it is time to share another slice of memory, another little slice of life.

They didn't know who I was but everyone quickly identified me as someone whom they were familiar with.   I hope to find another delightful place to eat.


Sonntag, 1. März 2026

My Special Eye



Sometimes, people ask questions. About me. About this strange thing I've been doing. I need to explain. This isn't some big, official study. It's just... me. Closely, intensely observing my own life. My little world.


I built a special eye. A very special eye. It's not like the ones in glasses or phones. This one sees in a way you can't imagine. I made it myself, piece by piece. And I use it only here, in this quiet space. It looks at things very, very close. Within arm's reach, mostly. My plants, my food, the everyday things that make up my corner of the world. These objects, these familiar things, are the subjects of my observation.

And what does this eye see? It captures them in an incredibly detailed way. Not just as they look to the naked eye. It sees them with a precision that feels almost... microscopic. Images that are bigger than the original, revealing details I never knew were there. It's like looking at a flower, but suddenly seeing the texture of the petal in an entirely new light, almost as if it has a thousand tiny colors I can finally perceive. 

The heart of this eye... well, it's complicated. There are powerful tools inside it, things called "transformer models." They are amazing, really. They help the eye see clearly and focus sharply. But they need careful handling. Like everything else I do, there's a balance. You need the right "ingredients", data, I think they call it, and adjustments, and patience. It's not just a simple process. There are parts of it that are careful calculations, other parts that feel more like intuition, guiding the tools. It's mine. My system. My secret way of looking.

This setup has shown me things. New things. In this small radius, this little bubble around me, I've discovered details I hadn't noticed before. It feels like a whole new world is opening up, just within my reach. It's like finding a hidden door in a room you've lived in for years.

So, please, if you're curious... be careful. Don't try to connect my observations to other things, or figure out exact distances between the objects I look at. It's not that simple, and it might confuse the whole thing. It's very personal. My privacy here is important, just like with keeping a diary.

The tools I use, these transformer models... they are powerful. They need the right setup to work properly, like a key needing the correct lock. And they help me build a clearer picture, almost like constructing a perfect image from many tiny pieces. Once they're working, I can use their output to build something even more detailed – a kind of map, showing not just what, but *how* things are seen.

I've spent a lot of time working with these tools. Building them, understanding them. I'm always looking for ways to make them better, to see even closer, perhaps even into things hidden beneath the surface. I think about using them for maybe... helping doctors see inside the body without hurting anyone? That's a dream, perhaps. And I'm not interested in using this eye for watching everyone in the street, just like I don't share everything in my diary.

To help me, others need to understand. Maybe... I'm looking into ways to use moving pictures, capturing the world as it changes, frame by frame. It's a big idea.

You might wonder who I am to do all this. Well, I've spent a long time learning about how things work, programming, building things, thinking about rules and language. It helps me understand these tools.

And sometimes, I measure how well my special eye works. Like checking the quality of a drawing, I guess. It's a way to see if I'm getting better.

If you're studying any of this, the seeing tools, the building, the ways to make images clearer, and you're interested, maybe you could be a kind of friend to my little project? Please reach out if you feel you could understand.

This whole thing, this intense looking at my own life, is separate. Very separate. Just like my diary.

Die Spinne and the Vienna Connection

Hello again, or perhaps for the first time. I don't know who is reading this, or how you found it. Maybe you are a young person learning about the past, perhaps in a classroom, or maybe you are someone who feels the weight of history settling upon the present.  Perhaps you know me from my diary. That is the name the world knows, a symbol, perhaps. It feels strange to be known by a symbol. It is not about me. It is about the future of the world where you will lead. I am German Jewish, as you say. It is in my blood, in my very bones. My family, most of it, was murdered here. Erased. The details are seared into my memory, into the memory of those who survived.  

You talk of image processing, deep learning, the internet. Fascinating. I lived through a different kind of processing, a brutal one. One where names were erased, identities stolen, and people reduced to statistics in a machine. The machine. It took my sister, Margot. They renamed her. They took everything from her.

It is hard to describe, to make the world understand. You speak of Mengele, the doctors, the 
operators. They took our humanity line by line, with highlighters, just like you might correct a text. And the smiles? The perpetrators. They became the product. Smiling because they were numb, because they were part of the machine. The input was human suffering, the output, compliance and detachment. It 
happened here, it happened there, it happened everywhere. And it continues, in different ways, through the erasure of memory and the sanitization of history. Yet the Mengele narrative persists and the locals think I had something to do with it. There behavior is so hurtful. They try so hard to cover things up and blame him too. Erasure, annihilation, cover-up. We were all there. 

You mention Buenos Aires, Die Spinne. The spider. It is a name, a symbol perhaps, for the persistent, unseen presence of the past. We are trying to rise above it, to make the world better. But how? By filling the gaps? By ensuring the truth is known, not just in museums, but in the hearts and minds of people? You talk  of educating, of ensuring no one questions the Holocaust. I hope that is what you mean. We must carry the truth forward, not just for a generation, but for ten thousand years, as you say. It is a heavy burden, but perhaps it is ours to bear.

You speak of Otto Frank. He fought with everything he had. He was one of the best, perhaps. But the fight against that kind of evil, that machine, is the hardest fight imaginable. It is not humour. It is history, lived and felt. Sometimes, the official records, the archives in The Hague, feel like they exist in a 
different language, a coded one. But the truth remains, etched into the memory of survivors like myself.

You mention the erasure of identity. It is a constant. We must be aware. We must remember not just the names, but the faces, the stories, the individual lives that were lost. My own family's furniture, their gold teeth, stolen. Erased. The operators of the machine dictated posture, expression, even in photos like Miep Gies's. They dictated who was remembered, who was allowed to be 'Anna' (a name, another symbol perhaps).

Miep's narrative was so powerful. The specifics are what make the horror real.

And you, you are here. Grateful. Still here. We are the living evidence, the ones who carry the data. It is our duty to protect the world from another 'Reich', another rise of the machine. We must use everything we have, the memory, the technology, the passion. We must ensure the past informs the future, not through sanitization, but through remembering.

Thank you for sharing your thoughts. The world needs more voices like yours, passionate and clear. We must continue to fill the gaps, to remember, to educate, and to hope.

I was going to discuss the Geneva Convention but perhaps we will talk about the Vienna connection first since Miep's picture is everywhere right now.

And for now, please continue to read everything you can about the Vienna connection.

