Phenomenon Boundary Archive
The boundaries of a phenomenon are often more important than the standard result itself.
This archive does not record batches that meet release conditions. It records the moment when a phenomenon begins to deviate from its original observational range.
These deviations may come from: differences in thermal absorption, changes in development conditions, speed of structural transition, changes in raw material condition, or inconsistency between sensory expression and expected observational results.
They do not necessarily represent a decline in quality. More often, they simply indicate entry into another sensory region that has not yet been defined.
In SUNNY M Lab, deviation is not a discarded result. It is important observational data used to understand the system, its range, and its mechanism.
Because what truly defines a system is usually not when it is most stable. It is where it begins to leave its original observational range.
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It holds while hot. As it cools, the structure breaks.
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The curve is still present, but energy briefly stops speaking.
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It looks like it's changing. It isn't.
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You adjusted. Then adjusted again. The coffee absorbed all of it at once.
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The cup is present. Nothing is happening.
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The curve looked smooth. The cup showed accumulated overcorrection.
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The curve looked continuous. The cup showed the gap.
Each entry describes a boundary condition: the conditions under which a phenomenon stops holding. This is not an evaluation of batch quality. It is a record of where the system ends.