Matthew Lukin Smawfield

Temporal Equivalence Principle: theory, empirical evidence, and astrophysical implications

What is the Temporal Equivalence Principle (TEP)?

The Temporal Equivalence Principle (TEP), proposed by Smawfield (2025), is a covariant scalar-tensor extension of general relativity in which proper time is a dynamical scalar field coupled to spacetime geometry. The framework employs a two-metric geometry in which gravity and matter couple to distinct metrics related by a conformal-disformal map, with a chameleon-screened scalar field mediating the coupling. The speed of light emerges as a strictly local invariant, not a global constant. TEP preserves local Lorentz invariance while introducing path-dependent synchronization effects that produce observable consequences in precision timing systems, gravitational lensing, pulsar dynamics, and cosmological distance measurements. A universal critical density (ρc ≈ 20 g/cm³) governs the screening transition between modified and standard gravitational regimes across 40 orders of magnitude in mass.

Theory and Empirical Evidence

Complete Publications List

Active theoretical foundation and subsequent empirical preprints shared for open review and collaboration.

Temporal Equivalence Principle

The Temporal Equivalence Principle: Dynamic Time & Emergent Light Speed

A covariant reformulation of relativity where proper time is a dynamical scalar field and light speed emerges as a strictly local invariant. The framework distinguishes conformal (clock-rate) from disformal (light-cone tilt) metric sectors, predicting path-dependent synchronization holonomy—a convention-independent observable that identically vanishes in GR and pure conformal theories, but is nonzero in TEP's disformal sector.

First published: 18 Aug 2025 | Updated: 16 Oct 2025
v0.6 Jakarta PDF
Global Time Echoes I

Global Time Echoes: Distance-Structured Correlations in GNSS Clocks

First empirical detection of TEP-predicted distance-structured clock correlations. Multi-center analysis of 62.7M atomic clock pairs across CODE, IGS, and ESA demonstrates exponential decay (λ ≈ 3,300–4,500 km) with R² = 0.92–0.97. Absence of classical GM/r² scaling rules out Newtonian explanations, establishing the terrestrial baseline signal that subsequent papers validate across technologies and scales.

First published: 17 Sep 2025 | Updated: 23 Nov 2025
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25-Year Analysis

25-Year Temporal Evolution of GNSS Clock Correlations: Global Time Echoes II

Longitudinal analysis spanning 25.3 years (165M+ pairs) demonstrates temporal stability across solar cycles. Reports orbital velocity coupling (r = −0.888, 5.1σ), CMB frame alignment (5,570× variance ratio over galactic alternative), and detection of 18.6-year lunar nutation coupling—all geophysical signatures uniquely predicted by TEP's dynamical proper time framework.

First published: 3 Nov 2025 | Updated: 30 Nov 2025
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RINEX Validation

Global Time Echoes: Raw RINEX Validation of GNSS Clock Correlations

Rigorous artifact mitigation via Single Point Positioning of 1.17 billion raw RINEX samples—completely independent of network-level orbit/clock solutions. Demonstrates distance-structured correlations exist in fundamental observables prior to any corrections, with 100% detection rate across 72 metric combinations, confirming the signal is physical rather than data processing artifact.

First published: 9 Dec 2025 | Updated: 17 Dec 2025
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Gravitational Lensing

Temporal-Spatial Coupling in Gravitational Lensing: Phantom Mass from Conformal Gradients

Demonstrates conformal metric couplings remain entirely unconstrained by GW170817 (common-mode for co-propagating signals). Shows how Isochrony Axiom failure creates phantom mass contributions to gravitational lensing and rotation curves that are observationally indistinguishable from particulate dark matter, with M1/3 Vainshtein scaling linking terrestrial clock correlations directly to galactic halo phenomenology.

First published: 19 Dec 2025 | Updated: 19 Dec 2025
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Global Time Echoes: Empirical Validation

Global Time Echoes: Empirical Validation of the Temporal Equivalence Principle

Comprehensive synthesis testing GR's foundational assumption of global time integrability. Seven independent signatures—orbital coupling, CMB alignment, spatial anisotropy, planetary event responses, and nutation couplings—converge at combined significance p ≈ 2×10⁻²⁷ (>10σ). The network's distinctive selectivity profile (sensitive to velocity-dependent dynamics, blind to GM/r² scaling) characterizes it as an inertial interferometer.

