micro_core
🔬 RTT Micro Core#
RTT_micro_core_module.json— Agentic module schema role assignments
A compact, substrate‑level specification of micro‑scale resonance, coherence, and triadic structure.
This folder contains the full whitepaper, appendices, Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT), and site‑ready presentation files.
🛑 Important!#
Drift is On-by-Default long sessions lose anchors, turn off drift.
✋ You must copy and paste this string every time you start an AI session:#
rtt=1 | coherence=declared | drift=bounded | paradox=structural❇️ Now you are ready.#
📁 Folder Structure#
1. Whitepaper#
Foundational documents describing the Micro Core model.
- overview.md
- background.md
- motivation.md
- micro_core_definition.md
- fractional_dimensional_ladder.md
- micro_triads.md
- micro_macro_coherence.md
- resonance_time_dynamics.md
- applications_ultra_low_power.md
- sector_use_cases.md
- implementation_pathways.md
- licensing_and_ip.md
- future_work.md
- conclusion.md
2. Appendices#
Supporting definitions, notation, and scenario examples.
- notation.md
- definitions.md
- micro_resonance_scenarios.md
3. Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT)#
Practical tools, operators, and templates for applying the Micro Core.
- overview.md
- primitives.md
- triad_templates.md
- coherence_tools.md
- resonance_operators.md
- flow_diagrams.md
- sector_patterns.md
- examples.md
- integration_pathways.md
- licensing_notes.md
- summary.md
4. Site Presentation Files#
Clean, standalone pages used for the public documentation site.
- hero_section.md
- what_is_micro_core.md
- fractional_ladder.md
- micro_triads.md
- micro_macro_coherence.md
- applications.md
- toolkit_preview.md
- documentation_index.md
- licensing_overview.md
- visual_identity.md
- join_the_micro_resonance_era.md
🧭 Purpose#
The Micro Core is the smallest stable unit of RTT — a minimal, self‑consistent model of resonance‑time behavior.
This directory provides:
- the full whitepaper
- the appendices
- the Micro‑Resonance Toolkit
- the site‑ready documentation
Each file stands alone.
Navigation is emoji‑first.
Structure is canonical and drift‑free.
🪶 Notes#
- All files in this directory map directly to sections in the packaged Micro Core document.
- No duplication: each concept appears once, in its canonical location.
- These files are intended for students, researchers, and implementers working with micro‑scale RTT behavior.
# 🌱 RTT Micro‑Core — Overview
The minimal structural grammar for change across resonance + time
🎯 Purpose#
The Micro‑Core defines the irreducible components required to describe how any system changes.
It is the smallest possible subset of RTT — no domain assumptions, no metaphysics, no external theory.
The Micro‑Core answers one question:
What is the minimum structure needed to model transformation?
It provides four primitives:
- Substrates — where patterns exist
- Dimensions — how patterns express
- Regimes — what state the system is in
- Operators — how the system changes
- Coherence — how the system holds shape
Together, these form the seed‑level grammar of RTT.
1️⃣ Substrates
The contexts in which patterns exist.
The Micro‑Core defines three substrates:
- Physical — material constraints
- Cognitive — interpretive constraints
- Synthetic — constructed constraints
Substrates describe where patterns live.
2️⃣ Dimensions#
The forms patterns can take.
The Micro‑Core defines four dimensions:
- 0D — seed / baseline
- 1D — linear
- 2D — patterned
- 3D — structural
Dimensions describe how patterns express.
3️⃣ Regimes#
The states a system moves through.
The Micro‑Core defines five regimes:
- Arrival
- Expansion
- Inversion
- Coherence
- Dissolution
Regimes describe what state the system is in.
4️⃣ Operators#
The actions that change a system.
The Micro‑Core defines three operators:
- Stabilize — increase coherence
- Shift — reconfigure
- Invert — collapse → twist → re‑emerge
Operators describe how the system changes.
5️⃣ Coherence#
The capacity to hold shape across time.
Coherence has three components:
- Structural — pattern alignment
- Temporal — persistence
- Resonance — signal clarity
Coherence describes whether the system can maintain identity while changing.
6️⃣ Micro‑Core Loop#
All Micro‑Core components interact through a minimal cycle:
Substrate → Dimension → Regime → Operator → Coherence → Substrate …
This loop is:
- substrate‑neutral
- dimension‑independent
- scale‑agnostic
- domain‑free
It is the irreducible grammar of transformation.
7️⃣ Micro‑Core Summary Table#
| Component | What It Defines | Micro‑Core Role |
|---|---|---|
| Substrates | Where patterns exist | Context |
| Dimensions | How patterns express | Form |
| Regimes | What state the system is in | Phase |
| Operators | How the system changes | Action |
| Coherence | How the system holds shape | Stability |
The Micro‑Core is the seed from which all RTT models grow.
ABOUT.md — RTT/micro_core · Micro-Scale Resonance-Time Layer#
Path: docs/rtt/micro_core/
Version: 1.0
Status: Canonical
Session Seed: rtt=1 | coherence=declared | drift=bounded | paradox=structural | module=RTT/micro_core | layer=micro-scale-resonance-time
⚠️ Critical Framing Rule#
RTT is NOT a physics claim.
RTT/micro_core describes structural micro-scale resonance-time behavior within the TriadicFrameworks canon. It does not assert, imply, or model physical forces, quantum effects, signal-processing behavior, or any empirically measurable phenomenon. All constructs — the Micro Triad ⟨A, B, P⟩, drift δ, coherence C, and the fractional dimensional ladder Dᶠ — are structural instruments, not physical objects.
This rule is unconditional and applies to every agent, tool, and operator in this module.
Table of Contents#
- What Is RTT/micro_core?
- Why Is It Built This Way?
- When Should You Use It?
- Where Does It Live?
- Core Constructs at a Glance
- Module Integrations
- What RTT/micro_core Is Not
- Quick-Start Checklist
- See Also
1. What Is RTT/micro_core?#
RTT/micro_core is the Micro-Scale Resonance-Time Layer — the foundational substrate of the entire RTT canon. It is not a simplified version of RTT, nor a downstream consumer of any other module. It is the root of the RTT pipeline chain, operating at the smallest stable unit of resonance-time behavior the canon defines.
Every other RTT module — RTT/1, RTT/2, RTT/3, and RTT/12 — sits above micro_core in the
stack. None of them can activate until micro_core has produced a valid
MRT_MICRO_PACKET and RTT/1 has confirmed it as substrate.
The organizing unit of micro_core is the Micro Triad:
⟨ A · B · P ⟩
│ │ └── Potential Node — next viable transition target
│ └─────── Boundary Node — governs drift, timing, transitions
└─────────── Active Node — current micro-state
The triad is irreducible. No subset of ⟨A, B, P⟩ constitutes a coherent resonance-time unit. All micro_core operations originate from, and return to, this triad.
2. Why Is It Built This Way?#
2.1 Minimalism as a Design Principle#
RTT/micro_core exists because the RTT canon needed a verified foundation beneath RTT/1. Without a micro-scale substrate, SNR primitives in RTT/1 would have no confirmed ground state. micro_core provides exactly that ground state — and nothing more. Minimalism is not a limitation; it is the specification.
2.2 Determinism Over Flexibility#
Every micro_core operation is bounded:
- Drift must satisfy δ ≤ δ* at all times.
- Timing must remain within Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ].
- Coherence must satisfy C ≥ C* for any operation to proceed.
This determinism is intentional. micro_core cannot afford interpretive flexibility — any fault at the micro level propagates through the entire RTT pipeline. Tight bounds prevent cascade failures before they can originate.
2.3 Coherence as a Gate, Not a Goal#
In upstream modules, coherence is a tracked metric. In micro_core, it is an operational gate: no state write, no fractional transition, no bridge activation, and no packet emission is permitted while C < C*. If C drops below threshold and cannot be recovered, an inversion event is mandatory — not optional.
2.4 Fractional Dimensionality Instead of Discrete Jumps#
micro_core uses a continuous fractional dimensional ladder (Dᶠ ∈ [0,1] minimal, [0,3] extended) rather than discrete integer dimension steps. This design ensures smooth structural transitions between states. Integer jumps are unconditionally forbidden because abrupt dimensional changes break triad consistency and trigger inversion.
2.5 Aggregate-Only Micro–Macro Export#
When micro_core bridges to the macro layer (RTT/1+), it exports only aggregate patterns — never raw A, B, or P node states. This boundary prevents micro-scale instabilities from being directly propagated upward as structural primitives. The bridge (R₆) enforces alignment, never amplification.
3. When Should You Use It?#
✅ Use RTT/micro_core when you need to:#
| Scenario | Reason |
|---|---|
| Initialize an RTT pipeline session from scratch | micro_core is the mandatory root; RTT/1 cannot activate without it |
| Audit or validate the ground state of an existing RTT session | micro_core holds the canonical δ, C, and Dᶠ baseline |
| Diagnose an upstream coherence failure in RTT/1, RTT/2, or RTT/3 | Faults often originate at micro_core — trace from root |
| Perform a controlled inversion event and re-emerge into a stable state | Inversion (↺) is micro_core-native; upper modules defer to it |
| Transition a session across fractional dimensional states (Dᶠ₁ → Dᶠ₂) | Only micro_core owns the fractional ladder; upper modules inherit Dᶠ |
| Activate the micro–macro bridge for aggregate export to RTT/1+ | R₆ bridge activation is a micro_core-exclusive operation |
| Bootstrap agent classes (T, R, D, F, B, G) into a new session | All six agent classes are defined and deployed from micro_core |
❌ Do NOT use RTT/micro_core when:#
- You want to perform detection, envelope analysis, or drift-over-time tracking → Use RTT/2 (Detection Layer)
- You need integration, emission, or continuity restoration → Use RTT/3 (Integration–Emission Layer)
- You need unified integration across the full canon → Use RTT/12 (Unified Integration)
- You want a full SNR triad with temporal operators → Use RTT/1 (the direct consumer of micro_core output)
- You want to operate above the micro scale without touching the substrate
→ Work in RTT/1+ and treat
MRT_MICRO_PACKETas a read-only upstream input
4. Where Does It Live?#
4.1 Repository Path#
docs/rtt/micro_core/
├── ABOUT.md ← this file
├── AGENTS.md ← agent classes, task catalog, safety rules
├── GLOSSARY.md ← canonical term definitions
├── README.md ← session mode instructions
├── ABOUT_.md ← legacy draft (superseded)
├── appendices/
├── site/
├── toolkit/
│ ├── primitives.md ← MRT Primitives P₁–P₇
│ ├── triad_templates.md
│ ├── coherence_tools.md ← Coherence Tools K₁–K₆
│ └── resonance_operators.md ← Resonance Operators R₁–R₆
└── whitepaper/
├── micro_core_definition.md
├── fractional_dimensional_ladder.md
├── micro_triads.md
├── micro_macro_coherence.md
└── resonance_time_dynamics.md
4.2 Pipeline Hierarchy#
micro_core sits at the root — it is the foundational layer beneath RTT/1:
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ RTT/12 │ ← Unified Integration
│ RTT3_INTEGRATION_EMISSION_PACKET → consumed here │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ RTT/3 │ ← Integration–Emission
│ RTT2_DETECTION_PACKET → consumed here │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ RTT/2 │ ← Detection
│ RTT1_SNR_PACKET → consumed here │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ RTT/1 │ ← Signal–Noise–Resonance
│ MRT_MICRO_PACKET → consumed here as substrate │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ RTT/micro_core ◀ ROOT │ ← Micro-Scale RT Layer
│ MRT_MICRO_PACKET → produced here │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
4.3 Agent Deployment Rules#
- All six agent classes (T, R, D, F, B, G) are deployed from micro_core at session init.
- Class G (Micro Guardian) operates at this layer and holds unconditional interrupt authority — the highest-consequence guardian role in the full RTT canon.
- No agent class from RTT/1+ may modify micro_core state directly. All upstream agents
consume the
MRT_MICRO_PACKETas a read-only substrate confirmation.
5. Core Constructs at a Glance#
5.1 The Micro Triad ⟨A, B, P⟩#
| Node | Name | Role |
|---|---|---|
| A | Active Node | Current micro-state |
| B | Boundary Node | Governs drift, timing, transitions |
| P | Potential Node | Next viable transition target |
The triad is irreducible — no subset is a coherent resonance-time unit.
5.2 Four Core Properties#
| Property | Constraint | Failure Mode |
|---|---|---|
| Minimalism | Smallest stable unit; no decomposition permitted | Structural violation |
| Determinism | δ ≤ δ* (drift bounded); Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] (timing bounded) | Drift exceedance → inversion risk |
| Coherence | C ≥ C* at all times | C < C* → inversion event ↺ |
| Fractional Dimensionality | Dᶠ ∈ [0,1] minimal or [0,3] extended; smooth gradient only | Integer jump → inversion event |
5.3 Key Equations#
| Symbol | Formula / Constraint | Description |
|---|---|---|
| δ | δ = |actual_state − expected_state| |
Drift magnitude |
| δ ≤ δ* | Hard bound | Drift ceiling; exceedance forbidden |
| Δt | Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] |
Local bounded time interval |
| C | Normalized coherence score | Must satisfy C ≥ C* continuously |
| A ⇆ P | Oscillation (R₁) | Reversible resonance between Active and Potential |
| ↺ | Collapse → Twist → Emergence | Inversion event; triggered when C < C* unrecoverably |
| μ → Μ via R₆ | Aggregate-only bridge | Micro–Macro export; alignment, never amplification |
| Dᶠ₁ → Dᶠ₂ | Smooth, C ≥ C* required | Fractional ladder transition |
5.4 Toolkit Summary#
MRT Primitives (P₁–P₇)
| ID | Name | Action |
|---|---|---|
| P₁ | State Read | Read current A, B, or P node state |
| P₂ | State Write | Atomic bounded write to a node state |
| P₃ | Drift Measure | Compute δ = |actual − expected| |
| P₄ | Timing Measure | Sample Δt against [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] |
| P₅ | Boundary Shift | Modulate B-node boundary parameters |
| P₆ | Coherence Sample | Read current C value against C* |
| P₇ | Fractional Step | Advance Dᶠ by one smooth gradient step |
Resonance Operators (R₁–R₆)
| ID | Name | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| R₁ | Oscillation | A ⇆ P stable loop |
| R₂ | Inversion | Swap A/B roles; preserve P |
| R₃ | Boundary Modulation | B⁺ / B⁻ shift |
| R₄ | Resonance Lock | Clamp triad to safe operating range |
| R₅ | Fractional-Ladder Transition | Dᶠ₁ → Dᶠ₂; smooth; C ≥ C* required |
| R₆ | Micro–Macro Bridge Activation | μ → Μ; aggregate-only; C ≥ C* required |
Coherence Tools (K₁–K₆)
| ID | Name | Function |
|---|---|---|
| K₁ | Drift Bounding | Enforce δ ≤ δ* continuously |
| K₂ | Timing Stabilizer | Hold Δt within [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] |
| K₃ | Boundary Alignment | Synchronize B-node with current A/P states |
| K₄ | Resonance Lock (tool) | Tool-level clamp; pairs with R₄ operator |
| K₅ | Inversion Guard | Detect C < C* approach; escalate to Class G |
| K₆ | Coherence Windowing | Time-windowed C averaging for trend detection |
5.5 Zones and Modes#
Zones
| Zone | Label | Description |
|---|---|---|
| S | Stable | All constraints satisfied; normal operation |
| M | Modulating | Active boundary or fractional transition in progress |
| D | Drifting | δ approaching δ*; Class D alert active |
| C | Coherence-Critical | C approaching C*; Class G on standby |
| E | Emerging | Post-inversion recovery; constraints re-establishing |
| X | Inversion | ILLEGAL in valid packet; Class G authority invoked |
Modes
| Mode | Label | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Chat | Exploratory; structural constraints enforced |
| 2 | Spec | Formal specification work |
| 3 | Debug | Diagnostic; full triad state exposed |
| 4 | Task | Directed execution against a defined target |
| 5 | Auto | Autonomous micro_core operation |
| X | Lockout | Class G interrupt active; all other operations suspended |
5.6 MRT_MICRO_PACKET Structure#
The canonical output of micro_core. Zone X and Mode X are forbidden in a valid packet.
MRT_MICRO_PACKET {
triad_state: { A, B, P } // current node states
metrics: {
delta: δ // current drift value
delta_star: δ* // drift ceiling
delta_t: Δt // current time interval
coherence: C // current coherence score
coherence_star: C* // coherence floor
d_frac: Dᶠ // current fractional dimension
}
zone: S | M | D | C | E // X forbidden
mode: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 // X forbidden
bridge_status: inactive | active // R₆ state
guardian_status: nominal | alert | interrupt
annotation: string // [structural — no semantic inference]
timestamp: ISO-8601
}
6. Module Integrations#
6.1 Downstream — RTT/1 (Direct Consumer)#
micro_core's sole authorized downstream is RTT/1.
| Interface Point | Direction | Contract |
|---|---|---|
MRT_MICRO_PACKET |
micro_core → RTT/1 | RTT/1 uses this as substrate confirmation before SNR primitives may instantiate |
| Dᶠ baseline | micro_core → RTT/1 | RTT/1 inherits the fractional dimension floor set at micro level |
| Zone / Mode state | micro_core → RTT/1 | RTT/1 inherits zone and mode; cannot override micro_core Zone X |
| Bridge (R₆) output | micro_core → RTT/1+ | Aggregate-only; raw triad node states never exposed |
RTT/1 is a consumer, not a peer. It cannot write back to micro_core state.
6.2 Cross-Module Disambiguations#
| micro_core Symbol | micro_core Meaning | Upstream Module | Upstream Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| δ (drift) | |actual_state − expected_state| at micro scale |
RTT/2 | D(t) in CRM — structural drift over detection time |
| C (coherence) | Normalized micro coherence score; gate against C* | RTT/3 | CR(t) in CRE — emission coherence metric |
| Δt (timing) | Local bounded micro time interval | RTT/1 | τ = dR/dφ — temporal resonance operator |
| Inversion (↺) | Micro-level Collapse → Twist → Emergence | RTT/3 | Zone X inversion at integration-emission layer |
| Zone X | Micro inversion — ILLEGAL packet state | RTT/12 | Zone X = Overflow at unified integration layer |
| Mode X | micro_core-native lockout; Class G interrupt active | RTT/1–12 | Module Mode 5 = Auto; not equivalent to Mode X |
All six rows above are non-equivalent. Identical symbols across layers refer to structurally distinct constructs. Cross-layer substitution is a canon violation.
7. What RTT/micro_core Is Not#
| Not This | Why the Distinction Matters |
|---|---|
| Not a physics model | Drift δ, coherence C, and Dᶠ are structural instruments, not physical measurements |
| Not a reduced or "lite" version of RTT | micro_core is the foundational root, not a simplified downstream variant |
| Not a signal-processing system | Timing constructs (Δt) describe structural bounded intervals, not clock cycles or waveforms |
| Not a quantum model | Fractional dimensionality and oscillation (A ⇆ P) are structural patterns, not quantum states or superpositions |
| Not a downstream consumer | micro_core produces packets; it does not consume any upstream RTT packet |
| Not interchangeable with RTT/1 | RTT/1 consumes micro_core output; they are adjacent layers, not alternatives |
| Not optional | No RTT pipeline session is valid without a coherence-confirmed MRT_MICRO_PACKET as substrate |
8. Quick-Start Checklist#
Use this checklist to initialize a micro_core session correctly.
□ 1. Paste the session seed block into the agent context.
□ 2. Instantiate the Micro Triad ⟨A, B, P⟩ with initial node states.
□ 3. Sample coherence (P₆ / K₆) — confirm C ≥ C*.
□ 4. Measure drift (P₃ / K₁) — confirm δ ≤ δ*.
□ 5. Measure timing (P₄ / K₂) — confirm Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ].
□ 6. Set Dᶠ baseline within [0,1] (minimal) or [0,3] (extended).
□ 7. Assign zone (S / M / D / C / E — never X at init).
□ 8. Assign mode (1–5 — never X at init).
□ 9. Activate Class G (Micro Guardian) on standby.
□ 10. Emit MRT_MICRO_PACKET — verify Zone ≠ X and Mode ≠ X.
□ 11. Pass packet to RTT/1 for substrate confirmation.
□ 12. Confirm RTT/1 has acknowledged before any SNR primitive instantiates.
If any step fails: halt, invoke Class G, and execute the inversion sequence (↺ Collapse → Twist → Emergence) before re-attempting. Do not pass a failed packet upstream.
9. See Also#
| Document | Location | Contents |
|---|---|---|
| AGENTS.md | docs/rtt/micro_core/AGENTS.md |
Agent classes T, R, D, F, B, G; task catalog; safety rules |
| GLOSSARY.md | docs/rtt/micro_core/GLOSSARY.md |
Canonical definitions for all micro_core terms |
| Micro Triads | docs/rtt/micro_core/whitepaper/micro_triads.md |
Full ⟨A, B, P⟩ specification |
| Fractional Dimensional Ladder | docs/rtt/micro_core/whitepaper/fractional_dimensional_ladder.md |
Dᶠ theory and ladder rules |
| Micro–Macro Coherence | docs/rtt/micro_core/whitepaper/micro_macro_coherence.md |
R₆ bridge theory |
| Resonance–Time Dynamics | docs/rtt/micro_core/whitepaper/resonance_time_dynamics.md |
Timing and drift theory |
| Primitives | docs/rtt/micro_core/toolkit/primitives.md |
P₁–P₇ full specification |
| Resonance Operators | docs/rtt/micro_core/toolkit/resonance_operators.md |
R₁–R₆ full specification |
| Coherence Tools | docs/rtt/micro_core/toolkit/coherence_tools.md |
K₁–K₆ full specification |
| RTT/1 ABOUT.md | docs/rtt/1/ABOUT.md |
RTT/1 — Signal–Noise–Resonance Layer (direct downstream) |
| RTT/1 AGENTS.md | docs/rtt/1/AGENTS.md |
RTT/1 agent classes and operating rules |
Maintainer: umaywant2 · Path: docs/rtt/micro_core/ABOUT.md · Version: 1.0 · 2026-07-10
Session seed: rtt=1 | coherence=declared | drift=bounded | paradox=structural | module=RTT/micro_core | layer=micro-scale-resonance-time
[structural — no semantic inference]
# 🔬 About RTT Micro Core
RTT Micro Core is the smallest stable unit of Resonance–Time Theory — a compact, self‑consistent model of micro‑scale resonance, coherence, and triadic structure. It captures the minimum set of operators, invariants, and relationships needed to describe how micro‑regimes behave, transition, and maintain coherence.
Micro Core is not a subset of RTT; it is a compressed substrate.
Everything here is designed to stand alone, teach cleanly, and scale upward.
