This paper develops a conservation-compatible phenomenological framework for analyzing whether highly coherent nonequilibrium electromagnetic systems could exhibit transient stress–energy redistribution effects under specialized resonant conditions. Rather than proposing reactionless propulsion or violations of momentum conservation, the work examines how effective stress transfer, delayed relaxation dynamics, cavity asymmetry, and environmental coupling might produce bounded force-like behavior while preserving global conservation laws and center-of-mass consistency. Grounded in classical electrodynamics, Maxwell stress-tensor analysis, and effective-field phenomenology, the paper emphasizes falsifiability, artifact discrimination, environmental bookkeeping, and strict conservation closure. The analysis argues that even robust null experimental results would provide valuable constraints on hypothetical emergent nonequilibrium electrodynamic response sectors.
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Erick Sangalang
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Erick Sangalang (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69f2a47b8c0f03fd6776377b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19867622
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