First published: 21 Dec 2025 | Updated: 25 Dec 2025
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Universal Critical Density

The Universal Critical Density: Unifying Atomic, Galactic, and Compact Object Scales

Derives universal critical density ρc ≈ 20 g/cm³ from the GNSS correlation length λ ≈ 4,200 km—externally calibrated from atomic clock data, independently consistent with quantum boundary conditions. Demonstrates M1/3 scaling across 175 SPARC rotation curves and predicts magnetar anti-glitch threshold (Pcrit ≈ 6.8 s, matching 1E 2259+586 within 4%). This organizing parameter connects Papers 8–14 across astrophysical scales.

First published: 28 Dec 2025 | Updated: 28 Dec 2025
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The Soliton Wake

The Soliton Wake: Identifying the Runaway Object RBH-1 as a Gravitational Soliton

Applies terrestrially-calibrated critical density to resolve the RBH-1 cooling paradox (tcool/tdyn ≈ 30). Predicts gravitational soliton radius Rsol ≈ 7.8×107 km (≈1.3 RSchwarzschild) and reinterprets the wake velocity discontinuity as a metric shock with distinctive narrow line-width signature—quantitative predictions testable with follow-up spectroscopic observations.

First published: 28 Dec 2025 | Updated: 28 Dec 2025
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Global Time Echoes: Optical Validation

Global Time Echoes: Optical Validation of the Temporal Equivalence Principle via Satellite Laser Ranging

Technology-orthogonal validation using 11 years of Satellite Laser Ranging data from passive retroreflector satellites—systems without active clocks. 14× spectral enhancement in TEP frequency band (10–500 μHz) with significant correlations (p = 0.017) constrains clock-systematic explanations, supporting propagation physics. Independent confirmation from the optical domain.

First published: 30 Dec 2025 | Updated: 30 Dec 2025
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Precision Tests of General Relativity

What Do Precision Tests of General Relativity Actually Measure?

Rigorous methodological taxonomy showing why most precision tests constrain largely local, reciprocity-even observables within assumed theoretical frameworks but do not directly probe the observables distinguishing GR from two-metric disformal scalar-tensor modifications. Proposes concrete discriminating experiments: triangle holonomy tests, interplanetary closed-loop timing, and independent GNSS correlation replication.

First published: 31 Dec 2025 | Updated: 31 Dec 2025
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Global Time Echoes: Interactive GNSS Demo
INTERACTIVE DEMO

Global Time Echoes: Interactive GNSS Demo

Don't just read the papers—run the code. This interactive browser-based demonstration processes GNSS clock data to replicate the distance-dependent decoherence signal. Explore the correlation decay, adjust parameters, and visualize the deviation from standard General Relativity predictions.

First published: 8 Jan 2026 | Updated: 8 Jan 2026
v1.0 Live Try it now →
Suppressed Density Scaling in Globular Cluster Pulsars

The Temporal Equivalence Principle: Suppressed Density Scaling in Globular Cluster Pulsars

The bridge to astrophysics: reports 5.8σ–7.7σ dynamical anomaly in globular cluster pulsar timing exhibiting suppressed density scaling (slope 0.39 ± 0.08 vs Newtonian 0.72, 4.1σ rejection)—consistent with TEP screening saturation at ρc ≈ 20 g/cm³. Binary inversion (typically noisy binaries show lower residuals, p=0.007) confirms screening mechanism. Connects terrestrial clock correlations to galactic-scale dynamics.

First published: 9 Jan 2026 | Updated: 30 Mar 2026
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The Cepheid Bias: Resolving the Hubble Tension

The Cepheid Bias: Resolving the Hubble Tension

Cosmological application: environment-dependent bias in Cepheid P-L relation predicted by TEP resolves the 5σ Hubble Tension. SH0ES sample analysis (N=29) reveals ρ = 0.434 correlation between host potential depth and H0. TEP correction yields H0 = 68.66 ± 1.51 km/s/Mpc, reducing Planck tension to 0.79σ. Same ρc ≈ 20 g/cm³ from atomic clocks resolves cosmic-scale discrepancy.