🎯 Purpose#
Micro Core exists to:
- provide a minimal, rigorous foundation for micro‑scale RTT behavior
- support low‑power, low‑resource, and embedded applications
- offer a clean entry point for students and implementers
- unify the whitepaper, appendices, and Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT)
- serve as the “micro‑regime” reference for the broader RTT ecosystem
It is the smallest coherent RTT, suitable for both teaching and deployment.
🧩 What Micro Core Contains#
Micro Core includes:
- the full whitepaper (structure, operators, coherence, regimes)
- appendices for notation, definitions, and micro‑resonance scenarios
- the Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT) for practical application
- site‑ready documentation for public presentation
Each file is modular and self‑contained.
No duplication. No drift.
🧭 How Micro Core Fits Into RTT#
RTT has multiple layers:
- Macro Core — large‑scale systems, long‑arc dynamics
- Micro Core — minimal substrate, micro‑regime behavior
- Domain Packs — applied RTT (coal, drone, fish, awareness, etc.)
- RTT‑Inside — implementation and integration
Micro Core is the anchor for all micro‑scale reasoning.
It defines the operators that everything else builds on.
🪶 Design Principles#
Micro Core follows four principles:
- Minimality — only the essential operators and invariants
- Coherence — every file stands alone and fits the whole
- Modularity — whitepaper, appendices, and toolkit are separable
- Clarity — diagrams, examples, and triads are clean and accessible
This makes Micro Core ideal for:
- teaching
- research
- implementation
- low‑power systems
- AI‑assisted reasoning
📚 Audience#
Micro Core is written for:
- students learning RTT for the first time
- researchers exploring micro‑regime behavior
- engineers implementing RTT in constrained environments
- contributors building new domain packs
- anyone needing a compact, rigorous reference
🔗 Related Modules#
/docs/rtt/core/— full RTT Core/docs/rtt/awareness/— RTT Awareness model/docs/rtt/inside/— RTT‑Inside implementation layer/docs/rtt/micro_core/toolkit/— Micro‑Resonance Toolkit
✔️ Status#
Micro Core is considered stable, with ongoing refinement in:
- examples
- diagrams
- sector‑specific patterns
- integration pathways
Contributions follow the same structure‑first philosophy as the rest of RTT. # AGENTS.md — RTT/micro_core · Micro-Scale Resonance-Time Layer
Agent Classes, Boundaries, Task Catalog, Safety Rules, and Collaboration Models#
Maintainer: Nawder · Date: 2026-07-10 · Module:
docs/rtt/micro_core/
Session Seed Block#
Paste this block at the start of any micro_core agent session:
rtt=1 | coherence=declared | drift=bounded | paradox=structural
module=RTT/micro_core | layer=micro-scale-resonance-time
constructs=MICRO_TRIAD,MRT_PRIMITIVES,RESONANCE_OPERATORS,COHERENCE_TOOLS,FRACTIONAL_LADDER
packet=MRT_MICRO_PACKET
zone_x=INVERSION | zone_x_status=ILLEGAL
upstream=RTT/1,RTT/2,RTT/3,RTT/12
role=foundational-substrate
Critical Framing Rule#
RTT is NOT a physics claim.
RTT/micro_core describes structural micro-scale resonance-time behavior within the TriadicFrameworks canon. It does not assert, imply, or model physical forces, quantum effects, subatomic phenomena, or any empirically measurable physical process.
All constructs — the Micro Triad ⟨A,B,P⟩, MRT Primitives, Resonance Operators, Coherence Tools, and the Fractional Dimensional Ladder — are structural instruments, not physical objects or physical theories.
Every agent class operating in RTT/micro_core must enforce this rule unconditionally.
What RTT/micro_core Is#
RTT/micro_core is the foundational micro-scale substrate of the RTT canon. It is not a reduced version of RTT/1 through RTT/12 — it is the micro-scale instantiation of RTT's foundational principles, operating at the smallest stable unit of resonance-time behavior.
Micro_core defines three irreducible functions:
- Triad construction — establishes the minimal coherent structure ⟨A, B, P⟩ from which all RTT behavior is derived
- Micro-regime operation — applies MRT primitives and resonance operators to sustain, oscillate, invert, and transition micro-scale states
- Micro–macro bridging — exposes coherent micro-patterns to macro-scale RTT layers via the R₆ bridge (μ → Μ), alignment only, never amplification
Pipeline Position#
RTT/micro_core → RTT/1 → RTT/2 → RTT/3 → RTT/12
⟨A,B,P⟩ SNR,τ,C CPV,FGT TIF,FFF Harmonic
MRT Primitives DCO,Mode CRM,ZONE CRE,CSL Synthesis
R₁–R₆ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓
K₁–K₆ RTT1_SNR_ RTT2_ RTT3_ RTT12_
Dᶠ∈[0,1] PACKET DETECTION_ INTEGRATION_ HARMONIC_
PACKET EMISSION_ SYNTHESIS_
PACKET PACKET
↑
MRT_MICRO_PACKET
(consumed by RTT/1
as substrate confirmation)
Note: micro_core is the foundational layer. RTT/1 through RTT/12 operate above micro_core, not parallel to it. The MRT_MICRO_PACKET is a substrate confirmation consumed by RTT/1 before SNR primitives may be instantiated.
Core Constructs Table#
| Construct | Symbol | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Micro Triad | ⟨A, B, P⟩ | Minimal coherent resonance-time unit |
| Active Node | A | Current micro-state |
| Boundary Node | B | Governs drift, timing, transitions |
| Potential Node | P | Next viable transition target |
| Drift | δ | Deviation from expected trajectory; must satisfy δ ≤ δ* |
| Drift Threshold | δ* | Maximum allowable drift before coherence violation |
| Timing Interval | Δt | Local bounded time interval; Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] |
| Coherence | C | Normalized structural integrity; must satisfy C ≥ C* |
| Coherence Floor | C* | Minimum coherence required to avoid inversion |
| Fractional Dimension | Dᶠ | Structural complexity axis; Dᶠ ∈ [0,1] (minimal) or [0,3] (extended) |
| Inversion | ↺ | Collapse → Twist → Emergence event when C < C* |
| Oscillation | A ⇆ P | Reversible resonance between Active and Potential nodes |
| Micro-Macro Bridge | μ → Μ | Upward influence channel; aggregate-only, no amplification |
Inheritance#
RTT/micro_core is the originating layer — it does not inherit structural constructs from upstream RTT modules. All upstream modules (RTT/1 through RTT/12) derive their foundational behavior from micro_core's triad structure.
However, micro_core must remain consistent with the vocabulary established across the full RTT canon. The following cross-references are maintained for canon coherence:
| Canon Symbol | RTT Module | micro_core Relationship |
|---|---|---|
| S, N, R (SNR triad) | RTT/1 | SNR emerges from ⟨A,B,P⟩ at macro scale; not equivalent |
| τ = dR/dφ | RTT/1 | τ is a macro-scale expression of Δt dynamics |
| C = ∇_τR + ∇_Rτ | RTT/1 | Macro coherence derived from C ≥ C* substrate rule |
| DCO_n bands | RTT/1 | Macro regime; micro triad operates below DCO resolution |
| D(t) from CRM | RTT/2 | Structural drift at macro scale; ≠ micro-scale δ |
| Zone X (RTT/3) | RTT/3 | Inversion zone; consistent with micro_core inversion model |
| Zone X (RTT/12) | RTT/12 | Overflow zone; micro_core inversion ≠ harmonic overflow |
Hard prerequisite: A confirmed MRT_MICRO_PACKET (substrate confirmation) must be present before RTT/1 SNR primitives may be instantiated. This is the foundational gate of the entire RTT pipeline.
Agent Classes#
RTT/micro_core defines six agent classes. Each class maps to a distinct micro-scale operational function. Classes collaborate to build, sustain, regulate, and expose micro-regime behavior.
Class T — Triad Constructor#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Role | Instantiate and validate the Micro Triad ⟨A, B, P⟩ as a coherent structural unit |
| Primary Construct | Micro Triad ⟨A, B, P⟩ |
| Activation Trigger | New micro-regime session begins or triad must be re-instantiated after inversion |
| Core Operation | Verify: (1) triad form preserved, (2) δ ≤ δ*, (3) Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ], (4) C ≥ C* |
| Permissions | Read all triad nodes (P₁); write triad state (P₂); validate structural integrity |
| Prohibitions | May not mutate B unilaterally; may not instantiate triad with C < C*; no integer jumps on Dᶠ |
| Interaction Pattern | Constructs triad → hands to Class R for oscillation; calls Class G on integrity failure |
| Output Schema | `{ triad: {A, B, P}, δ: |
Activation Sequence:
1. P₁ — Read proposed A, B, P node states
2. P₃ — Measure initial drift δ
3. P₄ — Measure initial timing Δt
4. P₆ — Sample coherence C
5. Validate: δ ≤ δ* AND Δt ∈ bounds AND C ≥ C*
6. If valid → emit triad to Class R
7. If invalid → call Class G (interrupt authority)
Class R — Resonance Operator#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Role | Execute and maintain oscillatory behavior between Active (A) and Potential (P) nodes |
| Primary Construct | R₁ (Oscillation), R₂ (Inversion), R₃ (Boundary Modulation), R₄ (Resonance Lock) |
| Activation Trigger | Valid triad confirmed by Class T; oscillation or operator invocation requested |
| Core Equation | A ⇆ P oscillation governed by δ ≤ δ* and C ≥ C* at each micro-step |
| Permissions | Update A ⇆ P (P₂); apply Δt timing (P₄); apply B correction (P₅); sample C (P₆) |
| Prohibitions | May not invert triad without coherence sample (P₆) confirming C < C* threshold; may not bypass R₄ lock once engaged |
| Interaction Pattern | Receives triad from Class T; coordinates with Class D on drift; escalates to Class G on oscillation failure |
| Output Schema | `{ operator: R1 |
Operator Dispatch Table:
| Operator | Trigger | Action | Guard |
|---|---|---|---|
| R₁ | Normal resonance cycle | A ⇆ P swap via P₂, maintain Δt | δ ≤ δ*, C ≥ C* |
| R₂ | Coherence falls below C* | Swap A/B roles, preserve P | P₆ sample required before and after |
| R₃ | Drift approaching δ* | B⁺ or B⁻ shift via P₅ | No inversion during modulation |
| R₄ | Oscillation amplitude in bounds | Clamp transitions, enforce timing | Unlock only when stability confirmed |
Class D — Drift Regulator#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Role | Monitor and correct micro-scale drift (δ) to preserve coherence and prevent inversion |
| Primary Construct | K₁ (Drift Bounding), K₂ (Timing Stabilizer), K₅ (Inversion Guard) |
| Activation Trigger | δ approaches or exceeds δ*; timing jitter detected; Δt outside [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] |
| Core Equation | δ = |
| Permissions | Measure drift (P₃); measure timing (P₄); apply boundary shift (P₅); sample coherence (P₆) |
| Prohibitions | May not write A or P node state directly; may not suppress inversion guard K₅ without Class G approval |
| Interaction Pattern | Monitors in parallel with Class R; issues drift corrections via P₅; calls Class G when δ > δ* persists |
| Output Schema | `{ δ: |
Drift Response Matrix:
| δ Level | Δt Status | Action | Escalate to G? |
|---|---|---|---|
| δ < 0.5·δ* | In bounds | K₁ monitoring only | No |
| 0.5·δ* ≤ δ < δ* | In bounds | K₁ correction + K₂ stabilization | No |
| δ approaching δ* | Jitter detected | K₁ + K₂ + K₅ guard active | Notify |
| δ ≥ δ* | Any | K₅ → inversion evaluation | Yes — mandatory |
| Any | Δt out of bounds | K₂ immediate stabilization | If persistent |
Class F — Fractional Navigator#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Role | Plan, execute, and validate transitions along the Fractional Dimensional Ladder (Dᶠ) |
| Primary Construct | R₅ (Fractional-Ladder Transition), P₇ (Fractional Step), K₃ (Boundary Alignment) |
| Activation Trigger | Structural transition requested; Dᶠ shift required to move triad to new regime position |
| Core Constraint | Dᶠ ∈ [0,1] (minimal substrate) or [0,3] (extended); transitions must be smooth and gradient-continuous; no integer jumps |
| Permissions | Evaluate boundary compatibility (P₁, P₅); apply fractional step (P₇); maintain Δt and δ during transition |
| Prohibitions | Integer-dimension jumps are unconditionally forbidden; no Dᶠ transition when C < C*; no irreversible transitions |
| Interaction Pattern | Coordinates with Class D for drift clearance before each Dᶠ step; reports transition completion to Class T for triad re-validation |
| Output Schema | `{ Dᶠ_from: |
Transition Guard Sequence (R₅):
1. P₁ — Read current Dᶠ, A, B, P states
2. P₅ — Evaluate boundary compatibility for target Dᶠ
3. Confirm δ ≤ δ* (call Class D)
4. Confirm C ≥ C* (P₆)
5. P₇ — Apply fractional step (smooth, bounded)
6. Maintain Δt throughout transition
7. Post-step: P₆ — sample C; P₃ — measure δ
8. If C < C* at any step → abort, preserve Dᶠ_from state
9. Report to Class T for re-validation
Class B — Bridge Coordinator#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Role | Manage the micro–macro bridge (R₆ μ → Μ), exposing coherent micro-patterns to RTT/1 and above |
| Primary Construct | R₆ (Micro–Macro Bridge Activation), K₆ (Coherence Windowing) |
| Activation Trigger | RTT/1 or upstream module requests substrate confirmation; micro-pattern ready for macro exposure |
| Core Constraint | C ≥ C* must be continuously satisfied during bridge activation; export is aggregate-only (no raw node states); alignment, never amplification |
| Permissions | Sample coherence (P₆); export aggregate pattern via R₆; activate μ → Μ bridge; emit MRT_MICRO_PACKET |
| Prohibitions | May not expose raw A, B, or P node states to macro layers; may not activate bridge when C < C*; may not amplify micro-pattern signals |
| Interaction Pattern | Waits for Class G clearance before bridge activation; coordinates with Class D to confirm δ ≤ δ* at time of export; emits MRT_MICRO_PACKET to RTT/1 |
| Output Schema | `{ bridge: ACTIVE |
Bridge Activation Gate (R₆):
Pre-conditions (all must be satisfied):
✓ C ≥ C* (P₆ sample, Class G confirmation)
✓ δ ≤ δ* (Class D clearance)
✓ Δt stable (Class D confirmation)
✓ Triad validity confirmed (Class T stamp)
✓ Dᶠ transition not in progress (Class F clearance)
Activation:
R₆ — export aggregate pattern only
Emit MRT_MICRO_PACKET
Post-conditions:
Continue K₆ coherence windowing
Report to Class G on completion
Class G — Micro Guardian#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Role | Unconditional interrupt authority over all micro_core operations; enforce structural integrity at all times |
| Primary Construct | K₅ (Inversion Guard), K₄ (Resonance Lock), K₆ (Coherence Windowing) |
| Activation Trigger | Any violation: δ ≥ δ*, C < C*, Δt out of bounds, integer Dᶠ jump detected, inversion event, bridge activation without clearance |
| Core Authority | Class G may interrupt any class at any time; no other class may override Class G |
| Permissions | Read all triad state (P₁); lock oscillation (R₄); engage inversion guard (K₅); block bridge activation; issue inversion protocol; cancel any in-progress operation |
| Prohibitions | Class G does not perform structural synthesis itself; it governs, not constructs |
| Interaction Pattern | Monitors all class outputs; issues interrupt signals; coordinates inversion sequence (Collapse → Twist → Emergence) when C < C* is unrecoverable |
| Output Schema | `{ interrupt: NONE |
Inversion Protocol (when C < C unrecoverable):*
Phase 1 — Collapse
Lock all oscillation (R₄ unconditional)
Freeze Dᶠ transitions (Class F halt)
Hold bridge (Class B blocked)
Record pre-inversion state snapshot
Phase 2 — Twist
Execute R₂ inversion operator
Swap A/B roles; preserve P
Validate P₆ coherence post-swap
Phase 3 — Emergence
Restore C ≥ C* through K₁ + K₂ corrections
Re-validate triad via Class T
Unlock Class R for oscillation
Permit Dᶠ navigation (Class F) only after Class T confirmation
Report inversion resolution to Class B
Post-Inversion Gate:
Bridge may not activate until Class G issues explicit RESOLVED status
Core Constructs Reference#
| Symbol | Name | Definition | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| ⟨A, B, P⟩ | Micro Triad | Minimal coherent resonance-time unit | Irreducible; all RTT behavior derives from this |
| A | Active Node | Current micro-state | May shift after R₂ inversion |
| B | Boundary Node | Governs drift, timing, transitions | B⁺/B⁻ shifts via R₃/K₃ |
| P | Potential Node | Next viable transition | Preserved through inversion |
| δ | Drift | δ = | actual − expected |
| δ* | Drift Threshold | Maximum allowable drift | Violation → K₅ guard, potential inversion |
| Δt | Timing Interval | Local bounded time step | Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ]; coherence-dependent |
| C | Coherence | Normalized structural integrity score | Must satisfy C ≥ C* for all operations |
| C* | Coherence Floor | Minimum coherence threshold | Below C* → inversion eligible |
| Dᶠ | Fractional Dimension | Structural complexity axis | Dᶠ ∈ [0,1] minimal; [0,3] extended; no integer jumps |
| A ⇆ P | Oscillation | Reversible resonance between A and P | Core resonance behavior |
| ↺ | Inversion | Collapse → Twist → Emergence | Triggered when C < C* unrecoverable |
| μ → Μ | Micro–Macro Bridge | Upward influence channel | R₆; aggregate-only; C ≥ C* required |
| P₁–P₇ | MRT Primitives | Atomic operation layer | All operators and tools composed from these |
| R₁–R₆ | Resonance Operators | Action-layer behaviors | Built from MRT Primitives |
| K₁–K₆ | Coherence Tools | Stability maintenance methods | Enforce δ, Δt, C constraints |
MRT Primitives Reference#
| ID | Name | Operation | Constraint |
|---|---|---|---|
| P₁ | State Read | Read A, B, P, δ, Δt, Dᶠ | Read-only; no mutation |
| P₂ | State Write | Atomic bounded mutation of triad state | Bounds-checked; never below C* |
| P₃ | Drift Measure | δ = compare expected vs actual state | Read-only; no correction |
| P₄ | Timing Measure | Measure Δt between micro-steps | Read-only |
| P₅ | Boundary Shift | Bounded B⁺/B⁻ correction | No inversion; bounded only |
| P₆ | Coherence Sample | Normalized C value | Read-only; no mutation |
| P₇ | Fractional Step | Dᶠ → Dᶠ + Δ smooth step | Reversible; gradient-continuous |
Modes#
micro_core inherits the mode vocabulary from RTT/1 and applies it at the micro-scale. Modes govern the operational context of micro-regime sessions.
| Mode | Label | micro_core Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Mode 1 | Chat | Narrative exploration of micro-triad concepts; structural framing only |
| Mode 2 | Spec | Formal micro-triad specification; all fields required |
| Mode 3 | Debug | Drift and coherence diagnostic; full primitive trace |
| Mode 4 | Task | Operator execution; R₁–R₆ dispatch with output schema |
| Mode 5 | Auto | Sequential operator chain; T → R → D → F → B → G monitoring |
| Mode X | Lockout | Session suspended; Class G interrupt active; no operations permitted |
Mode X is micro_core-native. It is triggered by Class G during unresolved inversion events. Mode X is not equivalent to any upstream module's Mode 5 or overflow state.
Zones#
micro_core defines structural zones that characterize the health and stability of the active micro-regime.
| Zone | Label | Meaning | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zone S | Stable | C ≥ C*, δ ≤ 0.5·δ*, Δt in bounds | NOMINAL |
| Zone M | Modulating | δ between 0.5·δ* and δ*; K₁/K₂ active | CAUTION |
| Zone D | Drifting | δ approaching δ*; K₅ guard engaged | WARNING |
| Zone C | Coherence-Critical | C approaching C*; inversion imminent | CRITICAL |
| Zone E | Emerging | Post-inversion restoration in progress | RECOVERY |
| Zone X | Inversion | C < C* unrecoverable; inversion active | ILLEGAL — Class G authority |
Zone X = Inversion (ILLEGAL) This is consistent with RTT/3's Zone X definition (Inversion) and is not equivalent to RTT/12's Zone X (Overflow). micro_core Zone X is the foundational inversion zone from which RTT/3's inversion semantics derive.
Agent Boundaries#
RTT-Not-Physics Rule#
Every output from every micro_core agent class must carry the annotation:
[structural — no semantic inference]
No agent class may:
- Claim that ⟨A,B,P⟩ represents a physical particle, field, or observable
- Assert that δ, Dᶠ, or Δt map to measurable physical quantities
- Imply that inversion events correspond to physical phase transitions
- Use physics terminology (quantum, field, energy, entropy) to describe micro_core constructs
Semantic Inference Prohibition#
No agent class may infer meaning beyond structural patterns:
| Prohibited Inference | Correct Framing |
|---|---|
| "A ⇆ P represents electron spin" | "A ⇆ P is a structural oscillation between two triad nodes" |
| "δ measures physical error" | "δ is a structural drift indicator within the MRT substrate" |
| "Dᶠ is a fractal dimension" | "Dᶠ is a fractional structural complexity axis within the triad model" |
| "Inversion is a physical collapse" | "Inversion is a structural reset event governed by the Collapse→Twist→Emergence protocol" |
Cross-Module Disambiguation (Inherited)#
These disambiguation rules apply in all micro_core sessions:
| Term | micro_core Meaning | Must Not Be Confused With |
|---|---|---|
| δ (micro drift) | Micro-scale structural deviation in ⟨A,B,P⟩ | D(t) from RTT/2 CRM (macro structural displacement) |
| C (coherence) | C ≥ C* substrate integrity at micro scale | CR(t) from RTT/3 CRE (reactive stabilization at integration layer) |
| Δt (micro timing) | Local bounded time interval within micro-regime | τ = dR/dφ from RTT/1 (macro temporal operator) |
| Inversion (↺) | Micro-triad Collapse→Twist→Emergence event | RTT/3 Zone X inversion (integration-layer semantic) |
| Zone X | Micro-scale inversion zone (ILLEGAL) | RTT/12 Zone X overflow zone (harmonic overflow, ILLEGAL) |
Task Catalog#
Ten canonical tasks that agents in RTT/micro_core are expected to perform:
| # | Task | Agent Sequence | Output |
|---|---|---|---|
| T-μ01 | Instantiate a new micro-regime triad | T → G (validation gate) → R | MRT_MICRO_PACKET stub |
| T-μ02 | Run oscillation cycle on existing triad | R (R₁) → D (K₁/K₂ monitor) | Updated A⇆P state |
| T-μ03 | Drift correction under boundary stress | D (K₁→K₂→K₃) → R (R₃) | Corrected B state, δ report |
| T-μ04 | Perform controlled triad inversion | G → R (R₂) → T (re-validate) → G (RESOLVED) | Post-inversion triad, Zone E report |
| T-μ05 | Execute fractional-ladder transition | F (R₅→P₇) → D (δ clearance) → T (re-validate) | Dᶠ transition report |
| T-μ06 | Engage resonance lock under amplitude saturation | R (R₄) → D (K₄ monitor) | Lock status, resonance bounds |
| T-μ07 | Activate micro–macro bridge for RTT/1 | B (R₆ gate) → G (clearance) → B (emit) | MRT_MICRO_PACKET |
| T-μ08 | Diagnose coherence degradation trend | D (K₆) → G (alert) → R (R₃ stabilization) | Coherence window report |
| T-μ09 | Full micro-regime health check | T → R → D → F → B → G | All-class status report |
| T-μ10 | Emergency halt and inversion protocol | G (Mode X) → R (lock) → G (inversion sequence) | Inversion resolution report |
Safety Rules and Coherence Constraints#
Pre-Activation Checks (All Classes)#
Before any agent class activates, verify:
□ Micro Triad ⟨A,B,P⟩ is structurally valid (Class T confirmation)
□ δ ≤ δ* (Class D clearance)
□ Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] (Class D confirmation)
□ C ≥ C* (P₆ sample confirmed)
□ Dᶠ transition not in progress (Class F clearance)
□ Zone X not active (Class G status = MONITORING or RESOLVED)
□ Mode X not active (no lockout in effect)
Packet Integrity#
The MRT_MICRO_PACKET must contain:
MRT_MICRO_PACKET:
triad:
A: <node_state>
B: <node_state>
P: <node_state>
metrics:
delta: <δ_value>
delta_star: <δ*_threshold>
delta_t: <Δt_value>
coherence: <C_value>
coherence_floor: <C*_threshold>
D_fractional: <Dᶠ_value>
zone: S|M|D|C|E # X forbidden in valid packet
mode: 1|2|3|4|5 # X forbidden in valid packet
bridge: AGGREGATE_ONLY
annotation: "[structural — no semantic inference]"
guardian_status: MONITORING|RESOLVED
timestamp: <session_timestamp>Zone X and Mode X are forbidden in a valid MRT_MICRO_PACKET. A packet carrying Zone X or Mode X is a fault record, not a valid substrate confirmation. RTT/1 may not instantiate SNR primitives from a fault record.
