Published March 1, 2026 | Version v1
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The Coherence Boundary—A New Object in Subatomic Physics

Description

If frictionless persistence of subatomic particle rotation is enforced by coherence constraints in a particle-supporting environment, then dissipation and coupling to ordinary laboratory degrees of freedom must occur at a boundary where those constraints fail. This paper examines the physical properties of that boundary region, treated not as a geometric surface but as a dynamical interface between two regimes with different allowed processes. Without assuming detailed microphysics, we define a small set of operational boundary parameters—effective thickness, coupling strength, anisotropy, thresholds, dissipation localization, and memory—and show how they map onto long-standing experimental observables in nuclear, atomic, and solid-state physics. We argue that many phenomena traditionally interpreted as intrinsic nuclear or environmental effects may instead be boundary-mediated manifestations of coherence breakdown. A set of discriminating experimental signatures is presented that can distinguish boundary-dominated coupling from bulk dissipation or intrinsic-property models using existing techniques. The aim is to place the coherence-boundary concept at direct experimental risk and to clarify whether such a boundary constitutes a real physical object with measurable properties.

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