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This paper presents a novel approach to hyperspectral image (HSI) reconstruction from RGB images, addressing fundamental limitations in existing learning-based methods from a physical perspective. We discuss and aim to address the ``colorimetric dilemma": failure to consistently reproduce ground-truth RGB from predicted HSI, thereby compromising physical integrity and reliability in practical applications. To tackle this issue, we propose PhySpec, a physically consistent framework for robust HSI reconstruction. Our approach fundamentally exploits the intrinsic physical relationship between HSIs and corresponding RGBs by employing orthogonal subspace decomposition, which enables explicit estimation of camera spectral sensitivity (CSS). This ensures that our reconstructed spectra align with well-established physical principles, enhancing their reliability and fidelity. Moreover, to efficiently use internal information from test samples, we propose a self-supervised meta-auxiliary learning (MAXL) strategy that rapidly adapts the trained parameters to unseen samples using only a few gradient descent steps at test time, while simultaneously constraining the generated HSIs to accurately recover ground-truth RGB values. Thus, MAXL reinforces the physical integrity of the reconstruction process. Extensive qualitative and quantitative evaluations validate the efficacy of our proposed framework, showing superior performance compared to SOTA methods.