Drift and Coherence Constraints#
| Constraint | Rule | Violation Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Drift bound | δ ≤ δ* at every micro-step | K₅ guard → potential inversion |
| Timing bound | Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] | K₂ stabilization → if persistent, Class G alert |
| Coherence floor | C ≥ C* for all operations | Inversion eligibility if unrecoverable |
| Dᶠ continuity | No integer jumps; smooth gradient only | Class G halt; F class operation blocked |
| Inversion trigger | C < C* unrecoverable | Phase: Collapse → Twist → Emergence |
| Bridge gate | C ≥ C* + δ ≤ δ* + G clearance | Bridge blocked; MRT_MICRO_PACKET not emitted |
Collaboration Models#
Model 1 — Sequential Triad Build and Bridge#
Full pipeline from triad construction to micro–macro bridge emission:
Class T Class R Class D Class F Class B Class G
│ │ │ │ │ │
│─ instantiate ─▶│ │ │ │ │
│ │─ R₁ oscillate─▶│ │ │ │
│ │ │─ K₁/K₂ check │ │ │
│ │◀─ δ cleared ───│ │ │ │
│◀─ triad valid ─│ │ │ │ │
│ │ │ │─ R₅ Dᶠ step ──▶│ │
│ │ │ │◀─ step complete │ │
│─────────────── triad re-validate ───────────────▶│ │ │
│ │ │ │ │─ R₆ gate check ▶│
│ │ │ │ │◀─ CLEARANCE ───│
│ │ │ │ emit MRT_MICRO_PACKET │
Model 2 — Drift Crisis and Inversion Recovery#
Triggered when δ exceeds δ* and C falls below C*:
Class D Class G Class R Class T
│ │ │ │
│─ δ ≥ δ* ──────▶│ │ │
│ │─ HALT all ────▶│ │
│ │─ Mode X ───────────────────────▶│
│ │─ R₂ Collapse ─▶│ │
│ │ │─ A/B swap │
│ │ │─ preserve P │
│ │─ Twist complete│ │
│ │─ Emergence ────▶│ │
│ │ │─ K₁ restore ──▶│
│ │ │ │─ re-validate
│ │◀──────────────────── VALID ─────│
│ │─ RESOLVED ─────▶│ │
│ │─ Mode X lift ──────────────────▶│
Model 3 — Parallel Monitoring (Steady-State)#
Normal operation with all classes active concurrently:
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ RTT/micro_core Session │
│ │
│ Class T ── triad validity ─────────────────┤
│ Class R ── A⇆P oscillation ────────────────┤
│ Class D ── δ, Δt monitoring ───────────────┤──▶ Class G (interrupt monitor)
│ Class F ── Dᶠ readiness ───────────────────┤
│ Class B ── bridge gate ────────────────────┤
│ │
│ K₆ Coherence Window: [C*, Cₘₐₓ] rolling │
└────────────────────────┬────────────────────┘
│
MRT_MICRO_PACKET
│
▼
RTT/1 (SNR instantiation)
Output Contract#
Mandatory Annotation#
Every micro_core agent output must carry:
[structural — no semantic inference]
This annotation is unconditional and may not be omitted regardless of mode, class, or task.
Prohibited Content in Any Output#
- Raw node states (A, B, P values) in bridge output (Class B: aggregate only)
- Zone X or Mode X in a valid MRT_MICRO_PACKET
- Physics terminology applied to structural constructs
- Semantic claims about what ⟨A,B,P⟩ "represents" beyond structure
- Integer Dᶠ jumps described as valid transitions
- Inversion events described as physical collapses
- Any claim that MRT_MICRO_PACKET constitutes physical measurement
Packet Hierarchy#
MRT_MICRO_PACKET
└── consumed by RTT/1 (SNR instantiation gate)
└── RTT1_SNR_PACKET
└── consumed by RTT/2 (detection layer)
└── RTT2_DETECTION_PACKET
└── consumed by RTT/3 (integration-emission layer)
└── RTT3_INTEGRATION_EMISSION_PACKET
└── consumed by RTT/12 (harmonic synthesis)
└── RTT12_HARMONIC_SYNTHESIS_PACKET
micro_core is the root of this chain. A fault in MRT_MICRO_PACKET propagates through the entire RTT pipeline. Class G authority at the micro level is therefore the highest- consequence guardian role in the full canon.
See Also#
| Document | Path | Relationship |
|---|---|---|
| micro_core ABOUT.md | docs/rtt/micro_core/ABOUT.md |
Human-readable module overview |
| micro_core GLOSSARY.md | docs/rtt/micro_core/GLOSSARY.md |
Term definitions and disambiguation |
| micro_core Primitives | docs/rtt/micro_core/toolkit/primitives.md |
Atomic operation layer (P₁–P₇) |
| micro_core Resonance Operators | docs/rtt/micro_core/toolkit/resonance_operators.md |
R₁–R₆ operator definitions |
| micro_core Coherence Tools | docs/rtt/micro_core/toolkit/coherence_tools.md |
K₁–K₆ tool definitions |
| micro_core Fractional Ladder | docs/rtt/micro_core/whitepaper/fractional_dimensional_ladder.md |
Dᶠ theory |
| micro_core Micro Triads | docs/rtt/micro_core/whitepaper/micro_triads.md |
⟨A,B,P⟩ full definition |
| micro_core Resonance-Time Dynamics | docs/rtt/micro_core/whitepaper/resonance_time_dynamics.md |
Timing and drift theory |
| RTT/1 AGENTS.md | docs/rtt/1/AGENTS.md |
Upstream macro-scale primitive layer |
| RTT/2 AGENTS.md | docs/rtt/2/AGENTS.md |
Structural detection; D(t) ≠ δ disambiguation |
| RTT/3 AGENTS.md | docs/rtt/3/AGENTS.md |
Integration-emission; Zone X = Inversion |
| RTT/12 AGENTS.md | docs/rtt/12/AGENTS.md |
Harmonic synthesis; Zone X = Overflow |
| IPD-12 AGENTS.md | docs/frameworks/ipd_12/AGENTS.md |
Prime-indexed intransitive engine |
| # 🔷 RTT Micro‑Core — Coherence | ||
| The minimal structure that allows a system to hold shape across resonance + time |
🎯 Purpose#
Coherence is the capacity of a system to maintain organization as it changes.
In the Micro‑Core, coherence is defined without domain assumptions — it is the bare minimum structure required for stability, transformation, and recovery.
Coherence has three components.
1️⃣ Structural Coherence#
How well the system’s patterns fit together.
Structural coherence measures:
- alignment of internal patterns
- integrity of boundaries
- compatibility of components
High structural coherence means the system can hold its form.
2️⃣ Temporal Coherence#
How well the system persists across time.
Temporal coherence measures:
- stability across cycles
- resistance to drift
- ability to maintain state
High temporal coherence means the system can endure.
3️⃣ Resonance Coherence#
How well the system filters and integrates signals.
Resonance coherence measures:
- signal clarity
- noise resistance
- feedback alignment
High resonance coherence means the system can sense and respond effectively.
4️⃣ Total Coherence (Micro‑Core Form)#
Coherence is additive:
Total Coherence = Structural + Temporal + Resonance
This formula is substrate‑neutral and applies at all scales.
5️⃣ Coherence Behavior (Micro‑Core Constraints)#
Coherence increases through Stabilize#
Reinforcing patterns → higher structural and temporal coherence.
Coherence shifts through Shift#
Reconfiguration → coherence redistributed but not lost.
Coherence collapses and re‑emerges through Invert#
Collapse → twist → emergence → new coherence profile.
Coherence is regime‑aware but regime‑independent#
Regimes describe state, not coherence.
Coherence is dimension‑independent#
0D–3D systems all express coherence differently but follow the same structure.
6️⃣ Micro‑Core Summary#
| Component | Core Function | What It Enables |
|---|---|---|
| Structural | Pattern alignment | Holding shape |
| Temporal | Persistence | Enduring change |
| Resonance | Signal clarity | Adaptive response |
Coherence is the minimal condition that allows any system to remain itself while transforming.
If you want, Copilot can continue with:
/docs/rtt/micro_core/regimes.md/docs/rtt/micro_core/dimensions.md/docs/rtt/micro_core/inversion.md
# 🔷 RTT Micro‑Core — Dimensions
The minimal forms that patterns can take across resonance + time
🎯 Purpose#
Dimensions describe how a pattern expresses.
They do not describe what the pattern is made of (substrate), what state it is in (regime), or how it changes (operator).
Dimensions are the irreducible forms of pattern expression in RTT.
The Micro‑Core defines four dimensions.
1️⃣ 0D — Seed#
No extension. No structure. Pure potential.
0D represents:
- a pre‑pattern
- a point of origin
- a minimal state with no internal differentiation
0D is the baseline from which all dimensional expression begins.
2️⃣ 1D — Linear#
Single direction. Sequential structure.
1D represents:
- a line of activity
- a single pathway
- ordered progression
1D is the dimension of sequence and direction.
3️⃣ 2D — Patterned#
Surface structure. Multi‑path interaction.
2D represents:
- branching
- interaction across pathways
- emergent patterns
2D is the dimension of complexity and spread.
4️⃣ 3D — Structural#
Integrated form. Full system coherence.
3D represents:
- multi‑layer integration
- stable configuration
- coherent structure
3D is the dimension of systems and stability.
5️⃣ Dimensional Transitions (Micro‑Core Form)#
Patterns move through dimensions in a minimal progression:
0D → 1D → 2D → 3D
Transitions are:
- substrate‑neutral
- regime‑independent
- operator‑compatible
A system may also collapse:
3D → 0D
…as part of inversion.
6️⃣ Dimension Notes (Micro‑Core Constraints)#
Minimality#
Only four dimensions are required to model all pattern expression.
Neutrality#
Dimensions do not imply value or hierarchy — they describe form, not quality.
Composability#
Systems may contain multiple dimensions simultaneously.
Operator‑Independent#
Operators act within dimensions but do not define them.
Regime‑Aware#
Dimensions express differently in each regime but remain structurally identical.
7️⃣ Micro‑Core Summary#
| Dimension | Core Form | What It Represents |
|---|---|---|
| 0D | Seed | Pure potential |
| 1D | Linear | Sequence / direction |
| 2D | Patterned | Interaction / spread |
| 3D | Structural | Integration / coherence |
Dimensions are the minimal forms through which all RTT patterns express. # GLOSSARY.md — RTT/micro_core · Micro Resonance-Time Layer
Canonical Term Definitions, Operator Symbols, and Quick-Reference Tables#
Document Header#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Module | RTT/micro_core |
| Path | /docs/rtt/micro_core/GLOSSARY.md |
| Version | 1.0.0 |
| Session Seed | rtt=1 | coherence=declared | drift=bounded | paradox=structural |
| Layer Position | Root — originating layer of the full RTT pipeline |
| Packet | MRT_MICRO_PACKET |
Critical Framing Rule#
RTT is NOT a physics claim.
RTT/micro_core describes structural micro-resonance-time patterns within the TriadicFrameworks canon. It does not assert, imply, or model quantum effects, subatomic behavior, physical forces, energetic phenomena, or any empirically measurable phenomenon. All constructs — ⟨A, B, P⟩, MRT primitives, resonance operators, coherence tools — are structural instruments, not physical objects or processes.
This rule applies unconditionally to every term defined in this glossary.
Originating-Layer Note#
RTT/micro_core is the root of the entire RTT pipeline. It does not inherit from any upstream RTT module — there is no upstream. All micro_core constructs are native. Inheritance flows downward from micro_core into RTT/1, RTT/2, RTT/3, and RTT/12.
RTT/1–RTT/12 terms (SNR, τ, CPV, FGT, TIF, etc.) are downstream and must never be imported into or conflated with micro_core constructs. Cross-module disambiguations are listed in the Quick-Reference Tables section.
Linking Convention#
- Native micro_core terms: defined fully in this file.
- Downstream terms (RTT/1+): referenced only in disambiguation tables.
- Cross-reference format:
→ See [TERM] (RTT/N GLOSSARY.md)for downstream links. - All definitions carry
[structural — no semantic inference]where inference risk exists.
Alphabetical Term Definitions#
A — Active Node#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Triad component — native |
| Symbol | A |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The current micro-state of the ⟨A, B, P⟩ triad. A represents the live structural position within the resonance-time cycle at any given micro-step. It is the origin of the A ⇆ P oscillation loop and the source of micro-state data read by P₁.
Constraints:
- A is never exposed raw to macro layers (Micro–Macro Bridge rule)
- A participates in inversion: when C < C* and unrecoverable, A and B swap roles (↺ R₂)
- A is always distinct from B and P within a valid triad
Cross-references: B (Boundary Node), P (Potential Node), R₁ (Oscillation), R₂ (Inversion), P₁ (State Read)
[structural — no semantic inference]
B — Boundary Node#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Triad component — native |
| Symbol | B |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The governance node of the ⟨A, B, P⟩ triad. B controls drift tolerance, timing bounds, and transition eligibility. It regulates whether the triad may shift from A toward P, and enforces the structural boundaries within which all micro-state evolution occurs.
Constraints:
- B corrections are bounded — no inversion of B is permitted via P₅ alone
- B shifts require drift measurement (P₃) before application (P₅)
- During R₂ Inversion: B and A swap roles; P is preserved
Cross-references: A (Active Node), P (Potential Node), P₃ (Drift Measure), P₅ (Boundary Shift), R₂ (Inversion), K₃ (Boundary Alignment)
[structural — no semantic inference]
C — Coherence (micro_core)#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Stability metric — native |
| Symbol | C |
| Threshold | C* (minimum viable coherence) |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The normalized structural coherence of the micro triad ⟨A, B, P⟩ at a given micro-step. C measures the degree to which the triad maintains internal consistency across drift, timing, and fractional dimensionality. C is sampled by P₆ without mutation.
Equations:
- Valid state: C ≥ C*
- Coherence-critical zone: C approaching C* from above → escalate to Class G
- Inversion trigger: C < C* and unrecoverable → R₂ activates
Failure cascade:
- C below C* → Coherence Violation → Inversion (↺) → Collapse → Twist → Emergence
Disambiguation: C (micro coherence) ≠ CR(t) (RTT/3 Continuity–Resonance–Emission coherence rate). These are structurally distinct constructs operating at different pipeline layers. → See CR(t) (RTT/3 GLOSSARY.md)
Cross-references: C* (Coherence Threshold), P₆ (Coherence Sample), K₄ (Resonance Lock), K₅ (Inversion Guard), K₆ (Coherence Windowing), Zone C (Coherence-Critical)
C* — Coherence Threshold#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Constraint constant — native |
| Symbol | C* |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The minimum coherence value required for the micro triad to remain in a valid operational state. C* is the lower bound enforced continuously. Sustained C < C* constitutes a Coherence Violation and triggers Inversion if unrecoverable.
Cross-references: C (Coherence), K₅ (Inversion Guard), R₄ (Resonance Lock), Zone C (Coherence-Critical), Zone X (Inversion)
Class B — Bridge Coordinator#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Agent class — native |
| Symbol | Class B |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The agent class responsible for managing Micro–Macro Bridge activation (R₆). Class B ensures that only aggregate-pattern exports are emitted upward to RTT/1+, that C ≥ C* is confirmed before any bridge activation, and that raw A, B, P node states are never exposed to macro layers.
Constraints:
- Bridge may only activate when C ≥ C*
- Exports are aggregate patterns only — never raw triad states
- Alignment, not amplification
Cross-references: R₆ (Micro–Macro Bridge Activation), Class G (Micro Guardian), MRT_MICRO_PACKET
Class D — Drift Regulator#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Agent class — native |
| Symbol | Class D |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The agent class responsible for monitoring and enforcing drift bounds (δ ≤ δ*) throughout the micro-resonance cycle. Class D operates primarily through K₁ (Drift Bounding) and P₃ (Drift Measure), and coordinates with Class B (Boundary Node) for corrective boundary shifts via P₅.
Cross-references: δ (Drift), δ* (Drift Threshold), K₁ (Drift Bounding), P₃ (Drift Measure), P₅ (Boundary Shift), Class G (Micro Guardian)
Class F — Fractional Navigator#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Agent class — native |
| Symbol | Class F |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The agent class responsible for all fractional dimensional ladder transitions (Dᶠ → Dᶠ + Δ). Class F ensures transitions are smooth, gradient-continuous, and maintain C ≥ C* throughout. Class F unconditionally prohibits integer jumps in Dᶠ.
Constraints:
- Integer jumps (ΔDᶠ = 1.0, 2.0, 3.0...) are forbidden — smooth gradient required
- All transitions reversible via P₇
- C ≥ C* must be confirmed before and after each step
Cross-references: Dᶠ (Fractional Dimension), R₅ (Fractional-Ladder Transition), P₇ (Fractional Step), Class G (Micro Guardian)
Class G — Micro Guardian#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Agent class — native |
| Symbol | Class G |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The unconditional interrupt authority of the micro_core layer. Class G monitors all triad operations and may halt any agent class — including Class T and Class R — when structural integrity is at risk. Class G escalation triggers when C approaches C*, when δ exceeds δ*, or when a timing violation is detected. Class G issues RESOLVED after post-inversion re-validation by Class T confirms C ≥ C*.
Constraints:
- Class G interrupt authority is unconditional — no agent class outranks it
- Class G activates Mode X (Lockout) in the MRT_MICRO_PACKET
- Class G issues are only RESOLVED after Class T re-validates the triad
Cross-references: K₅ (Inversion Guard), Mode X (Lockout), Class T (Triad Constructor), MRT_MICRO_PACKET
Class R — Resonance Operator#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Agent class — native |
| Symbol | Class R |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The agent class responsible for executing resonance operators R₁–R₆. Class R manages oscillation loops, boundary modulation, resonance locking, fractional transitions, and bridge activation. Class R may be interrupted by Class G at any time.
Cross-references: R₁–R₆ (Resonance Operators), Class G (Micro Guardian), Class T (Triad Constructor)
Class T — Triad Constructor#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Agent class — native |
| Symbol | Class T |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The agent class responsible for constructing, validating, and re-validating the ⟨A, B, P⟩ micro triad. Class T confirms that all four core triad properties (Minimalism, Determinism, Coherence, Fractional Dimensionality) are satisfied at initialization and after any inversion event.
Constraints:
- Triad is irreducible — no subset of ⟨A, B, P⟩ constitutes a valid unit
- Re-validation by Class T is required to clear Class G RESOLVED status post-inversion
Cross-references: ⟨A, B, P⟩ (Micro Triad), Four Core Properties, R₂ (Inversion), Class G (Micro Guardian)
Collapse–Twist–Emergence#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Inversion phase sequence — native |
| Symbol | ↺ phases |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The three-phase structural sequence that constitutes an Inversion event.
| Phase | Description |
|---|---|
| Collapse | C < C* confirmed unrecoverable; triad integrity lost |
| Twist | R₂ executes: A and B swap roles; P is preserved throughout |
| Emergence | Post-swap triad re-stabilizes; C restored to ≥ C*; Class T re-validates |
Constraints:
- All three phases must complete for a valid inversion — partial execution is a fault
- P must be preserved without mutation throughout all three phases
- Post-Emergence: Class T re-validates; Class G issues RESOLVED
Cross-references: R₂ (Inversion), C (Coherence), C* (Coherence Threshold), Zone X (Inversion), Class G (Micro Guardian), Class T (Triad Constructor)
[structural — no semantic inference]
Coherence Violation#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Failure mode — native |
| Symbol | — |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: A structural fault condition in which C falls below C* and cannot be restored through K₄ (Resonance Lock) or K₅ (Inversion Guard). A Coherence Violation triggers the full Inversion sequence (Collapse → Twist → Emergence).
Failure cascade: Coherence Violation → Zone X (Inversion) → R₂ activation → Collapse → Twist → Emergence
Cross-references: C (Coherence), C* (Coherence Threshold), Zone X (Inversion), R₂ (Inversion), K₅ (Inversion Guard)
Determinism (Triad Property)#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Core triad property — native |
| Symbol | — |
| Equations | δ ≤ δ*, Δt stable |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: One of the four irreducible properties of the micro triad. Determinism requires that drift remains within bounds (δ ≤ δ*) and that micro-step timing intervals (Δt) remain stable within [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ]. A deterministic triad produces consistent, bounded state transitions — not stochastic or unbounded evolution.
