250px|thumb|A metastable state of weaker bond (1), a transitional "saddle" configuration (2) and a stable state of stronger bond (3).
250px|thumb|A metastable state of weaker bond (1), a transitional "saddle" configuration (2) and a stable state of stronger bond (3).
In chemistry and physics, metastability is an intermediate energetic state within a dynamical system other than the system's state of least energy. A ball resting in a hollow on a slope is a simple example of metastability. If the ball is only slightly pushed, it will settle back into its hollow, but a stronger push may start the ball rolling down the slope. Bowling pins show similar metastability by either merely wobbling for a moment or tipping over completely. A common example of metastability in science is isomerisation. Higher energy isomers are long lived because they are prevented from rearranging to their preferred ground state by (possibly large) barriers in the potential energy.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).