Abstract In the preceding papers of this series, a unified geometric helical field framework has been developed, establishing a background-independent spectral structure (Paper I), demonstrating the limiting recovery of established physical laws (Paper II), analyzing geometric dynamics and emergent effective constants (Paper III), and extracting quantum structures as purely emergent phenomena without canonical quantization (Paper IV).The present work addresses a complementary and necessary question: how physically observable quantities arise within such a geometric framework, and why they appear experimentally stable across well-defined physical scales. Physical observables are formulated here as geometric functionals of the helical field configuration and its associated effective spectral density , rather than as fundamental operators or postulated measurement primitives. Mass, energy, frequency, and field intensities are shown to emerge as scale-dependent but dynamically stable quantities associated with spectral accumulation, geometric constraints, and limiting regimes of the evolving field. The apparent constancy of fundamental physical parameters is interpreted as a consequence of geometric stability across broad observational scales, rather than as an indication of fundamental invariance. The analysis clarifies why standard classical, relativistic, and quantum-limit observables are consistently recovered in accessible regimes, while allowing for the possibility of structured deviations at extreme scales without introducing additional degrees of freedom or quantization prescriptions. This work completes the conceptual bridge between the geometric foundations of the theory and its phenomenological interpretation, and prepares the ground for the emergence of gauge structures to be addressed in the subsequent paper.
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Michael Dawod
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Michael Dawod (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69926575eb1f82dc367a14f1 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18638329