This work formulates a structural unification theorem for admissible spectral systems. The central result shows that several geometric, dynamical, thermodynamic, and topological structures arise from a common Dirac-type generator. Within this framework, the metric sector is reconstructed using the Connes spectral distance formula. The dynamical sector is governed by the spectral action functional, whose stationary points determine the semiclassical configurations of the theory. When the associated Hamiltonian possesses a positive spectral gap, the excited sector of the Gibbs state is exponentially suppressed at low temperature. The protected ground-state sector is described by a projection density matrix that is invariant under the effective dynamics and has vanishing von Neumann entropy. In addition, the same operator framework determines global topological invariants. In particular, the analytic index of the Dirac-type operator coincides with its Atiyah–Singer topological expression, and the associated determinant structure yields the Ray–Singer analytic torsion. Taken together, these results show that metric reconstruction, spectral dynamics, semiclassical structure, gap-protected stability, protected invariant states, analytic torsion, and index-theoretic invariants can be viewed as consequences of a single spectral operator architecture. The paper summarizes these relations through a unified spectral identity that expresses how the Dirac-type generator simultaneously determines the metric distance, spectral action, semiclassical sector, thermodynamic stability, torsion invariant, and index.
Andrew Kim (Fri,) studied this question.