Recent experimental interest in the Migdal effect has demonstrated that impulsive nuclear recoil can induce non-adiabatic electronic excitation in bound matter. In a prior work, this phenomenon was reinterpreted within Time-Scalar Field Theory (TSFT) as a manifestation of temporal coherence shear between nuclear and electronic scalar-time response layers. In this paper, we extend that framework by replacing impulsive recoil with explicitly driven source terms, representing electromagnetic torsion-stress, lattice strain, and angular momentum transfer. We derive a generalized driven temporal-shear equation and analyze resonance, phase-window amplification, and echo-like relaxation signatures that arise when scalar-time subsystems are coherently forced. The model predicts material- and geometry-dependent thresholds for non-adiabaticexcitation without net mass transport, providing a pathway for tabletop experimental probes of temporal microstructure using pulsed electromagnetic and mechanical excitation. All dynamics remain conservation-compliant and reduce to standard Migdal behavior in the impulsive limit.
Jordan Gabriel Farrell (Wed,) studied this question.