Long Description Coherence Physics introduces the Standard Coherence Fidelity Layer (SCFL): a proposed real-time observability framework for detecting upstream synchronization degradation across interdependent systems before visible operational failure occurs. Conventional infrastructure tools largely measure: topology, dependencies, utilization, outages, and post-failure conditions. SCFL proposes a different measurement primitive: the synchronization state of operational seams themselves. Rather than asking only: what depends on what,SCFL attempts to measure: how coherent those dependencies remain in real time. The manuscript introduces: coherence tensors, drift velocity, recoverability windows, propagation geometry, and seam-level observability as candidate operational variables for identifying instability before cascade emergence. The framework is positioned within the historical evolution of observability science, tracing conceptual lineage through: phasor measurement units (PMUs), early-warning bifurcation theory, systemic risk metrics such as CoVaR, temporal synchronization analysis, resilience engineering, and infrastructure observability research. The manuscript distinguishes three validation tiers: Tier 1 — Operational Validation Real-world ERCOT grid stress telemetry and coherence-state reconstruction. Tier 2 — Retrospective Reconstruction Historical propagation analysis including: Texas Winter Storm 2021, Colonial Pipeline 2021, and Maui 2023. Tier 3 — Candidate Application Domains Healthcare, reinsurance, supply chain, maritime systems, AI/ML systems, manufacturing, airlines, institutional portfolios, and sovereign-scale coordination frameworks. The document further outlines: mathematical implementation concepts, parameter estimation pathways, deployment architectures, shadow-mode validation strategies, commercialization models, and long-term national-scale observability considerations. Importantly, the manuscript does not claim SCFL is fully operationalized across all domains. Instead, it argues that: the measurement substrate is coherent, initial operational validation exists, and broader deployment now depends on pilot integrations, telemetry access, and institutional collaboration. At its core, Coherence Physics argues that modern infrastructures suffer from a common blind spot: systems can remain structurally intact while synchronization coherence silently degrades upstream. SCFL is proposed as an attempt to measure that hidden deformation before rupture emerges.
Ronald Brogdon (Mon,) studied this question.
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