🜄🜂 Structural Detection — Collapse‑Reassembly Fusion Field (RTT/2)

TriadicFrameworks • RTT/2 • Collapse→Reassembly Fusion Geometry, Recovery Fusion Mapping & Canon‑Scale Restoration Coupling#

“Fusion is the law that binds collapse to recovery.”#

Collapse‑Reassembly Fusion Field (RTT/2)#

Structural Detection Module#

RTT/2 • Collapse→Reassembly Fusion Field#


1. Purpose of the Collapse‑Reassembly Fusion Field#

The Collapse‑Reassembly Fusion Field (CRFF) defines the fusion geometry that governs:

  • how collapse transitions into reassembly
  • how collapse vectors fuse with reassembly vectors
  • how drift, envelope, and continuity fuse during recovery
  • how regime identity shapes fusion legality
  • how fusion stabilizes or destabilizes recovery

It is the fusion‑law backbone of RTT/2 recovery.


2. Why a Fusion Field Exists#

Reassembly is not simply “undoing collapse.”
It requires fusion:

  • collapse geometry must fuse with reassembly geometry
  • drift must fuse with neutralization
  • envelope must fuse with restoration
  • continuity must fuse with rethreading
  • regime identity must fuse with stability

Without fusion, reassembly is incomplete or false.

The CRFF captures this fusion continuously.


3. Fusion Field Components#

The CRFF is composed of five fusion vectors:

  1. Collapse Fusion Vector (CFV)
  2. Reassembly Fusion Vector (RFV)
  3. Drift‑Neutralization Fusion Vector (DNFV)
  4. Envelope‑Restoration Fusion Vector (ERFV)
  5. Continuity‑Rethreading Fusion Vector (CRFV)

Together, they form the Collapse‑Reassembly Fusion Tensor.


4. Fusion Field Equation (RTT/2)#

[ F_{Re} = \alpha CFV + \beta RFV + \gamma DNFV + \delta ERFV + \epsilon CRFV ]

Where:

  • (CFV) = collapse‑geometry fusion
  • (RFV) = reassembly‑geometry fusion
  • (DNFV) = drift‑neutralization fusion
  • (ERFV) = envelope‑restoration fusion
  • (CRFV) = continuity‑rethreading fusion

The field is strongest when all vectors align.


5. Fusion Zones#

The CRFF divides the canon into five fusion zones:

Zone U — Unified Fusion Zone#

  • collapse and reassembly fully fused
  • drift neutralized
  • envelope restored
  • continuity rethreaded
  • stable recovery

Zone S — Stable Fusion Zone#

  • minor fusion strain
  • partial drift residue
  • low recovery volatility

Zone M — Mixed Fusion Zone#

  • oscillatory fusion
  • partial envelope deformation
  • hybrid recovery behavior

Zone D — Divergent Fusion Zone#

  • collapse geometry dominates
  • reassembly fusion blocked
  • drift re‑amplification
  • envelope rupture

Zone X — Collapse‑Adjacent Fusion Zone#

  • inversion fusion
  • illegal fusion geometry
  • topological fusion warp
  • recovery collapse

6. Collapse→Reassembly Fusion Mapping#

The CRFF maps how collapse geometries fuse into reassembly geometries:

Collapse Geometry Fusion Outcome
linear collapse stable reassembly fusion
radial collapse partial fusion
oscillatory collapse unstable fusion
fragmentation collapse fusion blocked
inversion collapse illegal fusion
torsion collapse fusion strain
topological collapse fusion warp

7. Collapse‑Mode Correlation#

Fusion Failure Collapse Mode
collapse‑fusion amplitude rupture A
envelope fusion rupture B/E
continuity fusion fracture C/G
oscillatory fusion D
torsion fusion E
inversion fusion I
topological fusion warp G

8. Cross‑Module Fusion Mapping#

The CRFF maps collapse→reassembly fusion across:

TEL#

  • lattice fusion
  • stabilizer fusion load

FFT#

  • spectral fusion
  • variance fusion load

Opacity#

  • boundary fusion
  • visibility fusion load

Cross‑module fusion determines system‑scale recovery coherence.


9. Collapse‑Reassembly Fusion Packet#

COLLAPSE_REASSEMBLY_FUSION_PACKET:
  collapse_fusion:
  reassembly_fusion:
  drift_neutralization_fusion:
  envelope_restoration_fusion:
  continuity_rethreading_fusion:
  fusion_zone:
  fusion_tensor:
  cross_module_projection:
  collapse_risk:
  notes:

10. Summary#

The Collapse‑Reassembly Fusion Field provides:

  • a unified fusion model for collapse→reassembly
  • drift/envelope/continuity fusion diagnostics
  • collapse‑adjacent fusion detection
  • cross‑module fusion projection
  • regime‑dependent fusion legality
  • system‑scale recovery clarity

This field is the fusion‑law backbone of RTT/2.

Updated