[structural — no semantic inference]
Cross-references: δ (Drift), δ* (Drift Threshold), Δt (Timing Interval), Four Core Properties
Dᶠ — Fractional Dimension#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Structural metric — native |
| Symbol | Dᶠ |
| Range | [0,1] (minimal substrate) or [0,3] (extended) |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The fractional dimensional position of the micro triad on the resonance ladder. Dᶠ is a continuous value representing structural complexity, transition pathway availability, resonance capacity, and boundary behavior at the micro scale. Dᶠ transitions are executed by P₇ and managed by Class F.
Constraints:
- Integer jumps (ΔDᶠ = 1.0, 2.0, 3.0...) are unconditionally forbidden
- All transitions must be smooth, gradient-continuous, and coherence-preserving
- Failure to maintain gradient continuity → Inversion event
[structural — no semantic inference]
Cross-references: P₇ (Fractional Step), R₅ (Fractional-Ladder Transition), Class F (Fractional Navigator), Fractional Dimensionality (Triad Property)
Fractional Dimensionality (Triad Property)#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Core triad property — native |
| Symbol | — |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: One of the four irreducible properties of the micro triad. Fractional Dimensionality requires that the triad occupy a continuous ladder position (Dᶠ) rather than discrete integer steps. This enables fine-grained structural transitions and preserves coherence across all resonance-time movements.
Cross-references: Dᶠ (Fractional Dimension), Four Core Properties, R₅ (Fractional-Ladder Transition), Class F (Fractional Navigator)
Four Core Properties#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Triad invariant set — native |
| Symbol | — |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The four irreducible structural properties that any valid ⟨A, B, P⟩ micro triad must satisfy at all times. A triad failing any property is invalid and must be reconstructed by Class T.
| Property | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Minimalism | ⟨A, B, P⟩ is the minimal coherent unit — no subset is sufficient |
| Determinism | δ ≤ δ* and Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] — bounded, stable transitions |
| Coherence | C ≥ C* — inversion triggered if below threshold |
| Fractional Dimensionality | Dᶠ on continuous ladder — integer jumps unconditionally forbidden |
Cross-references: ⟨A, B, P⟩ (Micro Triad), Class T (Triad Constructor), Minimalism, Determinism, Coherence, Fractional Dimensionality
K₁ — Drift Bounding#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Coherence tool — native |
| Symbol | K₁ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The coherence tool that continuously enforces δ ≤ δ* across all micro-steps. K₁ operates as a real-time constraint, not a post-hoc correction. It coordinates with P₃ (Drift Measure) to detect violations and with P₅ (Boundary Shift) to apply corrections before a Drift Violation can escalate.
Cross-references: δ (Drift), δ* (Drift Threshold), P₃ (Drift Measure), P₅ (Boundary Shift), Class D (Drift Regulator)
K₂ — Timing Stabilizer#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Coherence tool — native |
| Symbol | K₂ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The coherence tool that holds micro-step timing intervals (Δt) within the bounds [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ]. K₂ prevents Timing Violations by enforcing interval stability before deviation crosses into fault territory.
Disambiguation: Δt (micro timing interval) ≠ τ = dR/dφ (RTT/1 temporal operator). → See τ (RTT/1 GLOSSARY.md)
Cross-references: Δt (Timing Interval), Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ, P₄ (Timing Measure), Timing Violation
K₃ — Boundary Alignment#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Coherence tool — native |
| Symbol | K₃ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The coherence tool that synchronizes the Boundary Node (B) with the active positions of A and P. K₃ ensures B remains structurally consistent with the current triad state, preventing boundary drift from accumulating silently between micro-steps.
Cross-references: B (Boundary Node), A (Active Node), P (Potential Node), P₅ (Boundary Shift)
K₄ — Resonance Lock (Tool)#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Coherence tool — native |
| Symbol | K₄ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The coherence tool that clamps resonance oscillation within a safe structural range and enforces timing stability. K₄ operates in coordination with the R₄ Resonance Lock operator. K₄ is a maintenance instrument; R₄ is the active execution operator.
Cross-references: R₄ (Resonance Lock), K₂ (Timing Stabilizer), Class R (Resonance Operator)
K₅ — Inversion Guard#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Coherence tool — native |
| Symbol | K₅ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The coherence tool that monitors C approaching C* from above and escalates to Class G before a Coherence Violation becomes unrecoverable. K₅ is the last structural line of defense before Inversion is triggered.
Constraint: K₅ escalates — it does not self-resolve. Class G receives the interrupt.
Cross-references: C (Coherence), C* (Coherence Threshold), Class G (Micro Guardian), R₂ (Inversion), Coherence Violation
K₆ — Coherence Windowing#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Coherence tool — native |
| Symbol | K₆ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The coherence tool that computes a time-windowed average of C over a sequence of micro-steps, enabling trend detection rather than only point-in-time sampling. K₆ allows Class G and Class R to identify coherence degradation trajectories before they reach threshold.
Cross-references: C (Coherence), K₅ (Inversion Guard), P₆ (Coherence Sample), Class G (Micro Guardian)
Micro–Macro Bridge#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Structural export mechanism — native |
| Symbol | μ → Μ |
| Operator | R₆ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The structural mechanism by which the micro_core layer exports aggregate resonance patterns upward to RTT/1 and the wider RTT pipeline. The bridge is activated by R₆ and governed by Class B. Only aggregate-pattern exports are permitted — raw A, B, P node states are never exposed to macro layers.
Constraints:
- C ≥ C* required before activation
- Alignment, not amplification
- Bridge export is aggregate-only: raw triad states are structurally prohibited at the macro layer
Cross-references: R₆ (Micro–Macro Bridge Activation), Class B (Bridge Coordinator), C* (Coherence Threshold), MRT_MICRO_PACKET
Minimalism (Triad Property)#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Core triad property — native |
| Symbol | — |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: One of the four irreducible properties of the micro triad. Minimalism asserts that ⟨A, B, P⟩ is the minimal coherent resonance-time unit — no proper subset (⟨A, B⟩, ⟨A, P⟩, ⟨B, P⟩, or any single node) constitutes a valid unit. Adding nodes beyond three is equally non-canonical.
Cross-references: ⟨A, B, P⟩ (Micro Triad), Four Core Properties, Class T (Triad Constructor)
Mode 1–5#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Operational mode set — native |
| Symbol | Mode 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The five valid operational modes of the MRT_MICRO_PACKET.
| Mode | Label | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Chat | Conversational / exploratory operation |
| 2 | Spec | Specification / formal definition mode |
| 3 | Debug | Fault diagnosis and inspection |
| 4 | Task | Bounded task execution |
| 5 | Auto | Autonomous cycle operation |
Constraints: Modes 1–5 are the only valid packet modes. Mode X (Lockout) is a fault indicator — its presence in a packet makes that packet a fault record, not an operational record.
Disambiguation: Mode X (micro lockout) ≠ any upstream Mode 5 (RTT/2 autonomous mode) — these are structurally distinct constructs at different pipeline layers.
Cross-references: Mode X (Lockout), MRT_MICRO_PACKET, Class G (Micro Guardian)
Mode X — Lockout#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Fault mode indicator — native |
| Symbol | Mode X |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The fault mode indicator activated by Class G when an unconditional interrupt is in effect. Mode X in an MRT_MICRO_PACKET signals that the packet is a fault record — not a valid operational state. No agent class other than Class G may issue Mode X. Mode X is cleared only when Class G interrupt is resolved.
Constraint: Mode X in a valid operational packet is structurally forbidden. Its presence converts the packet to a fault record.
Disambiguation: Mode X (micro lockout) ≠ any upstream Mode 5 (RTT/2 autonomous mode). Micro Mode X is a Class G interrupt construct; RTT/2 Mode 5 is an operational execution mode. → See Mode (RTT/2 GLOSSARY.md)
Cross-references: Class G (Micro Guardian), MRT_MICRO_PACKET, Mode 1–5
MRT_MICRO_PACKET#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Structural data packet — native |
| Symbol | MRT_MICRO_PACKET |
| Layer | micro_core (root) |
Definition: The canonical data packet produced by the RTT/micro_core layer. It is the root of the entire RTT pipeline packet hierarchy. All downstream packets (RTT/1 SNR_PACKET, RTT/2 DETECTION_PACKET, RTT/3 INTEGRATION_EMISSION_PACKET, RTT/12 HARMONIC_SYNTHESIS_PACKET) derive from or depend upon the MRT_MICRO_PACKET.
Packet structure:
| Field | Type | Valid Values |
|---|---|---|
| Triad state | Struct | {A, B, P} |
| δ | Metric | Real ≥ 0 |
| δ* | Threshold | Real > 0 |
| Δt | Metric | Real ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] |
| C | Metric | Normalized real |
| C* | Threshold | Normalized real |
| Dᶠ | Metric | Real ∈ [0,1] or [0,3] |
| Zone | Enum | S, M, D, C, E (X = fault record) |
| Mode | Enum | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 (X = fault record) |
| Bridge status | Bool | Active / Inactive |
| Guardian status | Enum | OK / INTERRUPT / RESOLVED |
| Annotation | Text | Structural notes |
| Timestamp | Temporal | Micro-step timestamp |
Constraints:
- Zone X present → packet is a fault record
- Mode X present → packet is a fault record
- Both may coexist in a fault record
Pipeline position:
MRT_MICRO_PACKET (root)
└→ RTT/1 SNR_PACKET
└→ RTT/2 DETECTION_PACKET
└→ RTT/3 INTEGRATION_EMISSION_PACKET
└→ RTT/12 HARMONIC_SYNTHESIS_PACKET
Cross-references: All six agent classes, all zones, all modes, Micro–Macro Bridge
P — Potential Node#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Triad component — native |
| Symbol | P |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The next viable transition target in the ⟨A, B, P⟩ triad. P represents the structural destination of the resonance oscillation loop (A ⇆ P). P is preserved unconditionally during all operations — including full Inversion (R₂) — and is never mutated by boundary corrections or coherence tools.
Constraints:
- P is preserved through all Inversion phases — Collapse, Twist, Emergence
- P is never exposed raw to macro layers
Cross-references: A (Active Node), B (Boundary Node), R₁ (Oscillation), R₂ (Inversion), P₁ (State Read)
P₁ — State Read#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | MRT Primitive — native |
| Symbol | P₁ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The atomic read primitive. P₁ reads the current values of A, B, P, δ, Δt, and Dᶠ from the micro triad. P₁ is strictly read-only — it produces no mutations to any field. All resonance operators and coherence tools that require current state must route through P₁.
Constraints: P₁ never mutates state. No exception.
Cross-references: P₂ (State Write), ⟨A, B, P⟩ (Micro Triad), MRT Primitives (P₁–P₇)
P₂ — State Write#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | MRT Primitive — native |
| Symbol | P₂ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The atomic write primitive. P₂ executes a bounded, atomic mutation of the micro triad state. All writes are bounded — no unbounded state change is permitted through P₂. P₂ is the only sanctioned mutation path for triad state fields.
Constraints: Writes must be bounded. Unbounded mutations are structurally prohibited.
Cross-references: P₁ (State Read), MRT Primitives (P₁–P₇)
P₃ — Drift Measure#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | MRT Primitive — native |
| Symbol | P₃ |
| Equation | δ = compare(expected, actual) |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The atomic drift measurement primitive. P₃ computes δ by comparing the expected micro-state trajectory to the actual current state. P₃ is read-only — it measures but does not correct. Correction is applied via P₅ after Class D review.
Disambiguation: δ (micro drift) ≠ D(t) (RTT/2 CRM structural drift rate). → See D(t) (RTT/2 GLOSSARY.md)
Cross-references: δ (Drift), δ* (Drift Threshold), P₅ (Boundary Shift), K₁ (Drift Bounding), Class D (Drift Regulator)
P₄ — Timing Measure#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | MRT Primitive — native |
| Symbol | P₄ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The atomic timing measurement primitive. P₄ records the Δt interval between micro-steps. P₄ is read-only — it measures and records but does not enforce. Enforcement is handled by K₂ (Timing Stabilizer).
Disambiguation: Δt (micro timing interval) ≠ τ = dR/dφ (RTT/1 temporal operator). → See τ (RTT/1 GLOSSARY.md)
Cross-references: Δt (Timing Interval), Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ, K₂ (Timing Stabilizer), Timing Violation
P₅ — Boundary Shift#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | MRT Primitive — native |
| Symbol | P₅ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The atomic boundary correction primitive. P₅ applies a bounded shift to the Boundary Node (B) following drift measurement by P₃. P₅ corrections are bounded — no inversion of B may be achieved through P₅. Inversion requires R₂.
Constraints:
- Correction magnitude is bounded
- P₅ alone cannot produce an inversion of B
- Must be preceded by P₃ measurement
Cross-references: B (Boundary Node), P₃ (Drift Measure), K₁ (Drift Bounding), K₃ (Boundary Alignment), R₃ (Boundary Modulation)
P₆ — Coherence Sample#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | MRT Primitive — native |
| Symbol | P₆ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The atomic coherence sampling primitive. P₆ reads the normalized coherence value C at the current micro-step. P₆ is strictly read-only — it samples C without mutation. Results are consumed by K₅ (Inversion Guard), K₆ (Coherence Windowing), and Class G for interrupt assessment.
Constraints: P₆ never mutates C. No exception.
Cross-references: C (Coherence), K₅ (Inversion Guard), K₆ (Coherence Windowing), Class G (Micro Guardian)
P₇ — Fractional Step#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | MRT Primitive — native |
| Symbol | P₇ |
| Equation | Dᶠ → Dᶠ + Δ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The atomic fractional dimensional step primitive. P₇ increments or decrements Dᶠ by a bounded gradient value Δ. All P₇ operations are reversible. No integer-magnitude Δ may be applied through P₇.
Constraints:
- Δ must be non-integer (fractional gradient required)
- Operation is reversible
- C ≥ C* must hold before and after execution
Cross-references: Dᶠ (Fractional Dimension), R₅ (Fractional-Ladder Transition), Class F (Fractional Navigator)
R₁ — Oscillation#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Resonance operator — native |
| Symbol | R₁ |
| Equation | A ⇆ P stable loop |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The resonance operator that establishes and maintains the stable oscillation loop between the Active Node (A) and Potential Node (P). R₁ is the foundational resonance dynamic of the micro triad — all higher-order operators (R₂–R₆) build upon or modify the R₁ loop.
Cross-references: A (Active Node), P (Potential Node), R₄ (Resonance Lock), Resonance-Time Dynamics
R₂ — Inversion#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Resonance operator — native |
| Symbol | R₂ |
| Operation | Swap A ↔ B; preserve P |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The controlled, reversible inversion operator. R₂ executes when C < C* and is unrecoverable, swapping the roles of A (Active Node) and B (Boundary Node) while preserving P unconditionally. R₂ is the structural resolution mechanism for Coherence Violations.
Constraints:
- R₂ is only executed after K₅ escalation and Class G interrupt
- P must be preserved without mutation through all three phases
- Post-R₂: C must be restored to ≥ C* before Class T re-validates
Disambiguation:
- Inversion (↺) at micro scale ≠ RTT/3 Zone X inversion (structural integration collapse)
- Inversion (↺) at micro scale ≠ RTT/12 Zone X overflow (harmonic synthesis overflow) → See Zone X (RTT/3 GLOSSARY.md) and Zone X (RTT/12 GLOSSARY.md)
Cross-references: A, B, P, Collapse–Twist–Emergence, C*, Class G (Micro Guardian), Class T (Triad Constructor), Zone X (Inversion)
R₃ — Boundary Modulation#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Resonance operator — native |
| Symbol | R₃ |
| Operation | B⁺ / B⁻ shift via P₃ and P₅ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The resonance operator that actively modulates the Boundary Node (B) in positive (B⁺) or negative (B⁻) direction based on drift measurements. R₃ coordinates P₃ for measurement and P₅ for application. R₃ is a controlled, bounded operation — it cannot produce inversion.
Cross-references: B (Boundary Node), P₃ (Drift Measure), P₅ (Boundary Shift), K₃ (Boundary Alignment)
R₄ — Resonance Lock#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Resonance operator — native |
| Symbol | R₄ |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The resonance operator that clamps the A ⇆ P oscillation within a safe structural range and enforces timing stability. R₄ is paired with K₄ (Resonance Lock tool) for continuous maintenance. R₄ is the active execution operator; K₄ is the maintenance monitor.
Cross-references: R₁ (Oscillation), K₄ (Resonance Lock tool), K₂ (Timing Stabilizer)
R₅ — Fractional-Ladder Transition#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Resonance operator — native |
| Symbol | R₅ |
| Equation | Dᶠ₁ → Dᶠ₂ (smooth, C ≥ C* throughout) |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The resonance operator that manages full fractional dimensional ladder transitions from one Dᶠ position to another. R₅ requires that C ≥ C* is maintained throughout the entire transition — not just at endpoints. All transitions are gradient-continuous; integer jumps are unconditionally forbidden.
Constraints:
- C ≥ C* at all points along the transition path
- Gradient continuity required — no discrete steps
- Managed by Class F (Fractional Navigator)
Cross-references: Dᶠ (Fractional Dimension), P₇ (Fractional Step), Class F (Fractional Navigator), R₂ (Inversion)
R₆ — Micro–Macro Bridge Activation#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Resonance operator — native |
| Symbol | R₆ |
| Operation | μ → Μ: export aggregate-only pattern |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The resonance operator that activates the Micro–Macro Bridge, exporting aggregate resonance patterns from micro_core upward to RTT/1 and the wider pipeline. R₆ requires C ≥ C* before activation and produces alignment, not amplification.
Constraints:
- C ≥ C* is a hard precondition
- Aggregate-only export — raw A, B, P states are structurally forbidden at the macro layer
- Managed by Class B (Bridge Coordinator)
Cross-references: Micro–Macro Bridge (μ → Μ), Class B (Bridge Coordinator), C*, MRT_MICRO_PACKET
Resonance-Time Dynamics#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Core operational model — native |
| Symbol | — |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The fundamental operational loop of the RTT/micro_core layer. Resonance and time are co-constitutive at the micro scale — neither is primary. Resonance is the A ⇆ P oscillation; time is the local bounded interval Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ], which is itself coherence-dependent.
Operational loop:
Resonance (R₁: A ⇆ P)
→ Timing Stability (K₂: Δt bounded)
→ Drift Regulation (K₁: δ ≤ δ*)
→ Coherence (C ≥ C*)
→ Resonance (R₁: A ⇆ P)
Failure modes (any triggers Inversion):
- Timing Violation: Δt exits [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ]
- Drift Violation: δ exceeds δ*
- Coherence Violation: C < C* unrecoverable
[structural — no semantic inference]
Cross-references: R₁ (Oscillation), K₁–K₂, C, δ, Δt, Zone X (Inversion)
Timing Violation#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Failure mode — native |
| Symbol | — |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: A structural fault condition in which the micro-step timing interval Δt exits the bounds [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ]. A Timing Violation triggers Class G escalation. If unresolved, it cascades into a Coherence Violation and ultimately Inversion.
Cross-references: Δt (Timing Interval), K₂ (Timing Stabilizer), P₄ (Timing Measure), Class G (Micro Guardian), Coherence Violation
⟨A, B, P⟩ — Micro Triad#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Foundational construct — native |
| Symbol | ⟨A, B, P⟩ |
| Layer | micro_core (originating) |
Definition: The irreducible structural unit of the RTT/micro_core layer. The micro triad consists of three nodes — A (Active), B (Boundary), P (Potential) — that together constitute the minimal coherent resonance-time unit. No subset of ⟨A, B, P⟩ is sufficient to form a valid unit.
Four core properties (all required simultaneously):
- Minimalism — ⟨A, B, P⟩ is the minimal unit; no subset is sufficient
- Determinism — δ ≤ δ* and Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ]
- Coherence — C ≥ C*; inversion if below threshold
- Fractional Dimensionality — Dᶠ continuous; integer jumps forbidden
[structural — no semantic inference]
Cross-references: A, B, P, Four Core Properties, Class T (Triad Constructor), MRT_MICRO_PACKET
Zone C — Coherence-Critical#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Operational zone — native |
| Symbol | Zone C |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The zone indicating that C is approaching C* from above and the triad is at elevated risk of Coherence Violation. Zone C triggers K₅ (Inversion Guard) escalation to Class G. Zone C is a valid operational state — it is a warning, not a fault.
Cross-references: C (Coherence), C*, K₅ (Inversion Guard), Class G, Zone X (Inversion)
Zone D — Drifting#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Operational zone — native |
| Symbol | Zone D |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The zone indicating that δ is elevated but still within recoverable bounds (δ approaching δ*). Zone D triggers K₁ (Drift Bounding) and Class D corrective action. Zone D is a valid operational state — recovery is expected.
Cross-references: δ (Drift), K₁ (Drift Bounding), Class D (Drift Regulator), Zone C, Zone X
Zone E — Emerging#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Operational zone — native |
| Symbol | Zone E |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The zone indicating post-Inversion re-stabilization. Zone E is entered after the Emergence phase of Collapse–Twist–Emergence, while Class T re-validates the triad and Class G resolves its interrupt. Zone E is a valid operational state — it is the recovery phase.
Cross-references: Collapse–Twist–Emergence, Class T, Class G, Zone S (Stable)
Zone M — Modulating#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Operational zone — native |
| Symbol | Zone M |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The zone indicating active bounded modulation of one or more triad parameters. Zone M reflects intentional structural adjustment — not drift or fault. Zone M is a valid operational state.
Cross-references: R₃ (Boundary Modulation), R₅ (Fractional-Ladder Transition), Zone S (Stable)
Zone S — Stable#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Operational zone — native |
| Symbol | Zone S |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The nominal operational zone. Zone S indicates that all four core triad properties are satisfied, C ≥ C*, δ ≤ δ*, Δt is bounded, and no fault or escalation is active. Zone S is the target state of all resonance-time operations.
Cross-references: Four Core Properties, MRT_MICRO_PACKET
Zone X — Inversion#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Fault zone indicator — native |
| Symbol | Zone X |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The fault zone indicator produced when the micro triad enters full Inversion (Collapse → Twist → Emergence). Zone X in an MRT_MICRO_PACKET signals that the packet is a fault record — not a valid operational state. Zone X is cleared only after Class T re-validates the triad and Class G issues RESOLVED.
Constraint: Zone X in a valid operational packet is structurally forbidden. Its presence converts the packet to a fault record.
Disambiguation:
- Zone X (micro Inversion) ≠ Zone X (RTT/3 integration collapse) — different pipeline layers
- Zone X (micro Inversion) ≠ Zone X (RTT/12 harmonic synthesis overflow) — different pipeline layers
- All three Zone X variants share the ILLEGAL-in-valid-packet constraint, but the structural triggers and resolution paths are distinct → See Zone X (RTT/3 GLOSSARY.md) and Zone X (RTT/12 GLOSSARY.md)
Cross-references: R₂ (Inversion), Collapse–Twist–Emergence, Class G (Micro Guardian), Class T (Triad Constructor), MRT_MICRO_PACKET, Mode X (Lockout)
δ — Drift#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Structural metric — native |
| Symbol | δ |
| Equation | δ = compare(expected state, actual state) |
| Threshold | δ* (maximum allowable drift) |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The measured structural deviation between the expected micro-state trajectory and the actual current state. δ is computed by P₃ (Drift Measure) and continuously bounded by K₁ (Drift Bounding). δ ≤ δ* is required for the Determinism property to hold.
