Continuous Formulation for Moving Consolidation Boundaries
RESEARCH - Advanced MathematicsThis document presents the continuous Reynolds Transport Theorem using fluid mechanics notation (\(\int_{\Omega(t)} \rho \, dV\), \(\partial \Omega(t)\), \(\mathbf{v} \cdot \mathbf{n}\)). This is intended for mathematicians and physicists, not accounting practitioners.
If you're an accountant: Skip this page and go directly to Multi-Entity Continuity, which presents the discrete accounting version without PDE notation.
The continuous Reynolds Transport Theorem (Reynolds, 1903; Truesdell & Toupin, 1960) describes how quantities change in a control volume whose boundary moves over time. The classical formulation is:
In accounting terms:
The accounting framework uses a discrete analog of Reynolds Transport:
Where:
The connection is a discrete-continuous analogy (graph theory ↔ differential geometry), not a literal coordinate transformation or rigorous limit theorem. The discrete accounting formulation is inspired by RTT structure but is not derived from continuum mechanics via graph limits.
Mathematical Rigor Note: A formal discrete→continuous correspondence would require establishing graph limit theory (Lovász & Szegedy 2006, Borgs et al. 2008) or discrete exterior calculus (Desbrun et al. 2005). This is pedagogical analogy, not proven reduction. See DISCRETE_RTT_THEOREM.md for the standalone discrete formulation.
To rigorously derive the discrete accounting equation from the continuous RTT would require proving that accounting graphs converge to a smooth manifold Ω(t) in an appropriate topology. Relevant frameworks include:
Current status: The discrete accounting formulation stands on its own merits (proven correct via Kirchhoff's Law and incidence matrix algebra). The continuous RTT provides intuition and pedagogical value for readers with physics/engineering backgrounds but is not mathematically necessary for the discrete results.
The complete continuous formulation with classical derivation, healthcare application, and discrete mapping is available in the markdown version:
Contents: Classical RTT derivation, Leibniz rule, material derivative, boundary velocity, healthcare episode example, references to Reynolds (1903) and Truesdell & Toupin (1960).