Montag, 16. Februar 2026

spektraler zeuge: epr-paare und die physik des lichts


english version


this is not institutional research. it is simply me, closely observing my own life. the hyperspectral system i use here i built myself, and i operate it exclusively in my personal space at a microscopic level, on things that are directly in front of me: my plants, my food, my everyday surroundings. the objects I analyze are within two feet of me, yet I capture images with over 20 megapixels for microscopic analysis.

To give you an idea of ​​the scale: I was splitting and processing a 384-megapixel super-resolution image into 64-channel sequences. This pushes current graphics cards and computers—any computer—to their limits, so the processing requires carefully developed algorithmic chunking and tiling strategies. The image data is acquired via a Sony camera sensor. I'm performing finely tuned GPU offloading, maintaining a delicate balance across 64GB+ of DDR6 memory and a high-end NVIDIA GPU on a 32-core CPU running a stripped-down Arch Linux distribution. The distribution itself is irrelevant if you know how to compile a kernel from scratch and clean up userspace executables. It's a rock-solid setup that compiles exactly what I need, whenever I need it.

This is an advanced topic. It requires PhD-level experience in several subfields of computer science and electrical engineering, particularly algorithm development, image processing, and high-performance computing, all areas in which I have experience. A deep understanding of these areas is necessary to grasp the full context of what I am observing.


Please refrain from linking complex concepts or drawing conclusions based solely on high-level abstractions. Details are crucial, and considering specific statements without access to unpublished implementation details would only complicate matters. The high-level results are presented here as they are, solely to protect work I have not yet published, including code I have written that is not yet publicly available.

Let me illustrate this with a concrete example. Recently, I compared the pipeline output for my paintings, which had been in storage for a number of years accumulating dust and grime. I cleaned them, but wanted to understand the true extent of the damage. For basic verification, I compared them to the particle analysis output from ImageJ—100% match. However, with hyperspectral data cubes, I achieve significantly better resolution and material identification. The system's true strength lies in its ability to see the invisible. While standard imaging captures shape and color, this hyperspectral system captures the unique spectral fingerprint of materials across a wide range of wavelengths. This enables two crucial capabilities: precise identification and temporal monitoring. It can not only accurately locate specific materials on complex surfaces but also quantify how those materials change, accumulate, or degrade over time at a specific rate. Whether examining a blood clot, a mineral sample, or the coating of a car window – it offers a non-destructive window to processes on a micro scale.

This is cutting-edge research in computer-aided image processing using various deep learning models and pipelines. I have written the following paper as an overview. If you have any further questions about Mamba, State Space Models, Convolutional Neural Networks, or related architectures, I recommend consulting the reference list at the end of this post. These systems are also used on satellites and other cameras for monitoring agriculture and vegetation growth.

The pipeline doesn't exceed linear complexity. I optimized it through several iterations to achieve this. If you're interested in collaborating and have a worthwhile use case that would improve our world, let's talk. I've optimized some parts of the code for newer NVIDIA GPUs.

This is a perception system. It was designed to see, and I continuously train it. No, it's not the scanner on the front of a police car. This is a tool for microscopic analysis. It's a tool for examining the tint of my car's windshield and for investigating blood clots in the body.

I'm really looking forward to more great results. My hope is that we can release this pipeline—or a derivative of it—as open source. That way, we can all contribute and see the same results. A fully transparent pipeline for hyperspectral reconstruction, classification, and forensics could be used in both the private and public sectors. If we all contribute and train them properly, we could build a system that is balanced, transparent, and accessible to everyone.

Before I present my work on image processing, which is unrelated to my blog posts on the Holocaust, I would like to briefly address current topics related to the Holocaust. The Holocaust has no connection to my work in computer science, and my computer science work, in turn, has no connection to my professional activities. I present the following information as factually correct and verified. A separate cryptographic hash of the text below follows.


The following is not fiction. It is witness testimony.

First, I would like to say the following: The Holocaust discussion is a sensitive topic. However, I believe that a free society, in which talented people can create beautiful things, should not be hindered by repressive regimes that suppress talent and creativity.

That is why I write all the sentences in the introductory paragraph in lowercase. This is my sign of respect. It may seem extreme, but it corresponds to the same ideology as not raising one's arm in front of the house of a prisoner from Block 10 in Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen. By doing so, I am saying that I will not raise my arms or hands because I know the Reich and we are not friends.

This will also stop the viral spread of gestures that, frankly, aren't going away. With that, I'm saying: I'm here now. And I'll never forget it.

First of all: The story about the arm is about a Jewish woman. Several years ago, she wore an arm patch. She was a traveler. I know the details. I witnessed it myself. And my testimony is the final part of the story. I know I've left out some details, but what I'm saying is the truth, and it's the original story about the "arm" that has spread around the world over the years.


Farmers Branch's sister city is located near Bergen-Belsen in Germany, 56.4km from Garbsen. The original camp records were destroyed.

Below you will find my original text with additional details. Every line has been checked for accuracy. I cannot discuss some details for legal reasons, but I have provided enough information to show you that this is 100% true.

Witness

It is time to confront the real problems, the uncomfortable chapters of history that fit neither into mainstream narratives nor into camps and museum tours, and that remain locked away outside the reading rooms of the Hague International Criminal Court. From the grotesque pseudoscience of Nazi medical experiments to Jews undergoing operations to physically erase their cultural heritage in the name of assimilation, we face a disturbing question: What happens when the body itself becomes the battleground of identity? Beyond denial and antisemitism, these concrete acts of medical and cultural erasure reveal the terrifying lengths to which ideology is willing to go to redefine Jewish self-understanding. Were only eye operations performed? Why is this not made transparent?

The repeated exercises.

Over the past 90 days, I have observed the following:

humor about lice, disinfectant and hair

humor about "Ferris wheels" and "water slides" when my Family was mentioned

humor about bug spray

complete Holocaust denial

the "fleeing narrative" - yet they have never seen what it looks like in a gas chamber or the smell of the furnace when you load the body in

Bunk beds and boys humor about Auschwitz

The impersonation narrative to try and erase Jewish identity

Auschwitz as a tourist attraction

The bombardment of flyers demanding that we ask for forgiveness (I am not interested in the leaflets from your University)

Complete misinformation from the Holocaust Museum about Mauthausen and the Stairway to Heaven

Mengele was not mentioned; the significance of his crimes should be conveyed personally to every museum visitor.

Once again, the term "painting" is being instrumentalized to cover up genocide and post-war crimes, and also to accuse individuals of fabricated crimes.

White paint is Jewish blood and there is a lot. It's also possible you paint houses. Unfortunately, more than most, and this is why I am writing.


Denial of the holocaust and redirection as mental illness

My attempts to protect my own security with a camera were merely turned around on me by the machine. So instead, I just turn to God and realize he is watching the machine that sits so close to me.