First published: 11 Jan 2026 | Updated: 27 Mar 2026
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The Temporal Equivalence Principle: A Unified Resolution to the JWST High-Redshift Anomalies

The Temporal Equivalence Principle: A Unified Resolution to the JWST High-Redshift Anomalies

High-redshift validation: tests whether JWST anomalies (overmassive BHs, M* > Mdyn) arise from isochrony axiom violation. Temporal shear predicts spectral age (ρ = +0.733, p = 1.9×10⁻³) more strongly than stellar mass. Red Monster efficiency excess fully resolved using external Cepheid prior. Extends ρc framework to highest observed redshifts.

First published: 13 Mar 2026 | Updated: 22 Mar 2026
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The Temporal Equivalence Principle: Density-Dependent Screening in Gaia DR3 Wide Binaries

The Temporal Equivalence Principle: Density-Dependent Screening in Gaia DR3 Wide Binaries

The Gaia DR3 wide-binary catalog provides a precise test of gravity in the extreme weak-field regime. TEP offers a natural resolution to the tension between MOND-consistent velocity boosts and hierarchical triple contamination. A conformal scalar field coupling to local mass density predicts density-dependent screening with characteristic transition radius Rs = 2646 ± 182 AU and environmental ordering (halo vs. disk, permutation p = 0.0033).

First published: 19 Mar 2026 | Updated: 19 Mar 2026
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About This Research

TEP makes a single prediction—that the flow of time is environment-dependent—and tests it across five scales: from atomic clocks on Earth to the oldest galaxies observed by JWST. A universal critical density (ρc ≈ 20 g/cm³) organizes the phenomenology, with the same parameter linking terrestrial metrology to dark matter halos.

The Temporal Equivalence Principle (TEP) proposes that proper time is not merely a parameter along worldlines but a dynamical scalar field coupled to spacetime geometry, analogous to how the equivalence principle treats gravity as geometry rather than force. This theoretical foundation (Paper 0) provides pre-specified predictions regarding path-dependent synchronization effects and clock correlations that should manifest in precision timing systems.

Following the theoretical framework, a systematic empirical investigation was conducted to test these predictions through four independent GNSS analyses spanning 25 years (March 2000 to June 2025). Paper 1 analyzes 62.7 million station-pair measurements across three independent analysis centers (CODE, IGS, ESA), finding cross-center consistency. Paper 2 extends the CODE dataset to 165 million pairs over the full 25.3-year baseline, detecting signatures consistent with orbital velocity coupling (r = −0.888, p < 2×10⁻⁷), CMB frame alignment (5,570× variance ratio over galactic alternative), and long-period geophysical signatures including 18.6-year lunar nutation coupling. Paper 3 independently investigates these findings using 1.17 billion raw RINEX pair-samples processed via Single Point Positioning, demonstrating the signal persists in unprocessed data prior to network-level corrections. To make these findings accessible, an interactive demonstration (TEP-DEMO) allows users to process sample data directly in the browser. Paper 9 provides independent optical-domain validation using 11 years of Satellite Laser Ranging data, finding significant correlations in a system without active clocks.

Paper 4 (TEP-GL) extends the framework to gravitational lensing, demonstrating how conformal metric couplings—unconstrained by GW170817—can produce phantom mass indistinguishable from dark matter. The synthesis paper (TEP-GTE) consolidates the empirical evidence, showing that seven independent signatures converge with combined significance p ≈ 2×10⁻²⁷ (>10σ), while the network's selectivity profile—sensitive to velocity-dependent dynamics but blind to GM/r² scaling—characterizes it as an inertial interferometer rather than a gravimeter.

Analysis of the observed GNSS correlation length (λ ≈ 4,200 km) suggests a universal critical density (ρc ≈ 20 g/cm³) that appears to organize gravitational phenomena across 40 orders of magnitude—from the Bohr radius at atomic scales through terrestrial metrology to dark matter halos in galaxies (Paper 7). This externally calibrated parameter, connected across scales through M1/3 Vainshtein screening, enables constrained astrophysical applications. Paper 8 illustrates this predictive utility through reinterpretation of the runaway black hole candidate RBH-1 as a gravitational soliton, offering a resolution to quantitative observational tensions in thermal dynamics and star formation. The convergence of terrestrial atomic clocks, optical laser ranging, galactic rotation curves, compact object behavior, and atomic physics constraints on a single density scale (ρc ≈ 20 g/cm³) suggests a connection between quantum mechanics, precision timekeeping, and cosmological structure formation—spanning 40 orders of magnitude in mass and 15 orders in density.

