Time Dilation from Quantum Substrate Dynamics: A Coherence-Based Origin for Relativistic Delay

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Time dilation is a well-established relativistic effect, yet its physical origin remains undefined within traditional geometric frameworks. In this work, we derive time dilation from first principles using the Quantum Substrate Dynamics (QSD) model, where time emerges as a quantized delay associated with local phase coherence recovery. In this view, each region of space is characterized by a coherence support length (Lcoh), and time flows at a rate determined by the scalar recovery speed (cs): τ(x) = Lcoh(x) / cs Gravitational dilation arises from stretch in the coherence field near a mass-phase, while kinematic effects emerge from projection of motion into the substrate's scalar recovery bandwidth. Together, these mechanisms yield a unified expression for time dilation without reference to coordinate transformations or invariant light speed.The resulting equation matches observed effects—including GPS clock offsets and muon lifetime extension—using only physically interpretable substrate terms. This approach replaces abstract geometry with a conserved coherence field, providing the first axiom-free, mechanical explanation of relativistic time delay. In doing so, QSD reframes time as a dynamic, field-based phenomenon grounded in substrate deformation rather than observation.

Article activity feed