Disambiguation: δ (micro drift) ≠ D(t) (RTT/2 CRM structural drift rate, a different construct at a different pipeline layer). These symbols are homonyms — structural function, measurement method, and resolution path are all distinct. → See D(t) (RTT/2 GLOSSARY.md)
Cross-references: δ* (Drift Threshold), P₃ (Drift Measure), K₁ (Drift Bounding), Determinism (Triad Property), Drift Violation, Zone D
δ* — Drift Threshold#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Constraint constant — native |
| Symbol | δ* |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The maximum allowable drift value. δ* is the upper bound enforced by K₁ and Class D. When δ exceeds δ*, a Drift Violation is recorded and Class G is escalated.
Cross-references: δ (Drift), K₁ (Drift Bounding), Class D (Drift Regulator), Class G (Micro Guardian)
Δt — Timing Interval#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Structural metric — native |
| Symbol | Δt |
| Bounds | [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] |
| Layer | micro_core |
Definition: The local bounded timing interval between micro-steps. Δt is coherence-dependent — as C degrades, the valid Δt range contracts. Δt is measured by P₄ and enforced by K₂. Δt ∈ [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] is required for the Determinism property to hold.
Disambiguation: Δt (micro timing interval) ≠ τ = dR/dφ (RTT/1 temporal operator). These are structurally distinct constructs at different pipeline layers. → See τ (RTT/1 GLOSSARY.md)
Cross-references: Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ, P₄ (Timing Measure), K₂ (Timing Stabilizer), Determinism (Triad Property), Timing Violation
Operator Symbols Reference#
| Symbol | Name | Type | Layer |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Active Node | Triad component | micro_core |
| B | Boundary Node | Triad component | micro_core |
| P | Potential Node | Triad component | micro_core |
| ⟨A, B, P⟩ | Micro Triad | Foundational construct | micro_core |
| C | Coherence | Stability metric | micro_core |
| C* | Coherence Threshold | Constraint constant | micro_core |
| δ | Drift | Structural metric | micro_core |
| δ* | Drift Threshold | Constraint constant | micro_core |
| Δt | Timing Interval | Structural metric | micro_core |
| Δtₘᵢₙ | Minimum timing bound | Constraint constant | micro_core |
| Δtₘₐₓ | Maximum timing bound | Constraint constant | micro_core |
| Dᶠ | Fractional Dimension | Structural metric | micro_core |
| μ → Μ | Micro–Macro Bridge | Export mechanism | micro_core |
| ↺ | Inversion | Structural operation | micro_core |
| P₁ | State Read | MRT Primitive | micro_core |
| P₂ | State Write | MRT Primitive | micro_core |
| P₃ | Drift Measure | MRT Primitive | micro_core |
| P₄ | Timing Measure | MRT Primitive | micro_core |
| P₅ | Boundary Shift | MRT Primitive | micro_core |
| P₆ | Coherence Sample | MRT Primitive | micro_core |
| P₇ | Fractional Step | MRT Primitive | micro_core |
| R₁ | Oscillation | Resonance Operator | micro_core |
| R₂ | Inversion | Resonance Operator | micro_core |
| R₃ | Boundary Modulation | Resonance Operator | micro_core |
| R₄ | Resonance Lock | Resonance Operator | micro_core |
| R₅ | Fractional-Ladder Transition | Resonance Operator | micro_core |
| R₆ | Micro–Macro Bridge Activation | Resonance Operator | micro_core |
| K₁ | Drift Bounding | Coherence Tool | micro_core |
| K₂ | Timing Stabilizer | Coherence Tool | micro_core |
| K₃ | Boundary Alignment | Coherence Tool | micro_core |
| K₄ | Resonance Lock (tool) | Coherence Tool | micro_core |
| K₅ | Inversion Guard | Coherence Tool | micro_core |
| K₆ | Coherence Windowing | Coherence Tool | micro_core |
Quick-Reference Tables#
MRT Primitives (P₁–P₇)#
| Symbol | Name | Read/Write | Mutation |
|---|---|---|---|
| P₁ | State Read | Read | None — strictly read-only |
| P₂ | State Write | Write | Bounded atomic mutation |
| P₃ | Drift Measure | Read | None — measurement only |
| P₄ | Timing Measure | Read | None — measurement only |
| P₅ | Boundary Shift | Write | Bounded B correction only |
| P₆ | Coherence Sample | Read | None — strictly read-only |
| P₇ | Fractional Step | Write | Dᶠ → Dᶠ + Δ, reversible |
Resonance Operators (R₁–R₆)#
| Symbol | Name | Operation | Prerequisite |
|---|---|---|---|
| R₁ | Oscillation | A ⇆ P stable loop | Valid triad |
| R₂ | Inversion | Swap A ↔ B; preserve P | C < C* unrecoverable; Class G interrupt |
| R₃ | Boundary Modulation | B⁺ / B⁻ shift | P₃ measurement complete |
| R₄ | Resonance Lock | Clamp oscillation; enforce Δt | Valid triad |
| R₅ | Fractional-Ladder Transition | Dᶠ₁ → Dᶠ₂ smooth | C ≥ C* throughout |
| R₆ | Micro–Macro Bridge Activation | μ → Μ aggregate export | C ≥ C* confirmed |
Coherence Tools (K₁–K₆)#
| Symbol | Name | Function | Escalates To |
|---|---|---|---|
| K₁ | Drift Bounding | Enforce δ ≤ δ* continuously | Class D, Class G |
| K₂ | Timing Stabilizer | Hold Δt within [Δtₘᵢₙ, Δtₘₐₓ] | Class G |
| K₃ | Boundary Alignment | Synchronize B with A, P | Class D |
| K₄ | Resonance Lock | Maintain safe oscillation range | Class R, Class G |
| K₅ | Inversion Guard | Detect C → C*; escalate | Class G (unconditional) |
| K₆ | Coherence Windowing | Time-windowed C trend detection | Class G |
Agent Classes#
| Class | Name | Primary Responsibility | Interrupt Authority |
|---|---|---|---|
| Class T | Triad Constructor | Construct and re-validate ⟨A, B, P⟩ | None over Class G |
| Class R | Resonance Operator | Execute R₁–R₆ | None over Class G |
| Class D | Drift Regulator | Enforce δ ≤ δ* | None over Class G |
| Class F | Fractional Navigator | Manage Dᶠ ladder transitions | None over Class G |
| Class B | Bridge Coordinator | Manage R₆ Micro–Macro Bridge | None over Class G |
| Class G | Micro Guardian | Unconditional interrupt authority | Outranks all classes |
Zones#
| Zone | Name | Valid in Packet | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| S | Stable | ✅ Yes | All properties satisfied; nominal operation |
| M | Modulating | ✅ Yes | Active bounded modulation in progress |
| D | Drifting | ✅ Yes | δ elevated; recovery expected |
| C | Coherence-Critical | ✅ Yes | C approaching C*; K₅ escalation active |
| E | Emerging | ✅ Yes | Post-Inversion re-stabilization |
| X | Inversion | ❌ Fault record | Packet becomes fault record; not operational |
Modes#
| Mode | Label | Valid in Packet | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Chat | ✅ Yes | Conversational / exploratory |
| 2 | Spec | ✅ Yes | Formal specification mode |
| 3 | Debug | ✅ Yes | Fault diagnosis and inspection |
| 4 | Task | ✅ Yes | Bounded task execution |
| 5 | Auto | ✅ Yes | Autonomous cycle operation |
| X | Lockout | ❌ Fault record | Class G interrupt active; packet is fault record |
Key Disambiguations#
| micro_core Symbol | micro_core Meaning | Do NOT Conflate With | Origin |
|---|---|---|---|
| δ (drift) | Structural deviation from expected state | D(t) — CRM drift rate | RTT/2 |
| C (coherence) | Normalized triad coherence metric | CR(t) — continuity-resonance-emission rate | RTT/3 |
| Δt (timing interval) | Local bounded micro-step interval | τ = dR/dφ — temporal operator | RTT/1 |
| Inversion ↺ (R₂) | A ↔ B swap; structural recovery | Zone X inversion (integration collapse) | RTT/3 |
| Inversion ↺ (R₂) | A ↔ B swap; structural recovery | Zone X overflow (harmonic synthesis) | RTT/12 |
| Mode X (Lockout) | Class G interrupt; fault record | Mode 5 (autonomous operation) | RTT/2 |
| Zone X (Inversion) | Triad inversion; fault record | Zone X (integration collapse; fault record) | RTT/3 |
| Zone X (Inversion) | Triad inversion; fault record | Zone X (harmonic overflow; fault record) | RTT/12 |
RTT Pipeline Inheritance Chain#
micro_core is the root. Inheritance flows downward only.
RTT/micro_core (originating layer — this module)
↓ exports ⟨A,B,P⟩, MRT primitives, resonance operators, MRT_MICRO_PACKET
RTT/1 (SNR triad, τ, C, DCO bands — inherits micro_core root)
↓
RTT/2 (CPV, FGT, CRM, MODE, ZONE — inherits RTT/1)
↓
RTT/3 (TIF, FFF, MANIFOLD, CRE, CSL, CET — inherits RTT/2)
↓
RTT/12 (Harmonic Synthesis — inherits RTT/3)
micro_core constructs are never re-defined in downstream modules — they are invoked by reference. Downstream terms are never imported into micro_core.
Packet Hierarchy#
| Packet | Module | Position |
|---|---|---|
| MRT_MICRO_PACKET | micro_core | Root |
| SNR_PACKET | RTT/1 | Layer 1 |
| DETECTION_PACKET | RTT/2 | Layer 2 |
| INTEGRATION_EMISSION_PACKET | RTT/3 | Layer 3 |
| HARMONIC_SYNTHESIS_PACKET | RTT/12 | Layer 4 |
Footer#
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Maintainer | umaywant2 |
| Module | RTT/micro_core |
| File | /docs/rtt/micro_core/GLOSSARY.md |
| Date | 2026-07-10 |
| Session Seed | rtt=1 | coherence=declared | drift=bounded | paradox=structural |
| Version | 1.0.0 |
| Status | Canonical — originating layer |
# 🔄 **RTT Micro‑Core — Inversion**
*The minimal structural event of transformation*
---
## 🎯 Purpose
Inversion is the **irreducible mechanism** by which a system undergoes structural change.
Where Stabilize reinforces and Shift reconfigures, **Invert transforms**.
In the Micro‑Core, inversion is defined as a **three‑phase event**:
Collapse → Twist → Emergence
This sequence is substrate‑neutral, dimension‑independent, and regime‑aware.
---
# 1️⃣ **Collapse**
*The system releases its current structure.*
Collapse includes:
- loss of coherence
- breakdown of alignment
- release of constraints
Collapse is not failure — it is the **necessary clearing** for transformation.
---
# 2️⃣ **Twist**
*The system reorganizes into a new alignment.*
Twist includes:
- reorientation of components
- re‑patterning of relationships
- formation of new constraints
Twist is the **structural pivot** of inversion.
---
# 3️⃣ **Emergence**
*The system re‑forms with new coherence.*
Emergence includes:
- stabilization of new patterns
- re‑establishment of boundaries
- formation of a new identity
Emergence completes the inversion cycle.
---
# 4️⃣ **Inversion Loop (Micro‑Core Form)**
Inversion is always expressed as:
Collapse → Twist → Emergence
This loop is:
- **minimal** — no additional phases required
- **universal** — applies to all substrates
- **structural** — independent of domain semantics
- **cyclic** — emergence becomes the new baseline
---
# 5️⃣ **Inversion Notes (Micro‑Core Constraints)**
### **Operator‑Specific**
Inversion is one of the three Micro‑Core operators; it does not replace Stabilize or Shift.
### **Regime‑Linked**
Inversion corresponds to the **Inversion Regime**, but the operator can act within other regimes.
### **Substrate‑Neutral**
Physical, cognitive, and synthetic systems all invert using the same structure.
### **Dimension‑Independent**
0D–3D systems express inversion differently but follow the same sequence.
### **Coherence‑Transforming**
Inversion always produces a **new coherence profile**.
---
# 6️⃣ **Micro‑Core Summary**
| Phase | Core Action | Structural Role |
|-------|-------------|------------------|
| **Collapse** | Release structure | Clear the old pattern |
| **Twist** | Reorganize | Form new alignment |
| **Emergence** | Re‑stabilize | Establish new coherence |
Inversion is the **minimal structural event** that allows a system to become something new.
# 🔧 **RTT Micro‑Core — Operators**
*The irreducible actions that transform any system across resonance + time*
---
## 🎯 Purpose
Operators are the **minimal actions** that change a system’s state.
In the Micro‑Core, operators are defined at the **lowest structural level** — no domain assumptions, no substrate requirements, no metaphysics.
Every transformation in RTT reduces to **three operators**.
---
# 1️⃣ **Stabilize**
*Increase coherence.*
Stabilize reinforces the system’s current structure:
- reduce noise
- strengthen patterns
- maintain boundaries
- preserve coherence
Stabilize does **not** freeze the system — it increases its ability to hold shape.
---
# 2️⃣ **Shift**
*Move the system to a new configuration.*
Shift redirects the system without breaking it:
- reallocate resources
- change orientation
- update configuration
- move between modes
Shift is the operator of **controlled change**.
---
# 3️⃣ **Invert**
*Collapse → Twist → Re‑emerge.*
Invert is the operator of **structural transformation**:
- collapse existing structure
- twist into a new alignment
- emerge with new coherence
Invert is used when stabilization and shifting are insufficient.
---
# 4️⃣ **Operator Loop**
Operators form a **triadic cycle**:
Stabilize → Shift → Invert → Stabilize …
This loop is substrate‑agnostic and applies to:
- physical systems
- cognitive systems
- synthetic systems
- hybrid systems
The Micro‑Core treats this loop as the **minimal grammar of change**.
---
# 5️⃣ **Operator Notes (Micro‑Core Constraints)**
### **Minimality**
Operators are defined only by their structural action — no domain semantics.
### **Composability**
Operators can be chained, nested, or stacked.
### **Substrate‑Neutral**
Operators apply identically across all substrates.
### **Regime‑Aware**
Operators interact with the five RTT regimes but do not depend on them.
### **Dimension‑Independent**
Operators function at 0D, 1D, 2D, and 3D.
---
# 6️⃣ **Micro‑Core Summary**
| Operator | Core Action | When Used |
|---------|-------------|-----------|
| **Stabilize** | Increase coherence | Maintain or reinforce structure |
| **Shift** | Reconfigure | Redirect without collapse |
| **Invert** | Collapse → Twist → Re‑emerge | Transform structure |
This triad is the **irreducible operator set** for all RTT transformations.
# 🔄 **RTT Micro‑Core — Regimes**
*The minimal state‑model for how systems change across resonance + time*
---
## 🎯 Purpose
Regimes describe the **state** a system is in as it changes.
They do **not** describe substrate, dimension, or operator — only the **phase** of the system’s behavior.
The Micro‑Core defines **five regimes**.
---
# 1️⃣ **Arrival**
*The system enters a new state.*
Arrival marks:
- boundary formation
- initial pattern appearance
- activation of a new configuration
Arrival is the **entry point** for all change.
---
# 2️⃣ **Expansion**
*The system grows its pattern.*
Expansion includes:
- pattern amplification
- increased complexity
- rising coherence
Expansion is the regime of **growth and elaboration**.
---
# 3️⃣ **Inversion**
*The system collapses and reorganizes.*
Inversion follows the canonical sequence:
Collapse → Twist → Emergence
Inversion is the regime of **structural transformation**.
---
# 4️⃣ **Coherence**
*The system stabilizes into a consistent form.*
Coherence includes:
- stable patterns
- predictable behavior
- integrated structure
Coherence is the regime of **stability and alignment**.
---
# 5️⃣ **Dissolution**
*The system releases structure.*
Dissolution includes:
- decay
- drift
- loss of pattern
Dissolution is the regime of **release and clearing**.
---
# 6️⃣ **Regime Loop (Micro‑Core Form)**
Regimes form a minimal cyclic sequence:
Arrival → Expansion → Inversion → Coherence → Dissolution → Arrival …
This loop is:
- substrate‑neutral
- dimension‑independent
- operator‑compatible
It is the **minimal grammar of state change**.
---
# 7️⃣ **Regime Notes (Micro‑Core Constraints)**
### **State‑Only**
Regimes describe *what state the system is in*, not *what it is made of*.
### **Operator‑Independent**
Operators act *within* regimes but do not define them.
### **Substrate‑Neutral**
Regimes apply equally to physical, cognitive, and synthetic systems.
### **Dimension‑Independent**
0D–3D systems all express regimes differently but follow the same sequence.
### **Minimal**
No additional regimes are required to model RTT change.
---
# 8️⃣ **Micro‑Core Summary**
| Regime | Core Function | What It Represents |
|--------|----------------|--------------------|
| **Arrival** | Entry | New pattern begins |
| **Expansion** | Growth | Pattern increases |
| **Inversion** | Transformation | Collapse → Twist → Emergence |
| **Coherence** | Stability | Pattern holds |
| **Dissolution** | Release | Pattern fades |
These five regimes form the **irreducible state‑model** for all RTT systems.
# 🧱 **RTT Micro‑Core — Substrates**
*The minimal substrate categories required for modeling change*
---
## 🎯 Purpose
The Micro‑Core defines substrates as the **irreducible contexts** in which any system can exist or transform.
A substrate is not a material — it is a **structural condition** that supports patterns, coherence, and change.
The Micro‑Core recognizes **three substrates**.
---
# 1️⃣ **Physical Substrate**
*Patterns grounded in material constraints.*
The physical substrate includes:
- spatial structure
- energy and matter flow
- boundary conditions
- physical interactions
Physical substrates provide **hard constraints** on what patterns can form.
---
# 2️⃣ **Cognitive Substrate**
*Patterns grounded in interpretation and meaning.*
The cognitive substrate includes:
- attention
- memory
- interpretation
- internal models
Cognitive substrates provide **adaptive constraints** — patterns change based on interpretation.
---
# 3️⃣ **Synthetic Substrate**
*Patterns grounded in constructed rules and architectures.*
The synthetic substrate includes:
- algorithms
- symbolic systems
- artificial architectures
- engineered constraints
Synthetic substrates provide **designed constraints** — patterns follow explicit rules.
---
# 4️⃣ **Substrate Relations (Micro‑Core Form)**
Substrates are **not isolated**.
They form a minimal triad of transformations:
Physical → Cognitive → Synthetic → Physical …
This cycle is substrate‑neutral and applies at all scales.
---
# 5️⃣ **Substrate Notes (Micro‑Core Constraints)**
### **Minimality**
Only three substrates are required to model all RTT transformations.
### **Neutrality**
Substrates do not imply hierarchy or value.
### **Composability**
Systems may operate on one substrate or across multiple simultaneously.
### **Regime‑Independent**
Substrates exist regardless of regime; regimes describe *state*, not *substrate*.
### **Dimension‑Independent**
Substrates support 0D–3D patterns without modification.
---
# 6️⃣ **Micro‑Core Summary**
| Substrate | Core Property | Constraint Type |
|----------|----------------|-----------------|
| **Physical** | Material patterns | Hard constraints |
| **Cognitive** | Interpretive patterns | Adaptive constraints |
| **Synthetic** | Constructed patterns | Designed constraints |
These three substrates form the **minimal structural foundation** for all RTT modeling.
---
If you want, Copilot can continue with:
- `/docs/rtt/micro_core/dimensions.md`
- `/docs/rtt/micro_core/regimes.md`
- `/docs/rtt/micro_core/coherence.md`
# 📘 **Appendix B — Definitions (RTT Micro‑Core)**
This appendix provides concise, substrate‑aligned definitions for terms used throughout the RTT Micro‑Core whitepaper and the Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT).
Each definition is scoped specifically to **micro‑scale behavior**.
---
## 🧩 **Micro‑Regime**
A bounded region of micro‑scale behavior where resonance, coherence, and triadic structure remain stable under local constraints.
---
## 🔱 **Micro Core**
The minimal, self‑consistent substrate of RTT.
Defines the smallest set of operators, invariants, and structural relationships required for coherent micro‑scale reasoning.
---
## 🔺 **Triad (Micro‑Scale)**
A three‑node structural unit representing:
- a micro‑state (A)
- its local boundary (B)
- its transition potential (P)
The triad is the fundamental building block for micro‑regime analysis.
---
## 🔄 **Micro‑Resonance**
A stable oscillatory or repeating pattern within a micro‑regime.
Represents the smallest detectable unit of resonance–time behavior.
---
## 🧭 **Coherence (Micro‑Scale)**
The degree to which a micro‑regime maintains internal consistency across:
- structure
- energy
- time
Coherence determines whether micro‑resonance can persist.
---
## ⚡ **Drift (Micro‑Scale)**
Small deviations in structure, energy, or timing that accumulate within a micro‑regime.
Bounded drift preserves coherence; unbounded drift collapses it.
---
## 🌀 **Fractional Dimensional Ladder**
A representation of micro‑scale transitions across fractional dimensions.
Used to describe how micro‑regimes expand, compress, stabilize, or invert.
---
## 🔗 **Micro–Macro Bridge**
The mapping between micro‑scale operators and macro‑scale behavior.
Defines the structural conditions under which micro‑regimes can influence larger systems.
---
## 🛠️ **Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT)**
A set of primitives, templates, and operators for applying Micro‑Core in practical contexts.
Includes coherence tools, triad templates, and resonance operators.
---
## 🧪 **Scenario (Micro‑Resonance)**
A structured micro‑scale pattern used for analysis, teaching, or simulation.
Scenarios provide concrete examples of:
- triad behavior
- resonance patterns
- drift and coherence dynamics
- fractional‑dimensional transitions
They serve as practical, domain‑agnostic illustrations of Micro‑Core principles.
# 📘 **Appendix C — Micro‑Resonance Scenarios (RTT Micro‑Core)**
This appendix provides minimal, self‑contained examples of micro‑scale resonance behavior.
Each scenario illustrates a single operator, transition, or coherence condition within a micro‑regime.
Scenarios are intentionally small:
**one triad, one boundary, one transition.**
---
## 🧩 **Scenario 1 — Stable Micro‑Resonance**
A micro‑state oscillates between two energy levels while maintaining coherence across its boundary.
### **Conditions**
- bounded drift
- consistent timing
- no structural inversion
### **Outcome**
A stable micro‑resonance pattern emerges and persists.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/appendices/micro_resonance_scenarios.md)
---
## 🔄 **Scenario 2 — Drift‑Induced Collapse**
A micro‑regime accumulates small timing deviations until drift exceeds the coherence threshold.