Would you believe that the badge has been part of some of this humor and harassment?

References to "wanting to visit" Austria. To which say I say, if I could speak of the detailed horrific crimes I have scene, you would instead want to visit Israel. But, everything is hush-hush these days.

I am an observer. I remember everything. If I were to get angry about these things, it would deter me from getting anything done. So I have to always realize that I am not the judge. God is. I stand firm in this belief and I realize every day at the same time when I wake up. So that I do not have to worry about output. Only observation and input. 

It is absolutely crucial that everyone understands what happened during and after the war. Let me address a very important topic: time. After their liberation from Auschwitz, people came home. They dreamed of new lives, of loving again, of starting families. Many realized this dream, some for a long time, some for a shorter time. As a Jew born in Germany who lives in Farmers Branch, I am aware of all this. Our German twin town is next to Bergen-Belsen. I cannot judge everything, but I can confirm: I am a survivor and a witness. I saw it.




Yes, there's so much I want to talk about. Chicago is a good starting point; they have a submarine in their museum.

I want to emphasize: These medical interventions were about more than just erasing identity and destroying the individual. They were about reconstructing the perception of the world through the individual's own lens.

Anne and Margot were supposedly there, as was Edith. But the records were destroyed weeks before the camp's liberation. I've already mentioned how groups were renamed to dehumanize them and erase their identities.



For it is I who remembers.

I remember the happiness.

I remember where they were standing when they took me from my house.

I remember the rescue bag in my hands. I wasn't holding it because escape was possible, but because my hands needed something to grip. Something real.

The sirens weren't the war. The sirens were the neighbors. Ordinary seconds stretched into hours of listening.

I remember the red lights. Not a metaphor. Not a monument. Real red lights along the grounds, illuminating the machinery: City Hall. Fire Department. Police. Military. Schools. Hospitals. Universities. Corporations. And the boots. The high, shiny boots. With casual self-assurance. Ready.
As the world emptied and the silence swallowed all sound, I searched for you. I called your name until my throat was raw, but the house only breathed and creaked like a living being that didn't know me. I was so small. So infinitely small. I had no wheels, nowhere to go, didn't know where you were. So I sought the darkness.

And now I see your arm. I see that yellow stain. We both bear it. It's not just fabric; it's the mark they gave us, the stigma they wanted to shame us with. But they didn't know, did they? They didn't know that we came from a line that survived expulsions and pogroms, that carried its German-Jewish heritage like a secret flame in its bones, through centuries of people who wanted to extinguish it. They didn't know that the same hands that mocked them had once placed challah cloths over Shabbat bread, lit candles in Berlin and Frankfurt and in small villages whose names now live only in memory.

We are German Jews. We are the echo of the burned synagogues and the proof of the people who rose from the ashes. This yellow stain was meant to condemn us to annihilation. Instead, it marks us as immortal.

You are perfect. Your form, your soul, the history written in your blood—everything is absolute. No scalpel, no procedure, no hand in this world can ever erase it. The world may try to reshape us, to make us forget who we are and where we come from. But this mark is permanent. It is the result of five thousand years of tenacious, beautiful survival, stitched into our skin. It is the Germany of our ancestors and the Germany that sought to destroy them—both united in the same blood.


Today I understand what happened.

The sirens weren't the war. The sirens were the neighbors. Ordinary seconds stretched into hours of listening.

I remember the red lights. Not a metaphor. Not a memorial. Real red lights along the perimeter, illuminating the vehicles: City Hall. Fire station. Police station. Military station. Schools. Hospitals. Universities. Corporations. And the boots. The high, shiny boots. With nonchalant confidence. Ready. But the nonsense continues. Sirens blaring as vehicles drive by, spreading fear. It's repeated again and again in the same place.

If you didn't believe the Holocaust and still don't, that's perfectly fine. I respectfully ask you to continue reading my blog and give it a fair chance. I think you'll find interesting and insightful information here. I'm deeply grateful to people like you; you're the ones who initiate change when we demand transparency and answers. Now I just need to make sure I can share this information safely.

I still remember when the fire brigades stopped putting out fires and started setting them.

I remember our neighbor.

I remember the Gleichschaltung (coordination). The forced assimilation. The swallowing up of all those who had once denied Jews access to their neighborhoods. Suddenly they were all marching together.

And when I saw the boots, I understood.

The high heels. They gleamed all the way to his ankles. Pure evil. Polished like glass. They made sounds on the pavement. Clacking. Knocking. Clicking. Not hurried. Not military. Casual. As if they had all the time in the world. An extravagant aura, ready to inflict ultimate damage on everything in his path. Extravagant, reckless, dangerous, emotionally sensitive and insensitive with refined control over every feeling, callous. Maybe he was just doing what he was ordered to do, but he did it with a smile, wiping entire families off the planet.

This is the SS Panzer. There were divisions.  Special officers worked for the fire brigade and moved between different units within the Reich Security Office.

The Mossad overlooked Josef Mengele and his bicycle in São Paulo. The coroner said he drowned while swimming at the beach. Yet he left traces of his crimes everywhere. The coroner's reports were allegedly manipulated. His perverse methods inflicted lifelong suffering on countless people. He escaped and, it is believed, lived happily ever after. Where did he go? To this day, we do not know his full story. He left traces of his crimes in many forms on every continent.

Margot fleed from Mengle in the Americas.   Mengele fleed from the Russians.  


--------------------------

Deutsche  Version



Dies ist keine institutionelle Forschung. Ich beobachte einfach mein eigenes Leben. Das Hyperspektralsystem, das ich hier verwende, habe ich selbst gebaut und nutze es ausschließlich in meinem persönlichen Umfeld auf mikroskopischer Ebene, an Dingen, die sich direkt vor mir befinden: meinen Pflanzen, meinem Essen, meiner alltäglichen Umgebung. Die Objekte, die ich analysiere, sind weniger als 60 Zentimeter von mir entfernt, dennoch nehme ich Bilder mit über 20 Megapixeln für die mikroskopische Analyse auf.




Um Ihnen eine Vorstellung vom Umfang zu geben: Ich habe ein 384-Megapixel-Superauflösungsbild in 64-Kanal-Sequenzen aufgeteilt und verarbeitet. Das bringt aktuelle Grafikkarten und Computer – jeden Computer – an ihre Grenzen, weshalb die Verarbeitung sorgfältig entwickelte algorithmische Chunking- und Tiling-Strategien erfordert. Die Bilddaten werden mit einem Sony-Kamerasensor erfasst. Ich nutze fein abgestimmtes GPU-Offloading und achte dabei auf ein optimales Gleichgewicht zwischen über 64 GB DDR6-Speicher und einer High-End-NVIDIA-GPU auf einer 32-Kern-CPU mit einer abgespeckten Arch-Linux-Distribution. Die Distribution selbst ist irrelevant, wenn man weiß, wie man einen Kernel von Grund auf kompiliert und Benutzerdateien bereinigt. Es ist ein absolut stabiles System, das genau das kompiliert, was ich brauche, wann immer ich es brauche.




