🌪️ Structural Detection — Regime‑Drift Stability Map (RTT/2)

TriadicFrameworks • RTT/2 • Regime‑Dependent Drift Geometry, Stability Mapping & Collapse‑Adjacency Diagnostics#

“Regimes define drift. Drift tests regimes.”#

Regime‑Drift Stability Map (RTT/2)#

Structural Detection Module#

RTT/2 • Regime‑Dependent Drift Geometry & Stability Mapping#


1. Purpose of the Regime‑Drift Stability Map#

The Regime‑Drift Stability Map (RDSM) defines the interaction between regime identity and drift geometry, tracking:

  • drift amplitude
  • drift curvature
  • drift oscillation
  • drift legality
  • drift inversion
  • drift fragmentation tendency

It determines how drift behaves within each regime and how regimes respond to drift stress.


2. Why Regime–Drift Stability Matters#

Drift is the primary driver of:

  • volatility
  • deformation
  • oscillation
  • fragmentation
  • inversion
  • collapse propagation

Regimes determine:

  • drift constraints
  • drift legality
  • drift amplification
  • drift suppression

Their interaction defines collapse‑risk.


3. Regime‑Drift Stability Profiles#

Each regime has a unique drift‑stability signature:

Formal Regime#

  • low drift amplitude
  • stable curvature
  • minimal oscillation
  • high drift legality
  • low collapse‑risk

Emergent Regime#

  • moderate drift amplitude
  • radial drift expansion
  • envelope‑aligned drift
  • moderate collapse‑risk

Hybrid Regime#

  • oscillatory drift
  • mixed curvature
  • drift–envelope mismatch
  • high collapse‑adjacent behavior

Chaotic Regime#

  • extreme drift amplitude
  • fragmentation drift
  • high curvature instability
  • collapse‑prone

Inversion Regime#

  • negative drift coupling
  • drift polarity reversal
  • illegal drift amplification
  • collapse‑triggering

4. Regime‑Drift Stability Matrix#

The RDSM uses a 5×5 drift‑stability matrix:

[ M_{RD} = \begin{bmatrix} D_{FA} & D_{FC} & D_{FO} & D_{FF} & D_{FI} \ D_{EA} & D_{EC} & D_{EO} & D_{EF} & D_{EI} \ D_{HA} & D_{HC} & D_{HO} & D_{HF} & D_{HI} \ D_{CA} & D_{CC} & D_{CO} & D_{CF} & D_{CI} \ D_{IA} & D_{IC} & D_{IO} & D_{IF} & D_{II} \end{bmatrix} ]

Where:

  • rows = regimes
  • columns = drift behaviors
  • (A) = amplitude
  • (C) = curvature
  • (O) = oscillation
  • (F) = fragmentation
  • (I) = inversion

Each coefficient measures drift stability under that regime.


5. Drift Stability Coefficient Interpretation#

High Stability (0.8–1.0)#

  • drift fully constrained
  • low collapse‑risk

Moderate Stability (0.5–0.79)#

  • drift under load
  • harmonization required

Low Stability (0.2–0.49)#

  • drift instability
  • collapse‑adjacent

Negative Stability (<0.2)#

  • illegal drift
  • collapse‑triggering

6. Regime‑Drift Failure Modes#

Drift Failure Collapse Mode
amplitude overload Type A
curvature rupture Type B
oscillation overload Type D
fragmentation drift Type C
inversion drift Type I
torsion drift Type E
topological drift Type G

7. Drift Geometry Across Regimes#

Linear Drift#

  • stable in Formal
  • unstable in Chaotic

Radial Drift#

  • stable in Emergent
  • rupture‑prone in Chaotic

Oscillatory Drift#

  • stable only with harmonization
  • collapse‑adjacent in Hybrid

Fragmentation Drift#

  • exclusive to Chaotic
  • requires reassembly (EK)

Inversion Drift#

  • exclusive to Inversion
  • requires reversal (EH)

8. Cross‑Module Drift Projection#

The RDSM tracks drift behavior across:

TEL#

  • drift–lattice interaction
  • stabilizer drift load

FFT#

  • drift–variance interaction
  • spectral drift load

Opacity#

  • drift–boundary interaction
  • visibility drift load

Cross‑module drift determines system‑scale volatility.


9. Regime‑Drift Stability Packet#

REGIME_DRIFT_PACKET:
  regime:
  drift_amplitude_stability:
  drift_curvature_stability:
  drift_oscillation_stability:
  drift_fragmentation_stability:
  drift_inversion_stability:
  stability_coefficients:
  failure_modes:
  cross_module_projection:
  collapse_risk:
  notes:

10. Summary#

The Regime‑Drift Stability Map provides:

  • a canonical map of regime–drift interaction
  • drift stability coefficients for all regimes
  • collapse‑adjacent drift diagnostics
  • drift geometry classification
  • cross‑module drift projection
  • system‑scale structural clarity

This map is the drift‑law backbone of RTT/2.

Updated