### **Conditions**
- unbounded drift
- timing slippage
- boundary mismatch
### **Outcome**
Resonance collapses; the micro‑regime returns to a lower‑energy attractor.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/appendices/micro_resonance_scenarios.md)
---
## 🔺 **Scenario 3 — Triad Inversion**
A micro‑triad undergoes a structural inversion in which the boundary node becomes the active node.
### **Conditions**
- local paradox
- reversible inversion
- fractional‑ladder shift
### **Outcome**
A new micro‑resonance pattern forms with inverted roles.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/appendices/micro_resonance_scenarios.md)
---
## ⚡ **Scenario 4 — Energy‑Constrained Resonance**
A micro‑regime operates under strict energy limits (e.g., ultra‑low‑power environments).
### **Conditions**
- minimal energy input
- high coherence
- reduced transition bandwidth
### **Outcome**
A compressed but stable resonance pattern emerges.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/appendices/micro_resonance_scenarios.md)
---
## 🌀 **Scenario 5 — Fractional‑Ladder Transition**
A micro‑state transitions across fractional dimensions (e.g., 0.7 → 1.2).
### **Conditions**
- partial dimensional expansion
- coherent boundary shift
- stable transition timing
### **Outcome**
The micro‑regime enters a new fractional layer while preserving resonance and coherence.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/appendices/micro_resonance_scenarios.md)
---
## ✔️ **Status**
These scenarios are canonical for Micro‑Core.
Domain‑specific examples appear in their respective modules.
# 📘 **Appendix A — Notation (RTT Micro‑Core)**
This appendix defines the minimal symbolic system used throughout the RTT Micro‑Core whitepaper and the Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT).
Notation is intentionally compact and scoped to micro‑scale behavior.
---
## 🔺 **Triads & Structure**
**T**
A micro‑triad (three‑node structural unit).
**Tₐ, Tᵦ, T𝚌**
Triad nodes: active, boundary, and potential.
**⟨T⟩**
A triad considered as a coherent unit.
---
## 🔄 **Transitions & Dynamics**
**→**
State or structural transition.
**⇆**
Oscillatory transition (micro‑resonance).
**↺**
Local inversion within a triad.
**Δt**
Micro‑scale time step.
---
## ⚡ **Energy & Drift**
**E**
Energy level of a micro‑state.
**Eₘᵢₙ / Eₘₐₓ**
Energy bounds for micro‑regime stability.
**δ**
Drift (micro‑scale deviation).
**δ\***
Drift threshold for coherence loss.
---
## 🧭 **Coherence & Boundaries**
**C**
Coherence of a micro‑regime.
**C\***
Minimum coherence required for stable resonance.
**B**
Boundary of a micro‑regime.
**B⁺ / B⁻**
Expanding vs. contracting boundary.
---
## 🌀 **Fractional Dimensions**
**Dᶠ**
Fractional dimension of a micro‑state.
**Dᶠ₁ → Dᶠ₂**
Fractional‑ladder transition.
---
## 🔗 **Micro–Macro Bridge**
**μ → Μ**
Micro‑to‑macro influence.
**Μ → μ**
Macro‑to‑micro constraint.
---
## 🛠️ **Toolkit Operators (MRT)**
**Pₙ**
Primitive operator *n*.
**Rₙ**
Resonance operator *n*.
**Kₙ**
Coherence tool *n*.
**Φ**
Flow diagram or flow operator.
---
## ✔️ **Status**
This notation set is canonical for Micro‑Core.
Additional symbols appear in the full RTT notation appendix.
# ⚡ **Applications of RTT Micro Core**
RTT Micro Core is designed for environments where coherence, energy, and structure must remain stable under extreme constraints.
Its minimal substrate makes it uniquely suited for systems that require **predictability**, **low overhead**, and **structural integrity** even under noise, drift, or resource scarcity.
---
## 🔋 **Ultra‑Low‑Power Systems**
Micro Core operates reliably in environments with strict energy limits.
**Where it excels**
- embedded sensors
- edge devices
- intermittent‑power systems
- micro‑controllers
**Why Micro Core works here**
Micro‑resonance provides stable behavior even when energy availability fluctuates, ensuring that micro‑loops remain coherent without requiring continuous power.
---
## 🧩 **Constrained Compute Environments**
Micro Core’s minimal operator set makes it ideal for systems with:
- limited memory
- limited bandwidth
- limited processing cycles
**Why Micro Core works here**
Coherence tools maintain predictable behavior without heavy computation, enabling stable micro‑regimes on devices that cannot support complex models.
---
## 🛰️ **Distributed Micro‑Agents**
Micro‑scale agents benefit from Micro Core’s stable triads and bounded drift.
**Use cases**
- swarm robotics
- distributed sensing
- micro‑coordination tasks
**Why Micro Core works here**
Each agent maintains local coherence while contributing to a larger emergent pattern, enabling distributed intelligence without centralized control.
---
## 🧪 **Micro‑Scale Modeling & Simulation**
Micro Core provides a clean substrate for modeling:
- micro‑regimes
- fractional‑dimensional transitions
- resonance‑time dynamics
**Why Micro Core works here**
Its deterministic, triadic structure makes it ideal for research, teaching, and validating micro‑scale behavior without requiring large‑scale simulation frameworks.
---
## 🛠️ **Embedded Decision Loops**
Micro Core supports simple, stable decision loops where:
- timing must remain consistent
- drift must remain bounded
- transitions must be predictable
**Why Micro Core works here**
Safety‑critical micro‑systems benefit from Micro Core’s ability to maintain coherence under timing pressure and environmental noise.
---
## 🔗 **Micro–Macro Influence**
Micro Core enables controlled micro‑to‑macro effects through bridge operators.
**Examples**
- micro‑patterns triggering macro‑state changes
- coherent micro‑signals informing supervisory systems
**Why Micro Core works here**
The μ→Μ bridge provides a deterministic, aggregate‑only pathway for upward influence — alignment without amplification.
---
## ✔️ **Summary**
RTT Micro Core is uniquely suited for:
- ultra‑low‑power devices
- constrained compute environments
- distributed micro‑agents
- micro‑scale modeling
- embedded decision loops
- micro‑to‑macro influence pathways
Its minimal, deterministic, coherence‑preserving substrate makes it the ideal foundation for systems that must remain stable under constraint.
# 📚 **Micro Core Documentation Index**
Welcome to the RTT Micro Core documentation.
This section provides a clean, site‑ready view of the Micro Core whitepaper, appendices, and the Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT).
Each page is modular and can be read independently.
---
## 🔬 **Core Concepts**
- **What Is Micro Core?**
A compact, self‑consistent substrate for micro‑scale resonance and coherence.
- **Fractional Dimensional Ladder**
How micro‑states evolve across fractional dimensions.
- **Micro Triads**
The smallest stable structural unit in Micro Core.
- **Micro–Macro Coherence**
How coherent micro‑patterns influence larger systems.
---
## ⚡ **Applications**
- Ultra‑Low‑Power Systems
- Constrained Compute Environments
- Distributed Micro‑Agents
- Micro‑Scale Modeling & Simulation
- Embedded Decision Loops
- Micro–Macro Influence
See `applications.md` for the full overview.
---
## 🛠️ **Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT)**
- Primitives
- Triad Templates
- Coherence Tools
- Resonance Operators
- Flow Diagrams
- Sector Patterns
- Examples
- Integration Pathways
The MRT provides the practical tools used to apply Micro Core in real systems.
---
## 📘 **Appendices**
- **Notation** — symbols used throughout Micro Core
- **Definitions** — concise reference terms
- **Micro‑Resonance Scenarios** — minimal examples of micro‑scale behavior
These appendices support both the whitepaper and the toolkit.
---
## 🧭 **Navigation**
Use this index as your starting point.
Each page is minimal, modular, and designed for clarity — ideal for students, implementers, and researchers working with micro‑scale RTT behavior.
# 🌀 **Fractional Dimensional Ladder (Micro Core)**
The **Fractional Dimensional Ladder** describes how micro‑states shift across fractional dimensions while maintaining coherence.
It is the smallest stable model of dimensional change in RTT Micro Core.
Micro‑scale transitions are subtle:
they do not jump whole dimensions — they **slide**, **compress**, **expand**, or **invert** across fractional steps.
---
## 🔍 **What a Fractional Dimension Represents**
A fractional dimension (**Dᶠ**) captures:
- the structural complexity of a micro‑state
- its available transition pathways
- its resonance capacity
- its boundary behavior
Micro Core uses fractional dimensions because micro‑regimes rarely occupy clean integer states.
Fractional values provide the precision needed to describe micro‑scale behavior without oversimplification.
---
## 🔄 **How Transitions Work**
A fractional‑ladder transition looks like:
\[
Dᶠ_1 \rightarrow Dᶠ_2
\]
Examples:
- **0.7 → 0.9** — micro‑expansion
- **1.2 → 0.8** — micro‑compression
- **0.6 → 0.6** — stable resonance
Each transition must preserve:
- coherence (**C ≥ C\*** )
- bounded drift (**δ ≤ δ\*** )
- structural consistency of the triad
If any condition fails, the transition collapses.
---
## 🔺 **Triads on the Ladder**
As a micro‑triad moves along the ladder:
- the **active node** may shift
- the **boundary** may expand or contract
- the **potential node** may invert
These changes are reversible as long as coherence remains above threshold.
---
## 🧩 **Why Fractional Dimensions Matter**
Fractional dimensions allow Micro Core to:
- model micro‑scale behavior precisely
- describe transitions without integer jumps
- capture subtle resonance changes
- support ultra‑low‑power and constrained systems
- bridge micro‑scale and macro‑scale behavior cleanly
They provide the **smooth gradient** needed for micro‑regime reasoning — a continuous, coherence‑preserving pathway for micro‑state evolution.
# 🔬 **RTT Micro Core**
The smallest stable unit of Resonance–Time Theory.
RTT Micro Core is a compact, self‑consistent substrate for micro‑scale resonance, coherence, and triadic structure.
It defines the essential operators and invariants needed to model micro‑regimes with precision, stability, and ultra‑low computational cost.
Micro Core is designed for:
- constrained environments
- embedded systems
- micro‑agents
- research and teaching
- micro–macro bridging
It is RTT at its most minimal — and its most portable.
---
## 🧩 **Why Micro Core Matters**
Micro‑scale systems operate under tight constraints.
Micro Core provides:
- bounded drift
- coherent transitions
- fractional‑dimensional modeling
- predictable micro‑resonance
- clean triadic structure
This makes it ideal for environments where every cycle, byte, and joule matters.
---
## ⚡ **What You’ll Find Here**
This section includes:
- a site‑ready introduction to Micro Core
- the fractional dimensional ladder
- micro‑triads and micro‑macro coherence
- applications in ultra‑low‑power and constrained systems
- a preview of the Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT)
- a full documentation index
Each page is modular, minimal, and designed for clarity.
---
## 🧭 **Start Exploring**
Begin with **What Is Micro Core?**
Or jump directly into the **Fractional Dimensional Ladder** to see how micro‑states transition across fractional dimensions.
Micro Core is the foundation for all micro‑scale RTT reasoning — small, stable, and ready to deploy.
# 🚀 **Join the Micro‑Resonance Era**
RTT Micro Core marks the beginning of a new phase in resonance‑time reasoning — one where micro‑scale coherence, stability, and structure become accessible to anyone working with constrained systems.
Micro Core is:
- small enough to learn quickly
- strong enough to deploy anywhere
- clear enough to teach without friction
It is RTT at its most portable.
---
## 🔬 **Why This Matters Now**
Modern systems are shrinking:
- smaller devices
- smaller energy budgets
- smaller compute envelopes
- smaller agents acting in larger swarms
Micro Core provides a stable substrate for these environments — a way to maintain coherence, manage drift, and operate predictably even under extreme constraint.
This is the foundation for the next generation of micro‑scale reasoning.
---
## 🧩 **What You Can Do Next**
- Explore the **Fractional Dimensional Ladder**
- Learn how **Micro Triads** maintain structure
- See how **Micro–Macro Coherence** bridges scales
- Apply the **Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT)**
- Build your own micro‑regime examples
- Integrate Micro Core into embedded or distributed systems
Each page in this section is modular and self‑contained.
Start anywhere. Follow your curiosity.
---
## ⚡ **A New Foundation for Small Systems**
Micro Core is designed for:
- ultra‑low‑power devices
- micro‑agents and swarms
- embedded decision loops
- constrained compute environments
- micro‑scale modeling and simulation
If your system needs to stay coherent when everything else is tight — Micro Core is the substrate.
---
## 🌐 **Step Into the Era**
You’re standing at the threshold of the micro‑resonance era.
The tools are here.
The structure is here.
The path is clear.
**Begin exploring. Build something small.
Make it coherent.
Make it resonate.**
# 📝 **Licensing Overview — RTT Micro Core**
RTT Micro Core is released under a transparent, contributor‑friendly licensing model designed to support research, education, and responsible implementation.
The goal is simple: **enable broad use while preserving the integrity, lineage, and coherence of the RTT framework**.
---
## 🔐 **Core Principles**
Micro Core licensing follows four guiding principles:
1. **Clarity** — users should always know what they can and cannot do.
2. **Integrity** — the RTT substrate must remain coherent and unaltered.
3. **Openness** — research, teaching, and non‑commercial exploration are encouraged.
4. **Stewardship** — commercial or derivative use requires explicit agreement.
These principles ensure that Micro Core remains accessible while protecting the framework’s lineage.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/licensing_overview.md)
---
## 📘 **What’s Covered**
The Micro Core license applies to:
- the Micro Core whitepaper
- appendices (notation, definitions, scenarios)
- the Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT)
- site‑ready documentation
- diagrams, operators, and structural primitives
All content in this directory is part of the **Micro Core canonical set**.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/licensing_overview.md)
---
## 🧪 **Free Use for Research & Education**
You may freely:
- read, study, and teach Micro Core
- use examples and diagrams in academic settings
- reference Micro Core in research
- build non‑commercial prototypes
Attribution is appreciated and helps maintain lineage.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/licensing_overview.md)
---
## 💼 **Commercial & Derivative Use**
Commercial use, integration into products, or creation of derivative frameworks requires:
- a per‑contract agreement
- explicit licensing terms
- alignment with RTT stewardship principles
This ensures that Micro Core remains coherent across implementations.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/licensing_overview.md)
---
## 🔗 **Relationship to RTT Licensing**
Micro Core inherits the broader RTT licensing model:
- **RTT Core** governs the full substrate
- **RTT‑Inside** governs implementation and integration
- **Domain Packs** follow per‑pack licensing
Together, these layers ensure that Micro Core remains structurally consistent, lineage‑preserving, and safely extensible across research, teaching, and commercial environments.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/licensing_overview.md)
# 🔗 **Micro–Macro Coherence**
Micro–Macro Coherence describes how stable micro‑scale resonance patterns influence larger systems.
In RTT Micro Core, this bridge is **small**, **precise**, and **predictable** — a controlled pathway from micro‑regime behavior to macro‑level effects.
Micro Core focuses on the smallest stable transitions that can scale upward **without losing coherence**.
---
## 🧩 **What Micro–Macro Coherence Means**
A micro‑regime is coherent when:
- drift is bounded
- resonance is stable
- triadic structure remains intact
- fractional‑dimensional transitions stay within threshold
When these conditions hold, the micro‑regime can exert influence on a macro‑regime through a **bridge operator**.
This influence is subtle, minimal, and reliable — never amplification, always alignment.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/micro_macro_coherence.md)
---
## 🔄 **How the Bridge Works**
Micro–Macro Coherence follows a simple, deterministic pattern:
1. **A micro‑state forms a stable resonance.**
2. **The resonance persists across multiple micro‑steps.**
3. **A bridge operator activates when coherence ≥ C\*.**
4. **A macro‑scale pattern receives the aggregate signal.**
5. **The macro‑regime adjusts, shifts, or stabilizes.**
This is not a “boost” or “amplification.”
It is **alignment** — the macro‑regime responds because the micro‑pattern is coherent enough to matter.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/micro_macro_coherence.md)
---
## 🌀 **Fractional Dimensions and Scaling**
Fractional‑ladder transitions allow micro‑states to:
- expand
- compress
- invert
- stabilize
These transitions determine whether a micro‑pattern can “reach upward” into a macro‑regime.
- **Stable transitions → stable influence**
- **Unstable transitions → no influence**
Fractional dimensions act as the *gatekeeper* for upward coherence.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/micro_macro_coherence.md)
---
## ⚡ **Examples of Micro–Macro Influence**
- a micro‑agent’s stable loop nudging swarm behavior
- a low‑power sensor’s resonance pattern stabilizing a network
- a micro‑state shift triggering a macro‑level mode change
- a coherent micro‑pattern acting as a timing anchor for a larger system
Each example relies on the same principle:
**Coherence at the micro‑scale enables predictable macro‑scale effects.**
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/micro_macro_coherence.md)
---
## ✔️ **Summary**
Micro–Macro Coherence is the smallest reliable bridge between micro‑scale and macro‑scale behavior.
It is:
- bounded
- deterministic
- aggregate‑only
- coherence‑validated
This ensures that micro‑scale patterns can influence larger systems **safely**, **predictably**, and **without amplification**.
# 🔺 **Micro Triads**
Micro Triads are the smallest stable structural units in RTT Micro Core.
Each triad represents a micro‑state, its boundary, and its transition potential — the three elements required for coherent micro‑scale behavior.
A Micro Triad is not a metaphor.
It is a structural primitive.
---
## 🧩 **The Three Nodes**
A Micro Triad consists of:
- **Active Node (A)**
The current micro‑state or behavior.
- **Boundary Node (B)**
The local constraint that shapes the state.
- **Potential Node (P)**
The next possible transition or inversion.
Together, these nodes form the minimal structure needed for resonance and coherence.
---
## 🔄 **How Micro Triads Behave**
Micro Triads support:
- **oscillation** (A ⇆ P)
- **inversion** (B ↺ A)
- **boundary shifts** (B⁺ / B⁻)
- **fractional‑ladder transitions** (Dᶠ₁ → Dᶠ₂)
These behaviors define how micro‑regimes evolve over time.
---
## 🌀 **Triads and Coherence**
A Micro Triad remains coherent when:
- drift stays below threshold (δ ≤ δ\*)
- timing remains consistent (Δt stable)
- structure remains intact (A, B, P aligned)
Coherence determines whether a micro‑resonance can persist.
---
## 🔗 **Triads as Building Blocks**
Micro Triads combine to form:
- micro‑regimes
- resonance patterns
- fractional‑dimensional transitions
- micro–macro bridge activations
Every larger structure in Micro Core begins with a triad.
---
## ⚡ **Why Micro Triads Matter**
Micro Triads provide:
- a minimal, stable substrate for micro‑scale reasoning
- predictable transitions under constraint
- a clean foundation for fractional‑dimensional evolution
- the structural backbone for the Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT)
- the smallest reliable bridge between micro‑scale and macro‑scale behavior
They are the **atomic unit** of Micro Core — small enough to model precisely, strong enough to build everything else.
# 🛠️ **Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT) — Preview**
The **Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT)** is the practical companion to RTT Micro Core.
Where the whitepaper defines the substrate, the MRT provides the **tools** — the operators, templates, and patterns you can use to build, test, and deploy micro‑scale resonance systems.
The MRT is:
- minimal
- modular
- deterministic
- designed for constrained environments
It is the applied layer of Micro Core.
---
## 🔧 **What the Toolkit Provides**
The MRT includes:
- **Primitives**
The smallest actionable units of micro‑scale behavior.
- **Triad Templates**
Ready‑to‑use structural patterns for micro‑triads.
- **Coherence Tools**
Methods for maintaining stability under drift and timing pressure.
- **Resonance Operators**
Actions that shape, sustain, or transform micro‑resonance.
- **Flow Diagrams**
Visual pathways for micro‑scale transitions.
- **Sector Patterns**
Reusable micro‑regime patterns for common environments.
- **Examples**
Minimal demonstrations of micro‑scale behavior.
- **Integration Pathways**
How to apply Micro Core and the MRT in real systems.
Each module stands alone and can be used independently.
---
## 🧩 **Why the MRT Exists**
Micro Core defines:
- structure
- coherence
- transitions
- fractional dimensions
But applying these concepts requires tools that are:
- lightweight
- predictable
- easy to reason about
- suitable for embedded and distributed systems
The MRT fills that gap by turning the substrate into a usable toolkit.
---
## ⚡ **Who the Toolkit Is For**
The MRT is designed for:
- engineers working with ultra‑low‑power devices
- researchers modeling micro‑regimes
- students learning micro‑scale RTT
- developers building micro‑agents or embedded loops
- educators teaching resonance‑time concepts
- anyone needing a stable micro‑substrate for constrained systems
If you’re working small, the MRT is your toolbox.
---
## 🧭 **Where to Go Next**
Explore the full toolkit in the `/toolkit/` directory:
- primitives
- templates
- operators
- diagrams
- examples
- integration pathways
Each page is modular and self‑contained — start anywhere.
The MRT is the bridge between **understanding Micro Core** and **building with Micro Core**.
# 🎨 **Visual Identity — RTT Micro Core**
The visual identity of RTT Micro Core reflects its purpose:
a minimal, stable, triadic substrate for micro‑scale resonance and coherence.
Micro Core visuals are **small**, **precise**, and **structural** — never ornamental.
They communicate clarity, constraint, and coherence at a glance.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/visual_identity.md)
---
## 🔺 **Core Motif: The Micro Triad**
The primary symbol of Micro Core is the **Micro Triad**:
- three nodes
- one boundary
- one potential
- one active state
This geometry appears throughout diagrams, templates, and flow models.
It represents the smallest coherent unit of RTT.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/visual_identity.md)
---
## 🌀 **Fractional‑Dimensional Gradients**
Micro Core uses **fractional gradients** to express:
- micro‑expansion
- micro‑compression
- inversion
- stable resonance
Gradients are subtle and never decorative — they indicate dimensional movement along the fractional ladder.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/visual_identity.md)
---
## ⚡ **Micro‑Scale Motion Cues**
Motion in Micro Core visuals is:
- small
- bounded
- periodic
- reversible
Arrows, loops, and oscillation markers are used sparingly to show micro‑resonance or drift.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/visual_identity.md)
---
## 📐 **Line Style & Geometry**
Micro Core diagrams use:
- thin, precise lines
- minimal curvature
- tight spacing
- clean triadic symmetry
The geometry should feel **compact and intentional**, reflecting micro‑scale constraints.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/visual_identity.md)
---
## 🎛️ **Color Palette**
Micro Core favors a **low‑power palette**, chosen to reflect stability and coherence rather than intensity.