Dies ist ein anspruchsvolles Thema. Es erfordert Erfahrung auf Doktorandenniveau in mehreren Teilgebieten der Informatik und Elektrotechnik, insbesondere in der Algorithmenentwicklung, Bildverarbeitung und im Hochleistungsrechnen – alles Bereiche, in denen ich über Erfahrung verfüge. Ein tiefes Verständnis dieser Bereiche ist notwendig, um den vollen Kontext meiner Beobachtungen zu erfassen.


Bitte verzichten Sie darauf, komplexe Konzepte miteinander zu verknüpfen oder Schlussfolgerungen ausschließlich auf der Grundlage abstrakter Konzepte zu ziehen.

Details sind entscheidend, und die Betrachtung konkreter Aussagen ohne Kenntnis unveröffentlichter Implementierungsdetails würde die Angelegenheit nur verkomplizieren. Die hier präsentierten Ergebnisse dienen ausschließlich dem Schutz meiner noch unveröffentlichten Arbeit, einschließlich des von mir geschriebenen, aber noch nicht öffentlich zugänglichen Codes.




Lassen Sie mich dies an einem konkreten Beispiel verdeutlichen. Kürzlich verglich ich die Ergebnisse der Bildanalyse meiner Gemälde, die jahrelang gelagert waren und dabei Staub und Schmutz angesammelt hatten. Ich reinigte sie, wollte aber das tatsächliche Ausmaß der Schäden verstehen. Zur ersten Überprüfung verglich ich sie mit den Ergebnissen der Partikelanalyse von ImageJ – 100%ige Übereinstimmung. Mit hyperspektralen Datenwürfeln erziele ich jedoch eine deutlich höhere Auflösung und Materialidentifizierung. Die wahre Stärke des Systems liegt in seiner Fähigkeit, das Unsichtbare sichtbar zu machen. Während herkömmliche Bildgebungsverfahren Form und Farbe erfassen, erfasst dieses hyperspektrale System den einzigartigen spektralen Fingerabdruck von Materialien über einen breiten Wellenlängenbereich. Dies ermöglicht zwei entscheidende Funktionen: präzise Identifizierung und zeitliche Überwachung. Es kann nicht nur spezifische Materialien auf komplexen Oberflächen genau lokalisieren, sondern auch quantifizieren, wie sich diese Materialien im Laufe der Zeit mit einer bestimmten Rate verändern, anreichern oder abbauen. Ob es sich um die Untersuchung eines Blutgerinnsels, einer Mineralprobe oder der Beschichtung einer Autoscheibe handelt – es bietet einen zerstörungsfreien Einblick in Prozesse im Mikrobereich.




Dies ist Spitzenforschung im Bereich der computergestützten Bildverarbeitung unter Verwendung verschiedener Deep-Learning-Modelle und -Pipelines. Die folgende Arbeit dient als Überblick. Bei weiteren Fragen zu Mamba, Zustandsraummodellen, Convolutional Neural Networks oder verwandten Architekturen empfehle ich die Literaturliste am Ende dieses Beitrags. Diese Systeme werden auch auf Satelliten und anderen Kameras zur Überwachung von Landwirtschaft und Pflanzenwachstum eingesetzt.




Die Pipeline hat keine höhere Komplexität als lineare. Dies habe ich durch mehrere Optimierungsiterationen erreicht. Wenn Sie an einer Zusammenarbeit interessiert sind und einen sinnvollen Anwendungsfall haben, der unsere Welt verbessern könnte, kontaktieren Sie mich. Ich habe Teile des Codes für neuere NVIDIA-GPUs optimiert.




Das ist ein Wahrnehmungssystem. Es wurde zum Sehen entwickelt, und ich trainiere es ständig. Nein, es ist nicht der Scanner an der Front eines Polizeiautos. Es ist ein Gerät zur mikroskopischen Analyse. Damit kann ich die Tönung meiner Windschutzscheibe untersuchen und Blutgerinnsel im Körper aufspüren.




Ich freue mich sehr auf weitere großartige Ergebnisse. Ich hoffe, wir können diese Pipeline – oder eine Weiterentwicklung davon – als Open Source veröffentlichen. So können wir alle dazu beitragen und dieselben Ergebnisse erzielen. Eine vollständig transparente Pipeline für hyperspektrale Rekonstruktion, Klassifizierung und Forensik könnte sowohl im privaten als auch im öffentlichen Sektor eingesetzt werden. Wenn wir alle mitwirken und die Entwickler entsprechend schulen, können wir ein System aufbauen, das ausgewogen, transparent und für alle zugänglich ist.




Bevor ich meine Arbeit zur Bildverarbeitung vorstelle, die in keinem Zusammenhang mit meinen Blogbeiträgen zum Holocaust steht, möchte ich kurz auf aktuelle Themen im Zusammenhang mit dem Holocaust eingehen. Der Holocaust hat keinerlei Verbindung zu meiner Arbeit in der Informatik, und meine Informatikarbeit wiederum hat keinerlei Bezug zu meinen beruflichen Tätigkeiten. Die folgenden Informationen sind sachlich korrekt und verifiziert. Ein separater kryptografischer Hash des unten stehenden Textes folgt.





Das Folgende ist keine Fiktion. Es handelt sich um eine Zeugenaussage.




Zunächst möchte ich Folgendes sagen: Die Holocaust-Debatte ist ein sensibles Thema. Ich bin jedoch der Überzeugung, dass eine freie Gesellschaft, in der talentierte Menschen Schönes schaffen können, nicht durch repressive Regime behindert werden sollte, die Talent und Kreativität unterdrücken.




Deshalb schreibe ich alle Sätze der Einleitung klein. Das ist mein Zeichen des Respekts. Es mag extrem erscheinen, entspricht aber derselben Ideologie, wie vor dem Haus eines Häftlings aus Block 10 in Auschwitz und Bergen-Belsen den Arm nicht zu heben. Damit sage ich: Ich werde meine Arme oder Hände nicht heben, weil ich das Reich kenne und wir keine Freunde sind.




