Collapse
Introduction
Collapse denotes the rapid failure, breakdown, or disintegration of complex systems, characterized by sudden, catastrophic transitions leading to irreversible loss of integrity or function, setting it apart from gradual processes like decay or decline. This phenomenon spans multiple disciplines, where the emphasis lies on abrupt systemic thresholds crossed without inherent recovery mechanisms. In structural engineering, collapse manifests as the failure of key components such as beams, columns, or floors, resulting in the overall loss of a building's stability and support capacity.[1] In quantum mechanics, it describes the wave function collapse, whereby a system's superposition of states resolves into a single definite outcome upon interaction or measurement, fundamentally altering its probabilistic nature.[2] Societal collapse entails a drastic, rapid diminishment of sociopolitical, economic, and cultural complexity, often coupled with an inability to sustain population needs through established networks.[3] In ecosystems, it occurs when defining biotic or abiotic features are virtually lost across occurrences, preventing restoration of the original structure and functions.[4] Economic frameworks may experience collapse through cascading market or resource failures that undermine systemic resilience, as seen in historical analyses of interconnected breakdowns.[5] Biological organisms exhibit collapse in acute failures, such as cellular or organ-level disintegration under extreme stress, though this is less commonly framed independently from broader physiological decline. Across these domains, collapse highlights vulnerabilities in interdependent elements, where localized triggers can propagate into total systemic failure.
Physical and Structural
Structural Failure
Structural failure in load-bearing structures, such as buildings and bridges, occurs when applied stresses exceed the material's capacity, leading to sudden buckling, yielding, or fracture that compromises overall integrity.[6] Progressive collapse represents a critical mechanism where an initial local failure propagates chain-reaction-like, causing disproportionate damage beyond the affected area.[7] Key examples include pancake collapse, where successive floors fail and stack upon lower levels due to loss of vertical support, and zipper failure, involving sequential rupture of tension elements like cables or ties, resulting in lateral instability and progressive unloading.[8][9]