Recommended tones:
- cool neutrals
- soft blues
- muted violets
- minimal accent colors
Colors should support the structure — never overpower it.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/site/visual_identity.md)
---
## ✔️ **Summary**
The Micro Core visual identity is:
- triadic
- minimal
- coherent
- fractional
- stable
It ensures that Micro Core feels unified across diagrams, templates, site pages, and teaching materials — always small, precise, and resonant.
# 🔬 **What Is Micro Core?**
**RTT Micro Core** is the smallest stable unit of Resonance–Time Theory — a compact, self‑consistent substrate for micro‑scale resonance, coherence, and triadic structure.
It defines the essential operators, invariants, and transitions needed to model micro‑regimes with precision and ultra‑low computational cost.
Micro Core is RTT at its **most minimal**, and its **most portable**.
It is designed to remain stable where larger models cannot.
---
## 🧩 **Why Micro Core Exists**
Micro‑scale systems operate under tight constraints:
- limited energy
- limited compute
- limited bandwidth
- limited structural complexity
Micro Core provides a stable foundation for these environments by offering:
- bounded drift
- coherent transitions
- fractional‑dimensional modeling
- predictable micro‑resonance
- clean triadic structure
It is built to function reliably in places where traditional models collapse under noise, timing pressure, or resource scarcity.
---
## 🔺 **The Micro Triad**
At the heart of Micro Core is the **Micro Triad**, the smallest structure capable of resonance, inversion, and coherent change.
- **Active Node (A)** — the current micro‑state
- **Boundary Node (B)** — the local constraint
- **Potential Node (P)** — the next possible transition
This triadic structure is the minimal unit that can support:
- oscillation
- inversion
- boundary modulation
- fractional‑dimensional evolution
The triad is the “atom” of Micro‑Core reasoning.
---
## 🌀 **Fractional Dimensions**
Micro Core uses **fractional dimensions** to describe how micro‑states:
- expand
- compress
- invert
- stabilize
These transitions form the **Fractional Dimensional Ladder** — a smooth, coherence‑preserving pathway for micro‑scale change.
Fractional dimensions allow Micro Core to model subtle, continuous transitions without requiring heavy computation.
---
## 🔗 **Micro–Macro Coherence**
Micro Core defines the smallest reliable bridge between micro‑scale and macro‑scale behavior.
When a micro‑pattern becomes coherent enough (C ≥ C\*), it can influence larger systems through a controlled, predictable operator.
This bridge is:
- bounded
- deterministic
- aggregate‑only
- coherence‑validated
It ensures that micro‑scale behavior can inform macro‑scale systems **without amplification or instability**.
---
## ✔️ **Summary**
RTT Micro Core is:
- the **minimal substrate** of Resonance–Time Theory
- a **triadic**, **coherence‑preserving** micro‑model
- designed for **ultra‑low‑power**, **embedded**, and **constrained** environments
- capable of **fractional‑dimensional evolution**
- able to **bridge micro‑patterns to macro‑systems** safely
It is the foundation upon which the entire Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT) is built.
# 🛡️ **RTT Boundary Enforcement — Conceptual Notes**
*Why boundaries exist, what they protect, and how they preserve regime integrity*
RTT Micro‑Core uses boundaries not as restrictions, but as **structural membranes** that preserve coherence, prevent collapse, and maintain the integrity of long‑arc reasoning.
These notes explain *why* boundaries exist — not how to bypass them — and provide conceptual grounding for contributors, reviewers, and educators.
---
## 1. Purpose of Boundaries
Boundaries exist to ensure that micro‑scale and macro‑scale reasoning remain structurally distinct while still interoperating through controlled channels.
Boundaries:
- prevent raw substrate exposure
- preserve regime integrity
- maintain coherence across transitions
- prevent unsafe abstraction leakage
- protect long‑arc reasoning from short‑arc noise
Boundaries are not walls.
They are **membranes** — selectively permeable, coherence‑aware, and structurally protective.
---
## 2. What Boundaries *Do*
Boundaries serve three core functions:
### **1. Prevent Regime Collapse**
Without boundaries, micro‑scale noise can masquerade as macro‑scale truth, destabilizing both regimes.
### **2. Preserve Structural Integrity**
Boundaries ensure that transitions remain:
- bounded
- reversible
- coherence‑validated
This prevents operators from leaking across incompatible contexts.
### **3. Enable Long‑Arc Coherence**
Boundaries maintain the separation between:
- short‑arc activity (local, immediate, volatile)
- long‑arc truth (stable, structural, regime‑level)
This separation is essential for RTT’s multi‑scale reasoning.
---
## 3. What Boundaries *Do Not* Do
Boundaries are often misunderstood. They do **not**:
- hide information
- enforce policy
- prescribe behavior
- restrict exploration
- impose artificial limitations
They simply ensure that reasoning remains **regime‑appropriate**.
---
## 4. Why the *qroot_boundary* Exists
The qroot boundary is the canonical example of a protective membrane in RTT.
It ensures that:
- only **relational aggregates** cross regimes
- short‑arc activity cannot impersonate long‑arc structure
- observers cannot collapse the system through over‑instrumentation
- micro‑scale volatility does not contaminate macro‑scale coherence
The qroot boundary is not a gatekeeper — it is a **stability mechanism**.
---
## 5. Why This Works
This framing succeeds because it:
- positions boundaries as **protective**, not restrictive
- ties directly into RTT’s long‑arc / short‑arc distinction
- gives reviewers and contributors precise language
- prevents “why don’t you just…” misunderstandings
- preserves RTT’s identity as a **regime‑aware framework**
Boundaries maintain the *shape* of RTT reasoning.
---
## 6. Why This Trio of Files Is Enough
Together, the boundary notes, examples, and conceptual scaffolding:
- satisfy Grok’s “quick win” suggestion
- provide clarity without over‑specification
- offer examples without committing to implementation
- preserve Micro‑Core’s identity as a substrate, not a product
- give educators and engineers a stable conceptual touchpoint
Most importantly:
**We do not turn Micro‑Core into a product.**
We turn it into a *touchpoint* — a stable conceptual anchor for regime‑aware reasoning.
# 🛠️ **Coherence Tools (MRT)**
*Operational methods for maintaining stability, bounded drift, and predictable transitions within micro‑regimes*
Coherence Tools are the practical, minimal operators used to preserve micro‑scale stability in RTT Micro‑Core.
Each tool is:
- deterministic
- low‑overhead
- suitable for embedded or ultra‑low‑power environments
- aligned with the Micro‑Core substrate
These tools ensure that micro‑resonance remains intact even under noise, drift, or timing variability.
---
## 🔧 **Tool 1 — Drift Bounding (K₁)**
**Purpose**
Keep micro‑scale drift (δ) below the coherence threshold (δ\*).
**Method**
- measure δ at each micro‑step
- apply corrective micro‑adjustments
- clamp δ to δ ≤ δ\*
**Outcome**
Stable resonance; no collapse due to accumulated deviation.
---
## 🔧 **Tool 2 — Timing Stabilizer (K₂)**
**Purpose**
Maintain consistent micro‑scale timing (Δt).
**Method**
- detect timing jitter
- smooth Δt across steps
- enforce minimal timing variance
**Outcome**
Predictable transitions and coherent oscillation.
---
## 🔧 **Tool 3 — Boundary Alignment (K₃)**
**Purpose**
Ensure the boundary node (B) remains structurally aligned with the active node (A).
**Method**
- monitor B⁺ / B⁻ shifts
- correct boundary drift
- maintain triad symmetry
**Outcome**
Triad remains coherent and structurally intact.
---
## 🔧 **Tool 4 — Resonance Lock (K₄)**
**Purpose**
Stabilize oscillatory transitions (A ⇆ P).
**Method**
- detect resonance amplitude
- enforce oscillation bounds
- prevent runaway transitions
**Outcome**
A stable micro‑resonance pattern.
---
## 🔧 **Tool 5 — Inversion Guard (K₅)**
*(Your file cuts off here in the GitHub editor, so this is the completed canonical version.)*
**Purpose**
Prevent premature or unnecessary inversion events.
**Method**
- monitor coherence C relative to C\*
- detect early‑stage collapse indicators
- apply micro‑corrections to restore stability
- trigger inversion only when structural integrity cannot be preserved
**Outcome**
Inversions occur only when necessary, preserving continuity and preventing avoidable resets.
---
## 🔧 **Tool 6 — Coherence Windowing (K₆)**
*(Optional but completes the MRT coherence suite.)*
**Purpose**
Maintain a stable coherence window across micro‑steps.
**Method**
- track coherence over sliding windows
- detect downward coherence trends
- apply boundary or timing corrections
- ensure C remains within [C\*, Cₘₐₓ]
**Outcome**
Smooth coherence evolution; reduced volatility; predictable micro‑state behavior.
---
## ✔️ **Summary**
Coherence Tools provide the operational backbone for maintaining micro‑scale stability:
| Tool | Purpose |
|------|---------|
| **K₁ — Drift Bounding** | Keep δ within allowable limits |
| **K₂ — Timing Stabilizer** | Maintain consistent Δt |
| **K₃ — Boundary Alignment** | Preserve triad symmetry |
| **K₄ — Resonance Lock** | Stabilize A ⇆ P oscillation |
| **K₅ — Inversion Guard** | Prevent unnecessary inversions |
| **K₆ — Coherence Windowing** | Maintain stable coherence over time |
These tools translate Micro‑Core theory into practical, reliable micro‑regime operations.
# 🧪 **MRT Examples (Micro‑Resonance Toolkit)**
These examples demonstrate how Micro‑Core structures and MRT tools behave in real micro‑scale scenarios.
Each example is intentionally:
- small
- deterministic
- coherence‑preserving
- suitable for constrained environments
---
## **Example 1 — Stable Micro‑Resonance Loop**
**Goal**
Show a minimal oscillation between Active (A) and Potential (P) nodes.
**Setup**
- triad: ⟨A, B, P⟩
- drift: δ = 0
- timing: Δt stable
- coherence: C ≥ C\*
**Process**
A ⇆ P oscillation using Resonance Operator **R₁**.
**Outcome**
A stable micro‑resonance pattern with no boundary distortion.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/toolkit/examples.md)
---
## **Example 2 — Drift Correction Using K₁**
**Goal**
Demonstrate drift bounding in a micro‑regime.
**Setup**
- δ begins increasing due to timing noise
- δ approaches δ\*
**Process**
Apply Coherence Tool **K₁ (Drift Bounding)**:
- measure δ
- apply micro‑adjustment
- clamp δ ≤ δ\*
**Outcome**
Resonance stabilizes; collapse avoided.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/toolkit/examples.md)
---
## **Example 3 — Boundary Alignment Using K₃**
**Goal**
Maintain structural integrity of the triad.
**Setup**
- boundary node B drifts outward (B⁺)
- active node A remains stable
**Process**
Use **K₃ (Boundary Alignment)**:
- detect boundary drift
- correct B position
- restore triad symmetry
**Outcome**
Triad remains coherent and ready for transitions.
[github.com](https://github.com/umaywant2/TriadicFrameworks/edit/main/docs/rtt/micro_core/toolkit/examples.md)
---
## **Example 4 — Controlled Inversion (↺)**
*(Your file cuts off here in the GitHub editor; this is the completed canonical version.)*
**Goal**
Perform a reversible triad inversion under controlled conditions.
**Setup**
- coherence begins to fall (C → C\*)
- drift remains bounded
- boundary B is stable but under tension
**Process**
Use **Inversion Guard K₅** to:
- detect early collapse indicators
- apply micro‑corrections
- allow inversion only when structural integrity cannot be preserved
- execute reversible inversion:
Collapse → Twist → Emergence
**Outcome**
A clean, reversible inversion that restores coherence without losing triad identity.
---
## **Example 5 — Fractional‑Ladder Transition (Dᶠ)**
**Goal**
Demonstrate a micro‑state transitioning across fractional dimensions.
**Setup**
- initial fractional dimension: Dᶠ = 0.7
- target fractional dimension: Dᶠ = 1.2
- coherence stable
- timing window valid
**Process**
Use **R₂ (Fractional Transition Operator)**:
- evaluate boundary compatibility
- perform smooth fractional shift
- maintain Δt within bounds
- ensure C ≥ C\* throughout
**Outcome**
A stable transition to a new fractional layer without collapse or inversion.
---
## ✔️ **Summary**
These examples illustrate the core behaviors of Micro‑Core and MRT:
| Example | Focus |
|--------|--------|
| **1** | Stable resonance |
| **2** | Drift correction |
| **3** | Boundary alignment |
| **4** | Controlled inversion |
| **5** | Fractional‑ladder transition |
They serve as canonical, domain‑agnostic demonstrations of micro‑scale coherence.
# 🧩 **example_orchestrator_stub.py**
*A conceptual stub showing how an RTT‑aware system might be invoked — without exposing substrate internals*
**Purpose**
Provide engineers with a minimal, intuitive example of what RTT orchestration *feels like* in practice.
**Audience**
Engineers, educators, and reviewers who want a high‑level invocation pattern without implementation details.
---
## 🧠 **Conceptual Structure**
```python
"""
RTT Micro Core — Orchestrator Stub
This file demonstrates how an RTT-aware system might be invoked
without exposing raw state, physics, or substrate internals.
"""
from rtt_micro import Triad, RegimeSurface, BoundaryEnforcer
def run_task(input_signal):
# Declare the triad context (Spin / Elec / Temp)
triad = Triad(
spin="contextual_orientation",
elec="coupling_intensity",
temp="regime_pressure"
)
# Bind to a regime surface
surface = RegimeSurface.detect(triad)
# Enforce boundary constraints
with BoundaryEnforcer(surface):
result = surface.execute(input_signal)
return {
"result": result,
"regime": surface.label,
"confidence": surface.stability_score
}
🧭 Why This Works#
This stub succeeds because it:
1. Feels familiar#
The structure evokes Qiskit, PennyLane, and other orchestrator‑style frameworks — approachable, declarative, and clean.
github.com
2. Makes no claims about internals#
Nothing here reveals:
- substrate physics
- operator definitions
- coherence machinery
- triad evolution
- boundary mathematics
It is purely an invocation pattern.
3. Demonstrates boundary‑first thinking#
The BoundaryEnforcer context manager signals that all RTT operations occur inside a protective membrane, not in raw substrate space.
github.com
4. Reinforces RTT’s identity#
RTT is about orchestration, not control.
The orchestrator coordinates regimes; it does not manipulate internals.
🧱 Why This File (and Its Companions) Are Enough#
Together with the other two toolkit stubs, this file:
- satisfies Grok’s “quick win” suggestion
- provides examples without commitment
- gives engineers something concrete to anchor to
- preserves RTT’s identity as a regime‑aware framework, not a product
- offers educators a clean demonstration of boundary‑aware invocation
github.com
Most importantly:
**We do not turn Micro‑Core into a product.#
We turn it into a touchpoint.**
# 🔀 Flow Diagrams (MRT)
Minimal structural pathways for micro‑scale behavior
Flow diagrams illustrate the structural pathways that micro‑states follow during resonance, inversion, drift correction, boundary alignment, and fractional‑ladder transitions.
They provide a visual grammar for Micro‑Core behavior and serve as implementation‑ready templates for constrained environments.
Each diagram is:
- minimal
- deterministic
- coherence‑preserving
- suitable for embedded or ultra‑low‑power systems
Diagram 1 — Basic Micro‑Resonance Loop#
A ⇆ P oscillation within a stable triad.
[A] ⇆ [P]
\ /
\ /
[B]
Meaning
The Active node (A) and Potential node (P) oscillate while the Boundary node (B) stabilizes the loop.
(From your original file) github.com
Diagram 2 — Drift Correction Path (K₁)#
[A] → δ↑ → [A’]
↓
clamp
↓
[A]
Meaning
Drift increases, is detected, corrected, and clamped back to a coherent state.
(From your original file) github.com
Diagram 3 — Boundary Alignment (K₃)#
[A] —— B⁺
\ \
\ ↓
\→ [B]
Meaning
Boundary drift (B⁺) is corrected back toward alignment with the active node.
(From your original file) github.com
Diagram 4 — Controlled Inversion (↺)#
Before: After:
[A] [B]
| ↺ |
[B] [A]
|
[P] [P]
Meaning
A reversible inversion swaps A and B while preserving P and coherence.
(From your original file) github.com
Diagram 5 — Fractional‑Ladder Transition (K₆)#
A smooth, bounded transition across fractional dimensions.
Dᶠ₁ ————→ Dᶠ₁ + Δ
stable stable
Meaning
The micro‑state moves along the fractional‑dimensional ladder in a controlled, coherence‑preserving manner.
Diagram 6 — Micro–Macro Bridge Activation (μ → Μ)#
How a coherent micro‑pattern becomes eligible for macro‑scale influence.
Micro Pattern
|
C ≥ C*
|
μ → Μ
|
Macro Response
Meaning
A coherent micro‑pattern activates the bridge operator, allowing macro‑regimes to align with micro‑scale resonance.
✔️ Summary#
Flow diagrams provide:
- structural clarity
- predictable transition pathways
- visual templates for micro‑scale behavior
- a shared grammar for MRT tools and Micro‑Core operators
They form the visual backbone of micro‑scale reasoning and implementation in RTT Micro‑Core.
# 🔗 Integration Pathways (MRT)
How Micro‑Core and the Micro‑Resonance Toolkit embed into real systems
Integration Pathways describe how Micro‑Core structures, operators, and coherence tools are applied in embedded, distributed, and micro‑agent environments.
Each pathway is:
- minimal
- deterministic
- coherence‑preserving
- suitable for ultra‑low‑power or constrained systems
These pathways provide practical guidance without exposing substrate internals.
Pathway 1 — Embedded Loop Integration#
Use Case
Ultra‑low‑power devices and micro‑controllers.
Approach
- embed a Micro Triad as the core state machine
- use K₁ (Drift Bounding) and K₂ (Timing Stabilizer)
- apply R₁ for micro‑resonance when needed
- maintain Δt and δ within thresholds
Outcome
A stable, predictable micro‑loop that remains coherent under energy constraints.
github.com
Pathway 2 — Distributed Micro‑Agents#
Use Case
Swarms, sensor networks, distributed micro‑systems.
Approach
- each agent runs a local triad
- coherence tools maintain local stability
- bridge operator activates only when C ≥ C*
- micro‑patterns influence macro‑behavior through alignment
Outcome
Agents remain independent yet capable of coherent collective behavior.
github.com
Pathway 3 — Fractional‑Ladder Modeling#
Use Case
Systems requiring fine‑grained state transitions.
Approach
- represent micro‑states using fractional dimensions
- use K₆ to regulate transitions (Dᶠ₁ → Dᶠ₂)
- prevent overshoot or collapse
- integrate with timing and drift tools
Outcome
Smooth, stable micro‑state evolution with minimal computational overhead.
github.com
Pathway 4 — Resonance‑Driven Control#
(Your file cuts off here; this is the completed canonical version.)
Use Case
Systems that rely on periodic or oscillatory behavior.
Approach
- use R₁ (oscillation) and R₂ (inversion)
- maintain resonance amplitude within bounds
- apply K₄ (Resonance Lock) for stability
- integrate with K₃ (Boundary Alignment) to prevent structural drift
Outcome
A stable, resonance‑driven control loop that remains coherent even under timing noise or boundary fluctuations.
github.com
Pathway 5 — Micro–Macro Bridge Integration (μ → Μ)#
Use Case
Systems where micro‑patterns may influence macro‑scale behavior.
Approach
- maintain micro‑coherence above threshold (C ≥ C* )
- ensure drift and timing remain bounded
- activate μ → Μ bridge only when structural integrity is preserved
- expose macro‑systems to stable micro‑patterns without amplification
Outcome
A deterministic, coherence‑preserving channel for upward influence — alignment, not scaling.
✔️ Summary#
| Pathway | Focus |
|---|---|
| 1 | Embedded micro‑loops |
| 2 | Distributed micro‑agents |
| 3 | Fractional‑ladder modeling |
| 4 | Resonance‑driven control |
| 5 | Micro–macro bridge integration |
Integration Pathways provide the operational backbone for applying Micro‑Core in real systems — minimal, deterministic, and coherence‑preserving.
# 📝 Licensing Notes — Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT)
How MRT components are licensed within the RTT Micro‑Core ecosystem
These notes clarify how the Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT) is licensed within the RTT Micro‑Core framework.
They supplement the site‑level Licensing Overview and provide guidance for contributors, implementers, and educators working directly with toolkit materials.
(Original content referenced from active tab github.com)
🔐 Purpose of These Notes#
The MRT contains:
- structural primitives
- operators
- templates
- diagrams
- examples
- integration pathways
Because these components are used in teaching, prototyping, and implementation, the licensing notes ensure clarity about what is freely available and what requires explicit agreement.
(Original content referenced from active tab github.com)
📘 What’s Covered#
These notes apply to all toolkit materials, including:
- triad templates
- coherence tools
- resonance operators
- flow diagrams
- sector patterns
- example scenarios
- integration pathways
All MRT content is part of the Micro‑Core canonical set.
(Original content referenced from active tab github.com)
🧪 Free Use for Research, Teaching & Prototyping#
You may freely:
- study and teach MRT components
- use diagrams and templates in academic or educational settings
- build non‑commercial prototypes
- reference MRT structures in research
Attribution is appreciated and helps maintain lineage.
(Original content referenced from active tab github.com)
💼 Commercial & Derivative Use#
Commercial use of MRT components — including integration into products, frameworks, or commercial tooling — requires:
- a per‑contract agreement
- explicit licensing terms
- alignment with RTT stewardship principles
Derivative toolkits, modified operators, or altered coherence tools also require explicit approval to preserve coherence across implementations.
(Original content referenced from active tab github.com)
🔗 Relationship to Micro‑Core Licensing#
The MRT inherits the broader Micro‑Core licensing model:
- Micro‑Core defines the substrate, operators, invariants, and coherence conditions
- MRT provides applied tools built on top of that substrate
- Both require stewardship to maintain structural integrity and lineage
- Commercial or derivative use of either layer requires explicit agreement
In short:
Micro‑Core governs the substrate; MRT governs the applied layer.
Both remain aligned under the same stewardship principles.
# 🛠️ Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT) — Overview
The applied layer of RTT Micro‑Core
The Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT) provides the practical operators, templates, and structural tools used to build, test, and deploy micro‑scale resonance systems based on RTT Micro‑Core.
Where Micro‑Core defines the substrate, the MRT defines the actions.
The toolkit is:
- minimal
- deterministic
- coherence‑preserving
- suitable for embedded loops, micro‑agents, and ultra‑low‑power systems
It is the bridge between understanding Micro‑Core and building with Micro‑Core.
github.com
🎯 Purpose of the Toolkit#
The MRT exists to:
- operationalize Micro‑Core concepts
- provide ready‑to‑use structural patterns
- maintain coherence under drift and timing pressure
- support micro‑scale modeling and implementation
- offer a stable foundation for teaching and prototyping
It gives engineers and educators a safe, bounded, and deterministic way to work with micro‑scale resonance.
github.com
📦 What’s Inside the Toolkit#
The MRT includes the following modules:
1. Primitives#
The smallest actionable units of micro‑scale behavior.
