About the Institute

The Institute for Resonant Synthesis and Field Physics (IRSFP) is an independent research institute focused on theoretical and conceptual research at the intersection of quantum physics, thermodynamics, and information theory. The Institute was founded to develop new physical frameworks and methodological approaches where current models encounter formal or interpretative limits.

Mission

To deepen understanding of the fundamental principles of physical reality through analytical work, mathematically consistent models, and testable hypotheses that link energy, information, and time in quantum and mesoscopic systems.

Vision

To create an open scientific platform that continuously develops new theoretical frameworks, supports scholarly dialogue, and contributes to the design of future technologies—from energy-efficient computing architectures to a more precise understanding of the fundamental limits of physical processes.

Character and focus

The Institute is primarily oriented toward theoretical research, method development, and the design of experimentally testable protocols. In contrast to purely data-driven approaches, we emphasize conceptual work: precise definitions, model structure, and clear links between assumptions and predictions.

Our research focuses on domains where energetic costs, information flows, and temporal dynamics must be considered jointly—especially in quantum and mesoscopic regimes, where limits of reversibility, dissipation, and state control become apparent.

Principles and research standards

  • Logical and mathematical consistency – preference for models with explicit assumptions and derivable consequences.
  • Testability – emphasis on hypotheses that can be verified experimentally or by measurement.
  • Reproducibility and transparency – open publication of methods, versions, and sources whenever possible.
  • Scholarly dialogue – openness to critique, revision, and cross-disciplinary collaboration.
  • Long-term relevance – orientation toward results with fundamental or technological impact.

Main research areas

Information–Energetic Thermodynamics

Relationships between energy, information, and time; limits of reversibility, dissipation, and efficiency in quantum and mesoscopic systems.

Temporal dynamics and reversibility

The arrow of time, granularity, and time scales of processes in open systems; the role of feedback and state control.

Resonance and field synthesis

Interference, resonance, and nonlinear phenomena in electromagnetic, acoustic, and quantum fields within complex structures.

Models and experimental designs

Mathematical frameworks and protocols for hypothesis testing (e.g., in quantum thermodynamics, metrology, and computing architectures).

Methodology and workflow

Our work is grounded in integrating analytical physics, thermodynamics, and informational principles into unified, dimensionless metrics and consistent model structures. In practice, this involves:

  1. formulating clear assumptions and definitions,
  2. deriving the mathematical framework and its limits,
  3. translating theory into testable predictions,
  4. designing experimental verification (protocols, metrics, expected signals),
  5. public documentation of result development and iterative review.

Collaboration

The Institute is open to collaboration with academic institutions, laboratories, and technology partners. We prioritize projects that enable verifiable hypothesis testing, shared methodologies, and measurable outputs in the form of scholarly publications, preprints, or experimental protocols.

  • joint research projects and consultation of theoretical models,
  • design and validation of experimental protocols,
  • co-authored publications and professional dissemination of results.

Transparency and publishing

We strive for traceability and long-term sustainability of outputs. Accordingly, we are progressively building publicly accessible infrastructure for publications, preprints, and research materials that enable the scholarly community to follow the evolution of concepts and methods over time.

Interested in collaboration?

If you represent an academic institution, laboratory, or technology organization and are interested in joint research, consultation on theoretical models, or hypothesis testing, please contact us.

Interested in collaboration?

If you represent an academic institution, laboratory, or technology organization and are interested in joint research, consultation on theoretical models, or hypothesis testing, please contact us.

Founder and Director of the Institute
Martin Petrásek