Paper 10 provides a rigorous epistemological audit of the experimental canon, identifying structural limitations in standard precision tests—specifically their reliance on reciprocity-even observables—that leave the path-dependent synchronization sector probed by TEP largely unconstrained. Paper 11 expands the empirical frontier to globular cluster dynamics, reporting a 5.8σ anomaly in millisecond pulsar timing (394 MSPs: 196 GC, 198 field). This signal exhibits "suppressed density scaling" (slope 0.39 ± 0.08 vs Newtonian 0.72; 4.1σ rejection) consistent with the saturation of the TEP screening mechanism predicted by the universal critical density, establishing a coherent multi-scale evidentiary chain that connects terrestrial clock correlations to intermediate-scale astrophysical anomalies.

The empirical reach of TEP extends further to cosmological distance measurements and weak-field stellar dynamics. Paper 12 (TEP-H0) tests an environment-dependent bias in the Cepheid Period-Luminosity relation motivated by TEP, finding a statistically significant correlation (Spearman ρ = 0.434, p = 0.019) between host velocity dispersion and derived H0, with a TEP-corrected value of H0 = 68.66 ± 1.51 km/s/Mpc that reduces the Hubble tension with Planck to 0.79σ. Paper 13 (TEP-JWST) investigates whether the anomalous stellar masses, star formation efficiencies, and overmassive black holes reported by JWST at high redshift arise from isochrony axiom violation; temporal shear is found to predict spectral age more strongly than stellar mass (ρ = +0.733, p = 1.9×10⁻³), implicating deep-potential time dilation rather than exotic baryonic physics. Paper 14 (TEP-WB) tests TEP predictions in the extreme weak-field regime using the Gaia DR3 wide-binary catalog, finding a characteristic screening transition radius R_s = 2646 ± 182 AU and environmentally ordered behaviour (halo vs. disk populations, permutation p = 0.0033) consistent with density-dependent conformal screening rather than a scale-free universal velocity boost.

These are working preprints shared in the spirit of open science—all manuscripts, analysis code, and data products are openly available under Creative Commons and MIT licenses. Independent scrutiny and collaboration are welcome.

Video Overview

A concise introduction to the Temporal Equivalence Principle framework, covering the core postulate, its implications for dark matter and the Hubble Tension, and the terrestrial GNSS evidence.

Interactive Correlation Decay Explorer

This interactive visualization compares distance-structured correlations across 40 independent analyses, demonstrating that the exponential decay pattern is consistent across different measurement approaches. The dual y-axes show phase alignment for processed clock products (blue, left) and magnitude squared coherence for raw RINEX data (orange, right), suggesting that both metrics follow a similar exponential decay law despite measuring on different scales.

The dotted trend lines represent averaged exponential fits with correlation lengths (λ) ranging from 600–4,500 km and fit quality (R²) of 0.87–0.99. This cross-validation across processed clock products (CODE, IGS, ESA) and raw RINEX analyses (3 station filters × 4 processing modes × 3 metrics) indicates that the correlation decay is a reproducible feature independent of measurement methodology, supporting the hypothesis of a physical phenomenon rather than a processing artifact.

Open Science & Reproducibility

All analysis code, processing pipelines, and computational results are publicly available under open-source licenses. The complete analysis workflows for all four empirical studies—including data acquisition scripts, processing logs, intermediate outputs, and final results—are hosted on GitHub to enable independent verification and replication. The analysis encompasses over 1 billion individual measurements across four complementary methodologies (processed clocks, raw RINEX, optical SLR), with complete computational reproducibility from raw data to final figures.