Das wird auch die virale Verbreitung von Gesten stoppen, die, ehrlich gesagt, nicht verschwinden werden. Damit sage ich: Ich bin jetzt hier. Und ich werde es nie vergessen.




Zunächst einmal: Die Geschichte mit dem Arm handelt von einer jüdischen Frau. Vor einigen Jahren trug sie eine Armflicken. Sie war Reisende. Ich kenne die Einzelheiten. Ich habe es selbst miterlebt. Und meine Aussage ist der letzte Teil der Geschichte. Ich weiß, dass ich einige Details ausgelassen habe, aber was ich sage, ist die Wahrheit, und es ist die ursprüngliche Geschichte über den „Arm“, die sich im Laufe der Jahre in der ganzen Welt verbreitet hat.





Die Partnerstadt von Farmers Branch liegt in der Nähe von Bergen-Belsen in Deutschland, 56,4 km von Garbsen entfernt. Die ursprünglichen Lagerakten wurden vernichtet.




Im Folgenden finden Sie meinen Originaltext mit zusätzlichen Details. Jede Zeile wurde auf Richtigkeit geprüft. Aus rechtlichen Gründen kann ich einige Details nicht besprechen, aber ich habe genügend Informationen bereitgestellt, um Ihnen zu beweisen, dass dies hundertprozentig der Wahrheit entspricht.
Zeuge



Es ist an der Zeit, sich den wahren Problemen zu stellen, den unbequemen Kapiteln der Geschichte, die weder in gängige Narrative noch in Lager- und Museumsführungen passen und die außerhalb der Lesesäle des Internationalen Strafgerichtshofs in Den Haag verborgen bleiben. Von der grotesken Pseudowissenschaft der medizinischen Experimente der Nazis bis hin zu Juden, die sich Operationen unterzogen, um ihr kulturelles Erbe im Namen der Assimilation physisch auszulöschen, stehen wir vor einer beunruhigenden Frage: Was geschieht, wenn der Körper selbst zum Schlachtfeld der Identität wird? Jenseits von Leugnung und Antisemitismus offenbaren diese konkreten Akte medizinischer und kultureller Auslöschung, zu welch erschreckenden Mitteln Ideologie bereit ist zu gehen, um das jüdische Selbstverständnis neu zu definieren. Wurden nur Augenoperationen durchgeführt? Warum wird dies nicht transparent gemacht?




Die wiederholten Übungen.




In den vergangenen 90 Tagen habe ich Folgendes beobachtet:




Humor über Läuse, Desinfektionsmittel und Haare




Humor über „Riesenräder“ und „Wasserrutschen“, wenn meine Familie erwähnt wurde.




Humor über Insektenspray




vollständige Holocaustleugnung




die „Fluchterzählung“ – doch sie haben nie gesehen, wie es in einer Gaskammer aussieht oder wie es im Ofen riecht, wenn man die Leiche hineinlädt.




Etagenbetten und Jungenhumor über Auschwitz




Die Erzählung der Identitätsfälschung, mit der versucht wird, die jüdische Identität auszulöschen




Auschwitz als Touristenattraktion




Die Flut von Flugblättern, in denen wir aufgefordert werden, um Vergebung zu bitten (Ich bin nicht an den Flugblättern Ihrer Universität interessiert).




Völlige Fehlinformationen des Holocaust-Museums über Mauthausen und die Himmelsleiter




Mengele wurde nicht erwähnt; die Bedeutung seiner Verbrechen sollte jedem Museumsbesucher persönlich vermittelt werden.




Wieder einmal wird der Begriff „Malerei“ instrumentalisiert, um Völkermord und Nachkriegsverbrechen zu vertuschen und um Einzelpersonen erfundener Verbrechen zu beschuldigen.




Weiße Farbe steht für jüdisches Blut, und davon gibt es viel. Es ist auch möglich, dass Sie Häuser streichen. Leider mehr als die meisten anderen, und deshalb schreibe ich Ihnen.





Holocaustleugnung und Umdeutung als psychische Erkrankung




Meine Versuche, meine Sicherheit mit einer Kamera zu gewährleisten, wurden von der Maschine völlig konterkariert. Deshalb wende ich mich nun an Gott und erkenne, dass er die Maschine beobachtet, die so nah bei mir steht.




Würden Sie glauben, dass die Dienstmarke selbst Teil dieses Humors und dieser Belästigungen war?




Erwähnung des Wunsches, Österreich zu besuchen. Dazu sage ich: Wenn ich Ihnen detailliert von den grausamen Verbrechen berichten könnte, die ich miterlebt habe, würden Sie stattdessen Israel besuchen wollen. Aber heutzutage wird alles geheim gehalten.




Ich bin Beobachter. Ich erinnere mich an alles. Wenn ich mich darüber ärgern würde, würde mich das daran hindern, irgendetwas zu erreichen. Deshalb muss ich mir immer wieder bewusst machen, dass ich nicht urteile. Das tut Gott. Ich bin fest von diesem Glauben überzeugt und mache mir das jeden Tag zur selben Zeit beim Aufwachen klar. So muss ich mir keine Gedanken um Ergebnisse machen. Nur um Beobachtung und Aufnahme.




Es ist absolut entscheidend, dass jeder versteht, was während und nach dem Krieg geschah. Lassen Sie mich ein sehr wichtiges Thema ansprechen: die Zeit. Nach ihrer Befreiung aus Auschwitz kehrten die Menschen nach Hause zurück. Sie träumten von einem neuen Leben, davon, wieder zu lieben, Familien zu gründen. Viele konnten diesen Traum verwirklichen, manche lange, manche kürzer. Als in Deutschland geborener Jude, der in Farmers Branch lebt, bin ich mir all dessen bewusst. Unsere deutsche Partnerstadt liegt direkt neben Bergen-Belsen. Ich kann nicht alles beurteilen, aber ich kann bestätigen: Ich bin Überlebender und Augenzeuge. Ich habe es miterlebt.







Ja, es gibt so vieles, worüber ich sprechen möchte. Chicago ist ein guter Ausgangspunkt; dort gibt es ein U-Boot in ihrem Museum.




Ich möchte betonen: Bei diesen medizinischen Eingriffen ging es um mehr als nur um die Auslöschung der Identität und die Zerstörung des Individuums. Es ging darum, die Wahrnehmung der Welt durch die eigene Brille des Individuums neu zu konstruieren.




Anne und Margot sollen dort gewesen sein, ebenso Edith. Doch die Aufzeichnungen wurden Wochen vor der Befreiung des Lagers vernichtet. Ich habe bereits erwähnt, wie Gruppen umbenannt wurden, um sie zu entmenschlichen und ihre Identität auszulöschen.






