A simple dynamical model, Biased Random Organization, BRO, appears to produce
configurations known as Random Close Packing (RCP) as BRO's densest critical
point in dimension d=3. We conjecture that BRO likewise produces RCP in any
dimension; if so, then RCP does not exist in d=1β2 (where BRO dynamics lead
to crystalline order). In d=3β5, BRO produces isostatic configurations and
previously estimated RCP volume fractions 0.64, 0.46, and 0.30, respectively.
For all investigated dimensions (d=2β5), we find that BRO belongs to the
Manna universality class of dynamical phase transitions by measuring critical
exponents associated with the steady-state activity and the long-range density
fluctuations. Additionally, BRO's distribution of near-contacts (gaps) displays
behavior consistent with the infinite-dimensional theoretical treatment of RCP
when dβ₯4. The association of BRO's densest critical configurations with
Random Close Packing implies that RCP's upper-critical dimension is consistent
with the Manna class ducβ=4