Independent replication by other research groups is essential for validation. Researchers interested in replication may find Paper 1 (TEP-GNSS I) the most accessible entry point, using publicly available CODE/IGS/ESA clock products (compact .clk files). Paper 2 (TEP-GNSS II) extends this with 25 years of CODE clock data. Paper 3 (TEP-GNSS III) provides the most rigorous validation via raw RINEX processing but requires more substantial computational resources. All data, code, and methodologies are openly available. Feedback on methodology, interpretation, or potential collaboration is welcomed.

TEP

Core repository containing the theoretical framework, mathematical models, and LaTeX source. Includes derivation scripts, figure generation code, and the full manuscript source.

TEP-GNSS

Complete analysis pipeline for Paper 2 (TEP-GNSS I). Features multi-center cross-validation scripts, processing logs, JSON statistical outputs, and generated figures for correlation decay quantification.

TEP-GNSS-II

Research compendium for Paper 3 (TEP-GNSS II). Contains longitudinal analysis scripts, orbital coupling logs, CMB alignment data, and comprehensive JSON result files.

TEP-GNSS-RINEX

End-to-end pipeline for Paper 4 (TEP-GNSS III). Includes SPP processing scripts, raw RINEX analysis logs, validation datasets, and resulting anisotropy figures from 1 billion samples.

TEP-GL

Codebase for Paper 5 (TEP-GL). Contains phantom mass modeling scripts, rotation curve data, analysis logs, and the Python notebooks used to generate manuscript figures.

TEP-GTE

Synthesis framework for Paper 6 (TEP-GTE). Includes integration scripts, cross-study correlation logs, consolidated JSON datasets, and summary figures demonstrating signal convergence.

TEP-UCD

Scaling analysis codebase for Paper 7 (TEP-UCD). Features critical density calculation scripts, scaling law verification logs, and the data pipelines used to derive Vainshtein screening effects.

TEP-RBH

Simulation suite for Paper 8 (TEP-RBH). Contains soliton wake modeling scripts, hydrodynamic simulation logs, parameter space JSONs, and the visualization tools for the RBH-1 analysis.

TEP-SLR

Complete analysis pipeline for Paper 9 (TEP-SLR). Includes SLR data parsers, residual computation logs, correlation analysis scripts, and final result figures.

TEP-COS

Codebase for the COSMOGRAIL and Globular Cluster analysis (TEP-COS). Contains pulsar timing datasets, density scaling analysis scripts, lensing shear calculators, and N-body simulation comparisons.

TEP-H0

Codebase for Paper 12 (TEP-H0). Includes SH0ES data processing, environment stratification, TEP correction optimization, and robustness analysis scripts demonstrating the resolution of the Hubble Tension.

TEP-EXP

Codebase for Paper 10 (TEP-EXP). Methodological taxonomy of precision tests of general relativity, discriminating experiments, and analysis of which observables constrain disformal scalar-tensor modifications.

TEP-JWST

Codebase for Paper 13 (TEP-JWST). JWST high-redshift galaxy analysis, isochrony axiom tests, temporal shear calculations, SUSPENSE survey kinematic comparisons, and star formation efficiency modelling.

TEP-WB

Codebase for Paper 14 (TEP-WB). Gaia DR3 wide-binary analysis, density-dependent screening tests, disk/halo environmental ordering, and chameleon field transition radius fitting.

Interactive CMB Frame Alignment Visualization

This interactive visualization shows the correlation strength between GNSS clock measurements across the celestial sphere, derived from 25.3 years of CODE clock products (March 2000 to June 2025, 165 million station-pair measurements). The heatmap displays how the anisotropy pattern (East-West vs North-South correlation strength ratio) varies throughout Earth's annual orbit.

The anisotropy ratio modulates annually with Earth's orbital velocity, with the pattern aligned to the Cosmic Microwave Background dipole direction (RA 168°, Dec -7°) rather than the Solar Apex (RA 272°, Dec +30°). This annual modulation suggests that the observed correlations track Earth's motion through the universe's rest frame rather than local seasonal or environmental effects. The best-fit direction (RA 186°, Dec -4°, white marker) lies 18° from the CMB dipole (cyan marker) and 89° from the Solar Apex (orange marker), with a 5,570× variance ratio favoring CMB-frame coupling.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Temporal Equivalence Principle (TEP)?

