Spectral Kernel Dynamics via Maximum Caliber: Fixed Points, Geodesics, and Phase Transitions
Abstract
We derive a closed-form geometric functional for kernel dynamics on finite graphs by applying the Maximum Caliber (MaxCal) variational principle to the spectral transfer function h(lambda) of the graph Laplacian eigenbasis. The main result is that the MaxCal stationarity condition decouples into N one-dimensional problems with explicit solution: h*(lambdal) = h0(lambdal) exp(-1 - Tl[h*]), yielding self-consistent (fixed-point) kernels via exponential tilting (Corollary 1), log-linear Fisher-Rao geodesics (Corollary 2), a diagonal Hessian stability criterion (Corollary 3), and an l2+ isometry for the spectral kernel space (Proposition 3). The spectral entropy H[ht] provides a computable O(N) early-warning signal for network-structural phase transitions (Remark 7). All claims are numerically verified on the path graph P8 with a Gaussian mutual-information source, using the open-source kernelcal library. The framework is grounded in a structural analogy with Einstein's field equations, used as a guiding template rather than an established equivalence; explicit limits are stated in Section 6.
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