This work presents a unified physical framework for analyzing the temporal stability and viability of complex physical systems operating under continuous stochastic perturbation. Rather than treating failure as an instantaneous event or vibration as a secondary artifact, the paper reframes stability as a dynamic temporal process governed by coherence preservation over time. The framework introduces Kappa (κ) as the minimal stochastic cost required for a system to maintain functional identity under persistent perturbations. Kappa is not defined as a force, energy, or material property, but as a coherence constraint manifested through damping, dissipation, and corrective regulation inherent to non-equilibrium physical systems. The study extends this framework through Delta GT (ΔGT), a temporal governance indicator describing the directional evolution of a system’s capacity to regulate its own dynamics. While Kappa characterizes baseline coherence viability, Delta GT captures whether governance capacity is improving or degrading under sustained stress. Delta GT is inferred from observable system behavior, including recovery time, vibrational variance, damping efficiency, and sensitivity to low-energy disturbances. Vibration is identified as the primary observable carrier of basal coherence cost and temporal governance drift. Statistical changes in vibrational patterns—such as spectral drift, delayed recovery, and amplification of minor perturbations—are shown to precede observable failure across multiple domains. The framework applies to a wide range of systems, including computational hardware, rotating machinery, civil infrastructure, electrical grids, and planetary-scale natural systems. It does not aim at deterministic failure prediction nor replace domain-specific models. Instead, it provides a transversal temporal governance layer that complements existing approaches by enabling earlier detection of coherence erosion and systemic fragility. By shifting the analytical focus from performance thresholds to temporal governance and coherence sustainability, this work contributes a physically grounded perspective on stability as the sustained ability of a system to recover and remain itself over time.
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Rafael Felippe VOIGT
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Rafael Felippe VOIGT (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/698585bd8f7c464f2300945d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18484073