This paper introduces Temporal Stability Architecture (TSA), a timing-centric electrical infrastructure framework focused on rapid-response transient stabilization within increasingly dynamic power grids. The work argues that modern grid resilience depends not only upon energy capacity, but also upon the ability to preserve synchronization and suppress instability propagation across millisecond-to-second timescales. TSA proposes distributed transient buffer nodes embedded throughout electrical infrastructure as localized damping and synchronization-preservation layers. Superconducting magnetic energy storage (SMES) systems are examined as a potential implementation pathway due to their ultra-fast discharge capability, high transient power density, and exceptional cycling tolerance. The framework distinguishes temporal stabilization infrastructure from conventional long-duration storage systems and positions transient damping, propagation suppression, and synchronization preservation as explicit infrastructural functions necessary for future renewable-intensive grids. This paper functions as a domain-specific implementation pathway within the broader Propagation-Aware Stabilization (PAS) framework.
Matthew Dominik (Fri,) studied this question.