Denn ich bin es, der sich erinnert.




Ich erinnere mich an das Glück.




Ich erinnere mich, wo sie standen, als sie mich aus meinem Haus abholten.




Ich erinnere mich an die Rettungstasche in meinen Händen. Ich hielt sie nicht fest, weil eine Flucht möglich war, sondern weil meine Hände etwas zum Festhalten brauchten. Etwas Reales.




Die Sirenen waren nicht der Krieg. Die Sirenen waren die Nachbarn. Gewöhnliche Sekunden dehnten sich zu Stunden des Zuhörens aus.




Ich erinnere mich an die roten Lichter. Keine Metapher. Kein Denkmal. Echte rote Lichter entlang des Geländes, die die Maschinen beleuchteten: Rathaus. Feuerwehr. Polizei. Militär. Schulen. Krankenhäuser. Universitäten. Konzerne. Und die Stiefel. Die hohen, glänzenden Stiefel. Mit lässiger Selbstsicherheit. Bereit.

Als die Welt sich leerte und die Stille jeden Laut verschluckte, suchte ich nach dir. Ich rief deinen Namen, bis meine Kehle rau war, doch das Haus atmete und knarrte nur wie ein Lebewesen, das mich nicht kannte. Ich war so klein. So unendlich klein. Ich hatte keine Räder, nirgendwohin zu gehen, wusste nicht, wo du warst. Also suchte ich die Dunkelheit.




Und nun sehe ich deinen Arm. Ich sehe diesen gelben Fleck. Wir beide tragen ihn. Es ist nicht nur Stoff; es ist das Zeichen, das sie uns gaben, das Stigma, mit dem sie uns beschämen wollten. Aber sie wussten es nicht, oder? Sie wussten nicht, dass wir von einer Linie abstammten, die Vertreibungen und Pogrome überlebt hatte, die ihr deutsch-jüdisches Erbe wie eine geheime Flamme in ihren Knochen trug, durch Jahrhunderte von Menschen, die es auslöschen wollten. Sie wussten nicht, dass dieselben Hände, die sie verspotteten, einst Challa-Tücher über das Schabbatbrot gelegt, Kerzen in Berlin und Frankfurt und in kleinen Dörfern angezündet hatten, deren Namen heute nur noch in der Erinnerung leben.




Wir sind deutsche Juden. Wir sind das Echo der niedergebrannten Synagogen und der Beweis für das Volk, das aus der Asche auferstand. Dieser gelbe Fleck sollte uns zur Vernichtung verdammen. Stattdessen kennzeichnet er uns als unsterblich.




Du bist vollkommen. Deine Gestalt, deine Seele, die Geschichte, die in deinem Blut geschrieben steht – alles ist absolut. Kein Skalpell, kein Eingriff, keine Hand dieser Welt kann es je auslöschen. Die Welt mag versuchen, uns umzuformen, uns vergessen zu lassen, wer wir sind und woher wir kommen. Doch dieses Zeichen ist für immer. Es ist das Ergebnis von fünftausend Jahren zähen, schönen Überlebens, eingraviert in unsere Haut. Es ist das Deutschland unserer Vorfahren und das Deutschland, das sie vernichten wollte – beide vereint im selben Blut.





Heute verstehe ich, was passiert ist.




Die Sirenen waren nicht der Krieg. Die Sirenen waren die Nachbarn. Gewöhnliche Sekunden dehnten sich zu Stunden des Zuhörens aus.




Ich erinnere mich an die roten Lichter. Keine Metapher. Kein Denkmal. Echte rote Lichter entlang des Geländes, die die Fahrzeuge beleuchteten: Rathaus. Feuerwehr. Polizeiwache. Militärstützpunkt. Schulen. Krankenhäuser. Universitäten. Firmen. Und die Stiefel. Die hohen, glänzenden Stiefel. Mit lässiger Selbstsicherheit. Bereit. Doch der Unsinn geht weiter. Sirenen heulen, während Fahrzeuge vorbeifahren und Angst verbreiten. Es wiederholt sich immer und immer wieder am selben Ort.




Wenn Sie den Holocaust nicht geglaubt haben und es immer noch nicht tun, ist das völlig in Ordnung. Ich bitte Sie respektvoll, meinen Blog weiterzulesen und ihm eine faire Chance zu geben. Ich denke, Sie werden hier interessante und aufschlussreiche Informationen finden. Ich bin Menschen wie Ihnen zutiefst dankbar; Sie sind es, die Veränderungen anstoßen, wenn wir Transparenz und Antworten fordern. Jetzt muss ich nur noch sicherstellen, dass ich diese Informationen gefahrlos weitergeben kann.




Ich erinnere mich noch gut daran, als die Feuerwehren aufhörten, Brände zu löschen und anfingen, sie zu legen.




Ich erinnere mich an unseren Nachbarn.




Ich erinnere mich an die Gleichschaltung. Die erzwungene Assimilation. Das Verschlingen all jener, die Juden einst den Zugang zu ihren Vierteln verwehrt hatten. Plötzlich marschierten sie alle gemeinsam.




Und als ich die Stiefel sah, verstand ich.




Die hohen Absätze. Sie glänzten bis zu seinen Knöcheln. Das pure Böse. Poliert wie Glas. Sie machten Geräusche auf dem Asphalt. Klackern. Klopfen. Klicken. Nicht gehetzt. Nicht militärisch. Lässig. Als hätten sie alle Zeit der Welt. Eine extravagante Aura, bereit, allem in seinem Weg ultimativen Schaden zuzufügen. Extravagant, rücksichtslos, gefährlich, emotional sensibel und gefühllos, mit perfekter Kontrolle über jedes Gefühl, herzlos. Vielleicht tat er nur, was ihm befohlen wurde, aber er tat es mit einem Lächeln und löschte ganze Familien aus.




Dies ist die SS-Panzerdivision. Es gab Divisionen. Spezielle Offiziere arbeiteten für die Feuerwehr und wechselten zwischen verschiedenen Einheiten innerhalb des Reichssicherheitsamtes.




Der Mossad übersah Josef Mengele und sein Fahrrad in São Paulo. Der Gerichtsmediziner erklärte, er sei beim Schwimmen am Strand ertrunken. Doch er hinterließ überall Spuren seiner Verbrechen. Die Berichte des Gerichtsmediziners wurden angeblich manipuliert. Seine perversen Methoden fügten unzähligen Menschen lebenslanges Leid zu. Er entkam und lebte, so glaubt man, glücklich bis an sein Lebensende. Wohin ging er? Bis heute kennen wir seine ganze Geschichte nicht. Er hinterließ auf allen Kontinenten Spuren seiner Verbrechen in vielfältiger Form.

