Abstract
This work introduces a new interpretation of time as an emergent phenomenon that arises from the rate at which a four-dimensional quantum structure projects into three-dimensional classical space. Unlike conventional frameworks in general relativity and quantum mechanics that treat time as a fundamental coordinate or an external parameter, this model derives temporal flow from the decoherence-driven projection of a higher-dimensional quantum configuration onto a three-dimensional observational frame. The projection occurs in discrete increments called Projection Frame Units (PFUs), which represent the fundamental quanta of temporal measurement. In typical decohered laboratory conditions, the duration of a PFU is estimated to be around 10⁻²¹ seconds, many magnitudes greater than the Planck time but still below the limit of current experimental resolution. Classical time intervals emerge from the accumulation of PFUs along entropy gradients, creating a direct quantitative relationship between temporal flow and thermodynamic irreversibility. The theory predicts two experimentally testable effects. The first is a measurable deviation in quantum tunneling delay times, where PFU modulation influences sub-attosecond transit dynamics. The second is the possible generation of high-frequency gravitational wave transients caused by rapid deprojection events near black hole horizons. Both effects can, in principle, be tested using existing or near-future experimental technologies such as attosecond interferometry and next-generation gravitational wave detectors. By grounding time in the informational and geometric structure of quantum projections, this framework provides a clear and testable path toward unifying quantum mechanics, gravitational dynamics, and the thermodynamic arrow of time within a consistent higher-dimensional model.