Chronometric Closure Paper I: Robust Microscopic Source Closure Beyond Gaussian-Ohmic Environments Tovi Zituny — Independent Researcher, May 2026 Overview This paper is the first in the Chronometric Closure Series, a set of papers addressing the open closure burdens identified in the CIFT–CMM–CUP chronometric trilogy (Zituny, 2026a, 2026b, 2026c). It addresses the first closure burden of the programme: robust microscopic source closure for the chronometric maintenance source beyond the controlled Gaussian-Ohmic model class established in CUP. The CUP volume derived the effective chronometric maintenance coefficients κM = gM²ηM and ξM = 2gM²ηMᴛE within a single Gaussian-Ohmic model class and introduced Lemma 3', which showed that the original CMM maintenance source is recovered as a record-dominated, coefficient-controlled, low-frequency limit of a more general two-channel source. The present paper asks whether the two-channel source structure itself arises robustly across a broader class of admissible open chronometric environments, rather than being an artefact of the specific Gaussian-Ohmic model. Main Result The paper defines a class of admissible open chronometric environments (E1–E9) characterized by stationarity, causal retarded response, positive semidefinite spectral density, finite correlation scales, analytic Ohmic low-frequency expansion, short-range spatial response, and channel-projection compatibility. Within this class, it is shown that the generalized chronometric source Jₛourceᵍeneral = κR D∂_τ log R + κD R∂τ log D − Ξ∇ ∇² log χ + O (∂_τ², ∇⁴, ℓ²) arises as the local Markovian limit of the open-system influence functional. The dissipative coefficients κR and κD are determined by the low-frequency absorptive part of the retarded response matrix. The noise covariance is supplied by the Keldysh sector. The spatial-gradient coefficient Ξ_∇ is obtained from the k²-term in the short-range spatial response kernel. In thermal or KMS-like environments, the low-frequency fluctuation-dissipation relation connects the noise matrix to the dissipative matrix; in non-KMS environments, noise positivity is retained without a simple thermal proportionality. Under the additional record-dominated and coefficient-suppressed conditions of Lemma 3' — max (εD, ε_κ) ≪ 1 — the generalized source reduces to the original CMM maintenance source. The Gaussian-Ohmic result of CUP is recovered as the rank-one, thermal, single-channel special case of the general theorem. This upgrades the first closure burden of the chronometric programme from model-specific Gaussian-Ohmic closure to conditional robust closure over an explicitly delimited admissible environment class. Claim Status The result is a conditional source-closure theorem, not a universal microscopic derivation. It assumes channel-projection compatibility (E7): the environmental response is assumed to project onto the chronometric channels D∂_τ log R, R∂_τ log D, and ∇² log χ. Deriving this projection from a deeper chronometric operator algebra is identified as the principal remaining open assumption of the source-closure sector and is addressed in Chronometric Closure Paper II. The proofs are derivation-level open-system reductions in the standard Schwinger-Keldysh and open-EFT sense; they are not fully rigorous operator-algebraic existence theorems for arbitrary microscopic completions. Structure The paper contains eleven sections. Sections 1–2 place the result within the trilogy and explain why the Gaussian-Ohmic closure is insufficient. Section 3 defines the admissible environment class. Sections 4–7 prove the four conditional lemmas (S3. 1–S3. 4) covering retarded response, Keldysh noise, spatial-gradient, and CMM recovery. Section 8 assembles the full conditional theorem. Section 9 identifies failure classes and scope limits. Section 10 assesses implications for the closure programme. Section 11 concludes. A claim-status summary table is provided.
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