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This manuscript develops a rigorous framework in which the distribution of the non-trivial zeros of the Riemann zeta function is reinterpreted through principles of spectral stability and arithmetic rigidity, rather than treated as an isolated conjecture. The central idea is to identify the zero configuration as a manifestation of microscopic arithmetic rigidity, where Dirichlet structures impose strong constraints on spectral behavior. Within this framework, the apparent freedom of the system is replaced by a highly constrained stability regime governing admissible configurations. We construct a family of Gram-type operators associated with finite Dirichlet packets, whose quadratic forms encode spectral interactions. A key result is the derivation of coercivity estimates that prevent degeneracy unless strict structural conditions are violated. Using Gevrey–Paley–Wiener decay, we show that long-range interactions between separated spectral clusters are exponentially suppressed, leading to an effective decomposition into nearly independent subsystems. This structure enables a contradiction mechanism that excludes persistent spectral collapse under admissible configurations. As a consequence, the framework demonstrates that any hypothetical zero off the critical line would induce instability in the associated quadratic form, violating the established rigidity conditions. In this sense, the critical line emerges as the unique configuration compatible with global spectral stability. Rather than claiming a direct proof, this work provides a structural reformulation of the Riemann Hypothesis as a rigidity and stability principle, aligning with modern spectral and operator-theoretic perspectives.
Joisy Sofia Marrugo (Sun,) studied this question.