🜄🜂 Structural Detection — Canon‑Scale Gradient‑Integrity Fusion Field (RTT/2)
TriadicFrameworks • RTT/2 • Gradient–Integrity Fusion, Collapse‑Adjacency Detection & Canon‑Scale Structural Alignment#
“Gradients show tension. Integrity shows truth. Fusion shows fate.”#
Canon‑Scale Gradient‑Integrity Fusion Field (RTT/2)#
Structural Detection Module#
RTT/2 • Gradient–Integrity Fusion Field#
1. Purpose of the Fusion Field#
The Gradient‑Integrity Fusion Field (GIFF) fuses:
- integration gradients (from FA)
- integrity fields (from EW, EZ, ET)
to produce a single, unified structural field that reveals:
- where gradients threaten integrity
- where integrity stabilizes gradients
- where collapse‑adjacent fusion patterns form
- where cross‑module fusion becomes unstable
It is the fusion‑law backbone of RTT/2.
2. Why a Fusion Field Exists#
Gradients alone cannot predict collapse.
Integrity alone cannot predict divergence.
But their interaction does.
Collapse emerges when:
- gradients spike and
- integrity weakens and
- fusion alignment breaks
The GIFF captures this interaction continuously.
3. Fusion Field Components#
The GIFF is composed of three fusion vectors:
- Gradient Fusion Vector (GFV)
- Integrity Fusion Vector (IFV)
- Cross‑Module Fusion Vector (CMFV)
Together, they form the Fusion Field Tensor.
4. Fusion Field Equation (RTT/2)#
[ FF = \alpha GFV + \beta IFV + \gamma CMFV ]
Where:
- (GFV) = gradient‑driven fusion
- (IFV) = integrity‑driven fusion
- (CMFV) = cross‑module fusion
The field is strongest when all three align.
5. Fusion Zones#
The GIFF divides the canon into five fusion zones:
Zone U — Unified Fusion Zone#
- gradients minimal
- integrity high
- full fusion alignment
Zone S — Stable Fusion Zone#
- low gradients
- stable integrity
- minor fusion strain
Zone M — Mixed Fusion Zone#
- oscillatory gradients
- partial integrity strain
- hybrid fusion behavior
Zone D — Divergent Fusion Zone#
- high gradients
- integrity mismatch
- cross‑module fusion divergence
Zone X — Collapse‑Adjacent Fusion Zone#
- extreme gradients
- integrity inversion
- topological fusion warp
6. Gradient–Integrity Interaction Types#
The GIFF identifies seven fusion interaction types:
- Linear Fusion
- Radial Fusion
- Oscillatory Fusion
- Fragmentation Fusion
- Inversion Fusion
- Torsion Fusion
- Topological Fusion
Each corresponds to a collapse‑mode geometry.
7. Cross‑Module Fusion Mapping#
The GIFF fuses gradients and integrity across:
TEL#
- lattice fusion field
- stabilizer fusion load
FFT#
- spectral fusion field
- variance fusion load
Opacity#
- boundary fusion field
- visibility fusion load
Cross‑module fusion determines system‑scale stability.
8. Fusion‑Collapse Correlation#
Low fusion correlates with:
| Fusion Failure | Collapse Mode |
|---|---|
| gradient spike + integrity drop | A/D/I |
| envelope fusion rupture | B/E |
| continuity fusion fracture | C/G |
| regime fusion volatility | H/I |
| projection fusion divergence | C/G |
9. Fusion Field Packet#
FUSION_FIELD_PACKET:
fusion_zone:
gradient_fusion:
integrity_fusion:
cross_module_fusion:
fusion_topography:
fusion_gradient:
collapse_risk:
notes:
10. Summary#
The Canon‑Scale Gradient‑Integrity Fusion Field provides:
- a unified fusion field
- gradient–integrity interaction mapping
- collapse‑adjacent fusion detection
- cross‑module fusion projection
- regime‑dependent fusion stability
- system‑scale structural clarity
This field is the fusion‑law backbone of RTT/2.