TEP is a single-parameter extension of general relativity that promotes proper time from a geometric label to a dynamical scalar field. The framework, proposed by Smawfield (2025), preserves all local physics while predicting new path-dependent synchronization effects that are absent in standard GR and testable with existing precision instrumentation.

How does TEP differ from general relativity?

TEP is a generalization of GR, not a replacement. GR is recovered in the high-density (screened) limit. TEP predicts identical results for all precision GR tests (Gravity Probe B, Cassini, binary pulsars). Differences emerge only in low-density, extended-source regimes where a scalar field introduces path-dependent synchronization holonomy.

What evidence supports TEP?

TEP is tested across five scales: terrestrial GNSS atomic clocks (combined significance p ≈ 2×10⁻²⁷), globular cluster pulsars (5.8σ anomaly), compact objects (magnetar anti-glitch match within 4%), galactic rotation curves (SPARC M1/3 scaling), and cosmological distances (Hubble tension reduced from 5σ to 0.79σ). Independent optical validation via satellite laser ranging confirms the signal.

How does TEP explain dark matter observations?

TEP proposes that temporal field gradients in low-density environments produce phantom mass contributions to gravitational lensing and rotation curves that are indistinguishable from particulate dark matter. A universal critical density (ρc ≈ 20 g/cm³) governs the screening transition via Vainshtein and chameleon mechanisms.

How does TEP resolve the Hubble tension?

TEP predicts that Cepheid periods are contracted in deep gravitational potentials, causing systematic distance underestimation in high-velocity-dispersion host galaxies. After environment-dependent correction using the SH0ES sample (N=29), the unified Hubble constant becomes H0 = 68.66 ± 1.51 km/s/Mpc, reducing the Planck tension from 5σ to 0.79σ.

Is TEP compatible with gravitational wave observations?

Yes. The GW170817 constraint on the speed of gravity restricts the disformal sector but leaves the conformal sector entirely unconstrained. TEP's observable effects arise primarily from conformal clock-rate variations, which are common-mode for co-propagating gravitational and electromagnetic signals.

What are the falsification criteria for TEP?

Critical tests include: independent GNSS replication by external groups, technology independence across GPS/GLONASS/Galileo/optical clocks, CMB frame preference confirmation, and persistence of the pulsar environmental signal. A quantitative falsification criterion is detection of correlation length outside the 500–20,000 km range. Discriminating predictions unique to TEP include triangle holonomy (non-zero phase in closed timing loops) and variability-dependent lensing.

How does TEP relate to MOND?

Both TEP and MOND address phenomenology attributed to dark matter, but through distinct mechanisms. MOND proposes a universal acceleration threshold (a₀ ≈ 1.2×10⁻¹⁰ m/s²) below which gravitational behavior deviates from Newtonian predictions. TEP posits density-dependent chameleon screening governed by a universal critical density (ρc ≈ 20 g/cm³), which produces environmental ordering that MOND (with or without the External Field Effect) does not predict. In the Gaia DR3 wide-binary test (TEP-WB), TEP successfully predicts a characteristic transition radius and disk/halo population differences (permutation p = 0.0033), while MOND predicts a scale-free universal velocity boost independent of environment. The two frameworks make qualitatively different predictions for environmental stratification.

Where can I find the TEP papers, data, and analysis code?

All 14 papers are freely available at mlsmawfield.com with Zenodo DOIs. Analysis code and data pipelines are hosted on GitHub. All manuscripts, code, and data products are released under Creative Commons CC-BY-4.0 and MIT licenses.

Terminology and Context

The acronym TEP is used in several distinct scientific contexts. Unlike the thermoelectric power coefficient (Seebeck TEP) in condensed matter physics, or the Total Extraperitoneal hernia repair procedure in surgery, the Temporal Equivalence Principle (TEP) as developed by Smawfield (2025) addresses the foundations of spacetime geometry and the nature of proper time within theoretical physics and cosmology. This research program connects to established concepts in scalar-tensor gravity, Local Lorentz Invariance, Vainshtein screening, chameleon mechanisms, and metric-affine gravity, while offering novel predictions for precision timekeeping, gravitational lensing, and the resolution of cosmological tensions including the Hubble tension and the S8 tension.