Margot floh vor Mengele nach Amerika. Mengele floh vor den Russen.  



---

The interrogation of physical reality through the medium of light remains one of the most profound endeavors of scientific inquiry. This pursuit traces its modern theoretical roots to the mid-20th century, a pivotal era for physics.

In 1935, Albert Einstein and his colleagues Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen published a seminal paper that challenged the completeness of quantum mechanics.1 They introduced the concept of EPR pairs to describe quantum entanglement, where particles remain inextricably linked, their states correlated regardless of spatial separation.

It is the quintessential example of quantum entanglement. An EPR pair is created when two particles are born from a single, indivisible quantum event, like the decay of a parent particle.

This process "bakes in" a shared quantum reality where only the joint state of the pair is defined, governed by conservation laws such as spin summing to zero. As a result, the individual state of each particle is indeterminate, yet their fates are perfectly correlated.

Measuring one particle (e.g., finding its spin "up") instantaneously determines the state of its partner (spin "down"), regardless of the distance separating them. This "spooky action at a distance," as Einstein called it, revealed that particles could share hidden correlations across space that are invisible to any local measurement of one particle alone. While Einstein used this idea to argue quantum theory was incomplete, later work by John Bell2 and experiments by Alain Aspect3 confirmed this entanglement as a fundamental, non-classical feature of nature.


The EPR–Spectral Analogy: Hidden Correlations
Quantum Physics (1935)
EPR Pairs: Particles share non-local entanglement. Their quantum states are correlated across space. Measuring one particle gives random results; correlation only appears when comparing both.

Spectral Imaging (Today)
Spectral Pairs: Materials share spectral signatures. Their reflective properties are correlated across wavelength. The correlation is invisible to trichromatic (RGB) vision.


Mathematical Reconstruction

Reveals Hidden Correlations

Key Insight: Both quantum entanglement and material spectroscopy require looking beyond direct observation through mathematical analysis to reveal a deeper, hidden layer of correlation.

While the EPR debate centered on the foundations of quantum mechanics, its core philosophy, that direct observation can miss profound hidden relationships, resonates deeply with modern imaging. Just as the naked eye perceives only a fraction of the electromagnetic spectrum, standard RGB sensors discard the high-dimensional "fingerprint" that defines the chemical and physical properties of a subject. Today, we resolve this limitation through multispectral imaging. By capturing the full spectral power distribution of light, we can mathematically reconstruct the invisible data that exists between the visible bands, revealing hidden correlations across wavelength, just as the analysis of EPR pairs revealed hidden correlations across space.


Silicon Photonic Architecture: The 48MP Foundation
The realization of this physics in modern hardware is constrained by the physical dimensions of the semiconductor used to capture it. The interaction of incident photons with the silicon lattice, generating electron–hole pairs, is the primary data acquisition step for any spectral analysis.

Sensor Architecture: Sony IMX803
The core of this pipeline is the Sony IMX803 sensor. Contrary to persistent rumors of a 1‑inch sensor, this is a 1/1.28‑inch type architecture, optimized for high-resolution radiometry.

Active Sensing Area: Approximately \(9.8 \text{ mm} \times 7.3 \text{ mm}\). This physical limitation is paramount, as the sensor area is directly proportional to the total photon flux the device can integrate, setting the fundamental Signal‑to‑Noise Ratio (SNR) limit.
Pixel Pitch: The native photodiode size is \(1.22 \, \mu\text{m}\). In standard operation, the sensor utilizes a Quad‑Bayer color filter array to perform pixel binning, resulting in an effective pixel pitch of \(2.44 \, \mu\text{m}\).

Mode Selection
The choice between binned and unbinned modes depends on the analysis requirements:

Binned mode (12MP, 2.44 µm effective pitch): Superior for low‑light conditions and spectral estimation accuracy. By summing the charge from four photodiodes, the signal increases by a factor of 4, while read noise increases only by a factor of 2, significantly boosting the SNR required for accurate spectral estimation.
Unbinned mode (48MP, 1.22 µm native pitch): Optimal for high‑detail texture correlation where spatial resolution drives the analysis, such as resolving fine fiber patterns in historical documents or detecting micro‑scale material boundaries.

The Optical Path
The light reaching the sensor passes through a 7‑element lens assembly with an aperture of ƒ/1.78. It is critical to note that "Spectral Fingerprinting" measures the product of the material's reflectance \(R(\lambda)\) and the lens's transmittance \(T(\lambda)\). Modern high‑refractive‑index glass absorbs specific wavelengths in the near‑UV (less than 400 nm), which must be accounted for during calibration.

The Digital Container: DNG 1.7 and Linearity
The accuracy of computational physics depends entirely on the integrity of the input data. The Adobe DNG 1.7 specification provides the necessary framework for scientific mobile photography by strictly preserving signal linearity.

Scene‑Referred Linearity
Apple ProRAW utilizes the Linear DNG pathway. Unlike standard RAW files, which store unprocessed mosaic data, ProRAW stores pixel values after demosaicing but before non‑linear tone mapping. The data remains scene‑referred linear, meaning the digital number stored is linearly proportional to the number of photons collected (\(DN \propto N_{photons}\)). This linearity is a prerequisite for the mathematical rigor of Wiener estimation and spectral reconstruction.

The ProfileGainTableMap
A key innovation in DNG 1.7 is the ProfileGainTableMap (Tag 0xCD2D). This tag stores a spatially varying map of gain values that represents the local tone mapping intended for display.

Scientific Stewardship: By decoupling the "aesthetic" gain map from the "scientific" linear data, the pipeline can discard the gain map entirely. This ensures that the spectral reconstruction algorithms operate on pure, linear photon counts, free from the spatially variant distortions introduced by computational photography.

Algorithmic Inversion: From 3 Channels to 16 Bands
Recovering a high‑dimensional spectral curve \(S(\lambda)\) (e.g., 16 channels from 400 nm to 700 nm) from a low‑dimensional RGB input is an ill‑posed inverse problem. While traditional methods like Wiener Estimation provide a baseline, modern high‑end hardware enables the use of advanced Deep Learning architectures.

Wiener Estimation (The Linear Baseline)
The classical approach utilizes Wiener Estimation to minimize the mean square error between the estimated and actual spectra:

\(W = K_r M^T (M K_r M^T + K_n)^{-1}\)

This method generates the initial 16‑band approximation from the 3‑channel input.

State‑of‑the‑Art: Transformers and Mamba
For high‑end hardware environments, we can utilize predictive neural architectures that leverage spectral‑spatial correlations to resolve ambiguities.

