AbstractModern computational systems approach fundamental limits of performance due tothermal instability, noise amplification, and architectural rigidity. As computationaldensity increases, systems increasingly experience emergent instability resemblingchaotic dynamics.This paper introduces the Zero-Point Evolution Tracker (ZET) architecture — aself-stabilizing processor design that continuously measures its own physical noisestate and dynamically reorganizes computation to prevent instability.The ZET architecture combines:● graphene-based high-mobility logic layers● quantum noise sensors● diffusion-based stability propagation● predictive instability detectionBy computing a stability index G=γ/aC the system predicts the onset of chaotic behavior and proactively restructures itscomputational topology. The result is a new class of adaptive computing hardware capable of maintainingstability under extreme computational loads, with potential applications in quantumcomputing, plasma control, planetary-scale energy systems, and high-complexitysimulations.
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Roman Lukin
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Roman Lukin (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69b25b1996eeacc4fcec9770 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18940817