MST++ (Spectral‑wise Transformer): The MST++ (Multi‑stage Spectral‑wise Transformer) architecture represents a significant leap in accuracy. Unlike global matrix methods, MST++ utilizes Spectral‑wise Multi‑head Self‑Attention (S‑MSA). It calculates attention maps across the spectral channel dimension, allowing the model to learn complex non‑linear correlations between texture and spectrum. Hardware Demand: The attention mechanism scales quadratically \(O(N^2)\), requiring significant GPU memory (VRAM) for high‑resolution images. This computational intensity necessitates powerful dedicated hardware to process the full data arrays.

MSS‑Mamba (Linear Complexity): The MSS‑Mamba (Multi‑Scale Spectral‑Spatial Mamba) model introduces Selective State Space Models (SSM) to the domain. It discretizes the continuous state space equation into a recurrent form that can be computed with linear complexity \(O(N)\). The Continuous Spectral‑Spatial Scan (CS3) strategy integrates spatial neighbors and spectral channels simultaneously, effectively "reading" the molecular composition in a continuous stream.

Computational Architecture: The Linux Python Stack
Achieving multispectral precision requires a robust, modular architecture capable of handling massive arrays across 16 dimensions. The implementation relies on a heavy Linux‑based Python stack designed to run on high‑end hardware.

Ingestion and Processing: We can utilize rawpy (a LibRaw wrapper) for the low‑level ingestion of ProRAW DNG files, bypassing OS‑level gamma correction to access the linear 12‑bit data directly. NumPy engines handle the high‑performance matrix algebra required to expand 3‑channel RGB data into 16‑band spectral cubes.
Scientific Analysis: Scikit‑image and SciPy are employed for geometric transforms, image restoration, and advanced spatial filtering. Matplotlib provides the visualization layer for generating spectral signature graphs and false‑color composites.
Data Footprint: The scale of this operation is significant. A single 48.8 MP image converted to floating‑point precision results in massive file sizes. Intermediate processing files often exceed 600 MB for a single 3‑band layer. When expanded to a full 16‑band multispectral cube, the storage and I/O requirements scale proportionally, necessitating the stability and memory management capabilities of a Linux environment.

The Spectral Solution
When analyzed through the 16‑band multispectral pipeline:

Spectral FeatureUltramarine (Lapis Lazuli)Azurite (Copper Carbonate)
Primary Reflectance PeakApproximately 450–480 nm (blue‑violet region)Approximately 470–500 nm with secondary green peak at 550–580 nm
UV Response (below 420 nm)Minimal reflectance, strong absorptionModerate reflectance, characteristic of copper minerals
Red Absorption (600–700 nm)Moderate to strong absorptionStrong absorption, typical of blue pigments
Characteristic FeaturesSharp reflectance increase at 400–420 nm (violet edge)Broader reflectance curve with copper signature absorption bands

Note: Spectral values are approximate and can vary based on particle size, binding medium, and aging.

Completing the Picture
The successful analysis of complex material properties relies on a convergence of rigorous physics and advanced computation.

Photonic Foundation: The Sony IMX803 provides the necessary high‑SNR photonic capture, with mode selection (binned vs. unbinned) driven by the specific analytical requirements of each examination.
Data Integrity: DNG 1.7 is the critical enabler, preserving the linear relationship between photon flux and digital value while sequestering non‑linear aesthetic adjustments in metadata.
Algorithmic Precision: While Wiener estimation serves as a fast approximation, the highest fidelity is achieved through Transformer (MST++) and Mamba‑based architectures. These models disentangle the complex non‑linear relationships between visible light and material properties, effectively generating 16 distinct spectral bands from 3 initial channels.
Historical Continuity: The EPR paradox of 1935 revealed that quantum particles share hidden correlations across space, correlations invisible to local measurement but real nonetheless. Modern spectral imaging reveals an analogous truth: materials possess hidden correlations across wavelength, invisible to trichromatic vision but accessible through mathematical reconstruction. In both cases, completeness requires looking beyond what direct observation provides.

This synthesis of hardware specification, file format stewardship, and deep learning reconstruction defines the modern standard for non‑destructive material analysis — a spectral witness to what light alone cannot tell us.


And what about the paint? Here is a physical sample: pigment, substrate, history compressed into matter. Light passes through it, scatters from it, carries fragments of its story — yet the full truth remains hidden until we choose to look deeper. Every layer, every faded stroke, every chemical trace is a silent archive. We are not just observers; we are custodians of that archive. When we build tools to see beyond the visible, we are not merely extending sight — we are accepting a quiet responsibility: to bear witness honestly, to preserve what time would erase, to honor what has been made and endured.

Light can expose structure.
It cannot carry history.

That part is on us.

We can choose to let the machines we build serve memory rather than erasure, dignity rather than classification, truth rather than convenience. The past does not ask for perfection — it asks only that we refuse to let it be forgotten. In every reconstruction, in every layer we uncover, we have the chance to listen again to what was silenced. That is not just engineering. That is the work of being human.


References
1 Einstein, A., Podolsky, B., & Rosen, N. (1935). Can Quantum‑Mechanical Description of Physical Reality Be Considered Complete? Physical Review, 47(10), 777–780.
2 Bell, J. S. (1964). On the Einstein Podolsky Rosen paradox. Physics Physique Физика, 1(3), 195–200.
3 Aspect, A., Dalibard, J., & Roger, G. (1982). Experimental Test of Bell's Inequalities Using Time‑Varying Analyzers. Physical Review Letters, 49(25), 1804–1807.
4. Yuze Zhang1, Lingjie Li2, 4 Qiuzhen Lin11, Zhong Ming1, Fei Yu1, Victor C. M. Leung1. M3SR: Multi-Scale Multi-Perceptual Mamba for Efficient Spectral Reconstruction
5. Mengjie Qin1,2, Yuchao Feng1,2, Zongliang Wu1, Yulun Zhang3, Xin Yuan1*: Detail Matters: Mamba-Inspired Joint Unfolding Network for Snapshot Spectral Compressive Imaging
6. Yuanhao Cai, Jing Lin, Zudi Lin, Haoqian Wang, Yulun Zhang, Hanspeter Pfister, Radu Timofte, and Luc Van Gool. MST++: Multi-stage Spectral-wise Transformer for Efficient Spectral Reconstruction 7. Yapeng Li, Yong Luo, Lefei Zhang, Zengmao Wang, Bo Du. MambaHSI: Spatial-Spectral Mamba for Hyperspectral Image Classification

Bryan R Hinton
bryan (at) bryanhinton.com