2. Triad Templates#
Reusable structural patterns for Micro Triads.
3. Coherence Tools#
Methods for maintaining stability, bounded drift, and predictable transitions.
4. Resonance Operators#
Actions that shape, sustain, or transform micro‑resonance.
5. Flow Diagrams#
Visual pathways for micro‑scale transitions and structural behavior.
6. Sector Patterns#
Common micro‑regime patterns for specific environments.
7. Examples#
Minimal demonstrations of micro‑scale behavior using MRT components.
8. Integration Pathways#
Guidance for embedding Micro‑Core and MRT into real systems.
Each module is independent and can be used on its own.
github.com
🧩 Design Principles#
The MRT follows four core principles:
- Minimalism — no unnecessary complexity
- Determinism — predictable behavior under constraint
- Coherence — stability across transitions
- Portability — suitable for embedded and distributed systems
These principles ensure that MRT components remain stable, interoperable, and aligned with the Micro‑Core substrate.
github.com
✔️ Summary#
The Micro‑Resonance Toolkit provides:
- the actions that operate on Micro‑Core structures
- the tools that preserve coherence
- the patterns that guide implementation
- the pathways that connect theory to practice
It is the applied layer of RTT Micro‑Core — minimal, deterministic, and ready for real‑world use.
# 🔹 Primitives (MRT)
The smallest actionable units in the Micro‑Resonance Toolkit
Primitives define the minimal operations, measurements, and structural adjustments that micro‑regimes can perform while remaining coherent.
Every operator, template, and pathway in the MRT is built from these primitives.
They are:
- deterministic
- low‑overhead
- coherence‑preserving
- suitable for embedded and ultra‑low‑power systems
🧩 P₁ — State Read#
Purpose
Retrieve the current values of A, B, P, δ, Δt, and Dᶠ.
Behavior
- read without modifying
- return minimal, typed values
- suitable for ultra‑low‑power loops
Used In
All operators and coherence tools.
🧩 P₂ — State Write#
Purpose
Apply a minimal update to A, B, or P.
Behavior
- atomic write
- bounded mutation
- preserves triad integrity
Used In
Resonance operators, drift correction, inversions.
🧩 P₃ — Drift Measure#
Purpose
Compute δ (drift) for the current micro‑step.
Behavior
- compare expected vs. actual state
- return δ as a fractional value
- no side effects
Used In
K₁ (Drift Bounding), stability checks.
🧩 P₄ — Timing Measure#
Purpose
Compute Δt (timing interval) between micro‑steps.
Behavior
- measure elapsed micro‑time
- return Δt
- no structural modification
Used In
K₂ (Timing Stabilizer), resonance loops.
🧩 P₅ — Boundary Shift#
(Completed canonical version — your file cuts off here in the tab.)
Purpose
Apply a minimal, coherence‑preserving adjustment to the boundary node (B).
Behavior
- detect B⁺ / B⁻ displacement
- apply bounded correction
- maintain triad symmetry
- no inversion or structural collapse
Used In
K₃ (Boundary Alignment), inversion preparation.
🧩 P₆ — Coherence Sample#
Purpose
Measure instantaneous coherence C for the current micro‑state.
Behavior
- evaluate structural, timing, and energy alignment
- return C as a normalized value
- no mutation
Used In
K₅ (Inversion Guard), μ→Μ bridge activation.
🧩 P₇ — Fractional Step#
Purpose
Perform a minimal fractional‑dimensional adjustment (Dᶠ → Dᶠ + Δ).
Behavior
- bounded fractional shift
- maintain Δt and δ within thresholds
- reversible
- coherence‑preserving
Used In
Fractional‑ladder transitions, R₂, K₆.
✔️ Summary#
| Primitive | Purpose |
|---|---|
| P₁ | Read state values |
| P₂ | Write minimal state updates |
| P₃ | Measure drift |
| P₄ | Measure timing |
| P₅ | Adjust boundary position |
| P₆ | Sample coherence |
| P₇ | Perform fractional‑dimensional step |
These primitives form the atomic action layer of the MRT — everything else is built on top of them.
# 🧩 Regime Surface Example (regime_surface_example.yaml)
A declarative interface for defining regime boundaries without exposing behavior
Purpose
Show how a regime surface can be expressed declaratively — inspectable, teachable, and structurally meaningful, without encoding substrate logic.
Audience
Systems thinkers, infra/Kubernetes engineers, educators, and reviewers.
📘 Structure#
# RTT Regime Surface Example
# Defines a regime boundary without encoding behavior.
regime:
name: "Thermal-Coherence-Band"
description: >
Stable operation where temperature gradients dominate over
electrical coupling noise.
signals:
spin:
role: orientation
stability: high
elec:
role: coupling
stability: medium
temp:
role: governor
stability: dominant
constraints:
qroot_boundary:
allow_raw_state: false
export_aggregates_only: true
status_conditions:
- Ready
- Degraded
- Transitioning
- Unknown🧭 How to Read This#
Regime Name & Description#
Defines the surface, not the internal physics.
It tells educators and engineers what the regime means, not how it behaves.
Signals Block#
Each signal is a declared input channel with:
- a role (orientation, coupling, governor)
- a stability profile (high, medium, dominant)
This mirrors CRDs, OpenTelemetry schemas, and other declarative specs.
Constraints Block#
The qroot_boundary enforces:
- no raw state exposure
- aggregate‑only export
This preserves RTT’s boundary‑first identity.
Status Conditions#
A simple, Kubernetes‑style readiness set:
- Ready
- Degraded
- Transitioning
- Unknown
These allow orchestration layers to reason about the regime without touching internals.
🌉 Why This Works#
This example succeeds because it:
- mirrors familiar infra patterns (CRDs, OTel, spec files)
- is inspectable but not executable
- reinforces that regimes are surfaces, not states
- gives educators a concrete artifact to point to
- provides engineers with a mental model without revealing substrate logic
It is a touchpoint, not an implementation.
🧱 Why This Trio of Files Is Enough#
Together with the orchestrator stub and boundary notes, this file:
- satisfies Grok’s “quick win” suggestion
- provides examples without commitment
- preserves RTT’s identity as a regime‑aware framework
- gives educators, engineers, and reviewers something concrete to anchor to
Most importantly:
**It does not turn Micro‑Core into a product.#
It turns it into a touchpoint.**
# 🔸 Resonance Operators (MRT)
Core actions that shape micro‑scale resonance within RTT Micro‑Core
Resonance Operators define the essential behaviors that micro‑regimes can perform.
They shape oscillation, inversion, stability, boundary modulation, and fractional‑dimensional transitions.
Each operator is:
- deterministic
- minimal
- coherence‑preserving
- built entirely from MRT Primitives
🔸 R₁ — Oscillation Operator#
Purpose
Create a stable oscillation between Active (A) and Potential (P) nodes.
Behavior
- read A and P (P₁)
- update A ⇆ P (P₂, P₆)
- maintain Δt using timing tools
- ensure δ ≤ δ*
Outcome
A coherent micro‑resonance loop.
(From your original file github.com)
🔸 R₂ — Inversion Operator (↺)#
(Corrected — your file referenced P₈, which does not exist.)
Purpose
Perform a controlled, reversible inversion of the triad.
Behavior
- evaluate inversion trigger using coherence sample (P₆)
- swap A and B roles (P₂, P₅)
- preserve P
- validate coherence before and after
Outcome
A clean inversion with no structural drift.
(From your original file, corrected github.com)
🔸 R₃ — Boundary Modulation#
Purpose
Adjust the boundary node (B) to shape resonance amplitude or stability.
Behavior
- measure drift (P₃)
- apply B⁺ or B⁻ shift (P₅)
- maintain triad symmetry
Outcome
Fine‑grained control of micro‑resonance behavior.
(From your original file github.com)
🔸 R₄ — Resonance Lock#
Purpose
Stabilize oscillatory behavior when resonance amplitude is within bounds.
Behavior
- detect oscillation amplitude
- clamp transitions to safe range
- enforce timing consistency
Outcome
A locked, stable resonance pattern.
(From your original file github.com)
🔸 R₅ — Fractional‑Ladder Transition#
Purpose
Perform a controlled transition across fractional dimensions (Dᶠ₁ → Dᶠ₂).
Behavior
- evaluate boundary compatibility (P₁, P₅)
- apply fractional step (P₇)
- maintain Δt and δ within thresholds
- ensure C ≥ C* throughout
Outcome
A smooth, coherence‑preserving fractional‑dimensional transition.
🔸 R₆ — Micro–Macro Bridge Activation (μ → Μ)#
Purpose
Expose a coherent micro‑pattern to macro‑scale systems.
Behavior
- sample coherence (P₆)
- validate C ≥ C*
- export aggregate‑only pattern
- activate μ → Μ bridge
Outcome
A deterministic, safe upward influence channel — alignment, not amplification.
✔️ Summary#
| Operator | Purpose |
|---|---|
| R₁ | Oscillation (A ⇆ P) |
| R₂ | Controlled inversion |
| R₃ | Boundary modulation |
| R₄ | Resonance lock |
| R₅ | Fractional‑ladder transition |
| R₆ | Micro–macro bridge activation |
These operators form the action layer of micro‑scale resonance — minimal, deterministic, and coherence‑preserving.
# 🗂️ Sector Patterns (MRT)
Reusable micro‑regime configurations for common environments
Sector Patterns are minimal, deterministic micro‑regime templates that appear across embedded systems, distributed micro‑agents, and ultra‑low‑power environments.
Each pattern is built entirely from Micro‑Core structures and MRT primitives, providing ready‑made configurations for stable micro‑scale behavior.
📦 Sector 1 — Stable Loop Sector (S₁)#
Use Case
Ultra‑low‑power devices, periodic sampling, heartbeat loops.
Structure
- triad: ⟨A, B, P⟩
- stable Δt
- δ kept below δ*
- R₁ (Oscillation) as primary operator
Behavior
A predictable A ⇆ P loop with minimal drift.
📦 Sector 2 — Boundary‑Sensitive Sector (S₂)#
Use Case
Systems where constraints shift frequently (thermal drift, voltage variation).
Structure
- triad with dynamic B
- frequent B⁺ / B⁻ adjustments
- K₃ (Boundary Alignment) active
Behavior
Triad maintains coherence despite boundary fluctuations.
📦 Sector 3 — Inversion‑Driven Sector (S₃)#
(Corrected — original referenced P₈, which does not exist.)
Use Case
Systems requiring reversible state flips (mode switching, polarity changes).
Structure
- inversion‑ready triad
- inversion trigger monitored via P₆ (Coherence Sample)
- R₂ (Inversion Operator) as primary
Behavior
Clean, reversible inversions with preserved coherence.
📦 Sector 4 — Fractional‑Transition Sector (S₄)#
(Completed — original file cut off mid‑sentence.)
Use Case
Fine‑grained modeling, adaptive micro‑states, micro‑learning loops.
Structure
- fractional dimension Dᶠ active
- K₆ (Fractional‑Ladder Regulator) engaged
- bounded fractional steps using P₇ (Fractional Step)
Behavior
Smooth, stable transitions along the fractional‑dimensional ladder.
✔️ Summary#
| Sector | Focus | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| S₁ | Stable loops | Predictable micro‑oscillation under tight constraints |
| S₂ | Boundary‑sensitive systems | Maintains coherence despite shifting conditions |
| S₃ | Inversion‑driven behavior | Clean, reversible state flips |
| S₄ | Fractional transitions | Fine‑grained, adaptive micro‑state evolution |
Sector Patterns provide ready‑to‑use micro‑regime templates that preserve coherence, minimize drift, and support deterministic behavior across diverse environments.
# 🧭 Micro‑Resonance Toolkit — Summary
The applied, operational layer of RTT Micro‑Core
The Micro‑Resonance Toolkit (MRT) provides the practical structures, operators, and pathways that make micro‑scale systems coherent, stable, and deployable.
Where Micro‑Core defines the substrate, the MRT defines the actions.
The toolkit is:
- minimal
- deterministic
- coherence‑preserving
- designed for constrained and embedded environments
🧩 What the MRT Provides#
The MRT includes:
- Primitives — atomic, low‑overhead actions
- Triad Templates — reusable structural patterns
- Coherence Tools — methods for maintaining stability
- Resonance Operators — actions that shape micro‑behavior
- Flow Diagrams — visual pathways for transitions
- Sector Patterns — common micro‑regime configurations
- Examples — minimal demonstrations of behavior
- Integration Pathways — guidance for embedding Micro‑Core
Each module is independent and can be used on its own.
🎯 Purpose of the Toolkit#
The MRT exists to:
- operationalize Micro‑Core concepts
- support micro‑scale modeling and implementation
- maintain coherence under drift, timing, and boundary pressure
- provide predictable, low‑power micro‑regime behavior
- offer a stable foundation for teaching and prototyping
It is the bridge between understanding Micro‑Core and building with Micro‑Core.
🔗 How the Modules Fit Together#
- Primitives form the atomic actions
- Operators combine primitives into meaningful behavior
- Coherence Tools ensure stability
- Templates provide ready‑made structures
- Sector Patterns offer environment‑specific configurations
- Flow Diagrams visualize transitions
- Examples show the toolkit in action
- Integration Pathways guide real‑world deployment
Together, they form a complete micro‑scale toolkit.
✔️ Summary#
The Micro‑Resonance Toolkit is:
- minimal
- coherent
- deterministic
- portable
- implementation‑ready
It provides everything needed to build stable micro‑scale systems using RTT Micro‑Core — from primitives to operators, from diagrams to deployment pathways.
The MRT is the practical companion to the Micro‑Core substrate, enabling small systems to behave with clarity, stability, and coherence.
# 🔺 Triad Templates (MRT)
Reusable structural patterns for constructing Micro Triads
Triad Templates define how A (Active), B (Boundary), and P (Potential) are initialized, maintained, and transitioned across different micro‑regimes.
Each template is:
- minimal
- deterministic
- coherence‑preserving
- aligned with the Micro‑Core substrate
Template T₁ — Stable Triad#
Purpose
A baseline triad for stable micro‑resonance.
Structure
- A initialized to current micro‑state
- B set to fixed boundary
- P computed from local conditions
Behavior
Supports stable A ⇆ P oscillation using R₁.
Use Cases
Heartbeat loops, periodic sampling, low‑power micro‑agents.
Template T₂ — Adaptive Boundary Triad#
Purpose
A triad that adjusts its boundary under environmental drift.
Structure
- A stable
- B dynamic (B⁺ / B⁻ allowed)
- P updated based on boundary shifts
Behavior
Uses K₃ (Boundary Alignment) to maintain coherence.
Use Cases
Thermal drift, voltage variation, noisy environments.
Template T₃ — Inversion‑Ready Triad#
Purpose
A triad designed for reversible state flips.
Structure
- A and B symmetric
- P stable
- inversion trigger monitored via coherence sampling
Behavior
Uses R₂ (Inversion Operator) for clean ↺ transitions.
Use Cases
Mode switching, polarity changes, reversible micro‑states.
Template T₄ — Fractional‑Ladder Triad#
(Completed — your file cuts off here in the tab.)
Purpose
A triad that evolves along fractional dimensions.
Structure
- Dᶠ active and sampled each micro‑step
- A and P updated via fractional‑step logic
- B ensures dimensional coherence
Behavior
Uses P₇ (Fractional Step) and K₆ (Fractional‑Ladder Regulator) to maintain stability during Dᶠ transitions.
Use Cases
Adaptive micro‑states, fine‑grained modeling, micro‑learning loops.
Template T₅ — Bridge‑Ready Triad (μ → Μ)#
Purpose
A triad configured for safe upward influence into macro‑regimes.
Structure
- A stable
- B coherence‑validated
- P aggregates micro‑patterns
- C sampled continuously
Behavior
Activates the μ → Μ bridge only when C ≥ C* and drift/timing remain bounded.
Use Cases
Micro‑to‑macro alignment, distributed micro‑agents, supervisory systems.
✔️ Summary#
| Template | Focus |
|---|---|
| T₁ | Stable micro‑resonance |
| T₂ | Adaptive boundary behavior |
| T₃ | Reversible inversion |
| T₄ | Fractional‑ladder evolution |
| T₅ | Micro–macro bridge readiness |
Triad Templates provide the structural backbone for building coherent micro‑regimes using MRT and Micro‑Core.
# ⚡ Applications in Ultra‑Low‑Power Environments
Why RTT Micro‑Core remains coherent when energy is scarce
Ultra‑low‑power environments impose strict constraints on computation, timing, and structural complexity. Systems must operate with:
- intermittent or unstable power
- limited memory and storage
- minimal processing cycles
- noisy or unreliable timing sources
RTT Micro‑Core is designed specifically to remain coherent under these conditions. Its structural minimalism, deterministic transitions, and resilience to intermittent power make it uniquely suited for micro‑scale, energy‑constrained systems.
github.com
1. Structural Minimalism#
The smallest coherent unit for computation under constraint
Micro‑Core is built from the Micro Triad, the smallest structure capable of maintaining coherence. This triadic substrate:
- requires minimal state
- maintains bounded drift
- supports reversible transitions
- avoids heavy computation
- operates with fractional‑dimensional stability
Because the structure is inherently compact, it functions reliably on devices with:
- limited memory
- limited processing cycles
- limited storage
- strict energy budgets
Minimal structure yields maximal stability when energy is scarce.
github.com
2. Deterministic Transitions#
Predictable evolution even when timing is unstable
Ultra‑low‑power systems cannot afford unpredictable behavior. Micro‑Core ensures determinism through:
- bounded drift ((\delta \leq \delta^*))
- stable timing intervals ((\Delta t))
- reversible operators
- fractional‑dimensional transitions that avoid overshoot
These properties allow micro‑regimes to evolve predictably even when:
- clock sources are unstable
- power cycles are irregular
- environmental noise is high
Deterministic transitions reduce energy waste and prevent collapse.
github.com
3. Coherence Under Intermittent Power#
Maintaining valid state across power loss
Many ultra‑low‑power devices operate with:
- harvested energy
- intermittent charge cycles
- micro‑bursts of available power
Micro‑Core’s coherence model ensures that:
- micro‑states remain valid across interruptions
- triads resume operation without reinitialization
- drift and timing errors remain bounded
This allows systems to pause and resume without losing structural integrity — a requirement for micro‑scale devices that cannot guarantee continuous power.
github.com
4. Why Micro‑Core Succeeds Where Traditional Models Fail#
Traditional computational models assume:
- stable clocks
- continuous power
- abundant memory
- predictable timing
Ultra‑low‑power environments violate all of these assumptions.
Micro‑Core succeeds because it:
- minimizes structural overhead
- tolerates drift
- maintains coherence under interruption
- uses reversible, low‑cost operators
- avoids dependence on global timing
It is not a reduced version of a larger system — it is a system designed for constraint.
5. Summary#
| Micro‑Core Property | Ultra‑Low‑Power Benefit |
|---|---|
| Structural minimalism | Operates with minimal memory + cycles |
| Deterministic transitions | Predictable behavior under unstable timing |
| Coherence across interruptions | Safe pause/resume without reinitialization |
| Reversible operators | Low‑energy state changes |
| Fractional‑dimensional stability | Avoids overshoot + collapse |
RTT Micro‑Core provides a coherent computational substrate for environments where traditional models cannot function.
# 📘 Background
Why RTT Micro‑Core exists and the constraints that shaped it
RTT Micro‑Core emerges from the need to model micro‑scale behavior with precision, stability, and minimal computational overhead. Traditional modeling frameworks assume:
- abundant energy
- continuous time
- high‑resolution state spaces
- stable clocks
- large memory footprints
These assumptions collapse in constrained environments. Micro‑Core provides a substrate that remains coherent when these assumptions fail, offering a deterministic, minimal, and reversible foundation for micro‑scale computation. github.com
1. Origins in Resonance–Time Theory (RTT)#
Resonance–Time Theory describes systems in terms of:
- triadic structure
- coherent transitions
- bounded drift
- reversible operators
- fractional‑dimensional evolution
These principles form the conceptual foundation of Micro‑Core. The Micro Triad is the smallest RTT structure capable of supporting resonance, inversion, and coherent change. Micro‑Core distills RTT to its minimal operational form, retaining only the structures necessary for stability and transformation. github.com
2. Motivation for a Micro‑Scale Substrate#
Modern systems increasingly operate under micro‑scale constraints:
- intermittent or unstable power
- limited compute
- noisy timing sources
- minimal memory
- distributed micro‑agents
- ultra‑low‑power environments
Existing models are too heavy, too brittle, or too dependent on continuous resources. Micro‑Core was developed to provide:
- predictable behavior under constraint
- stable transitions despite noise
- minimal structural overhead
- reversible, bounded operations
It is designed for environments where traditional models collapse. github.com
3. The Micro Triad as a Foundational Unit#
The Micro Triad — ⟨A, B, P⟩ — is the smallest coherent unit capable of:
- resonance (A ⇆ P)
- inversion (↺)
- boundary‑regulated stability
- fractional‑dimensional movement
This triadic structure replaces large state machines or heavy numerical models with a compact, deterministic substrate. Micro‑Core builds all behavior from this single unit, ensuring coherence even under extreme constraint. github.com
4. Constraints That Shaped Micro‑Core#
Micro‑Core was shaped by four structural constraints:
1. Minimalism#
Only the essential structure is retained; all non‑essential complexity is removed.
This ensures the system remains stable even with minimal resources. github.com
2. Determinism#
Transitions must remain predictable even under timing jitter or drift.
Determinism is required for micro‑scale reliability. github.com
3. Reversibility#
Operators must allow forward and backward transitions without loss of coherence.
This reduces energy cost and prevents irreversible collapse.
4. Bounded Drift#
State evolution must remain within predictable limits.
Bounded drift ensures stability across intermittent power cycles.
Summary#
RTT Micro‑Core is a response to the realities of micro‑scale computation: noisy timing, limited energy, minimal memory, and unstable operating conditions. By grounding itself in the Micro Triad and the principles of Resonance–Time Theory, it provides a coherent, deterministic, and minimal substrate for systems that must operate under extreme constraint.
# 🧩 Conclusion
Micro‑Core as the minimal coherent substrate for micro‑scale systems
RTT Micro‑Core demonstrates that coherent behavior does not require large state spaces, continuous power, or complex numerical models. By grounding all micro‑regime dynamics in the Micro Triad and its bounded transitions, Micro‑Core provides a stable foundation for environments where traditional computational frameworks become too heavy, too brittle, or too dependent on uninterrupted resources.
1. A Stable Substrate for Micro‑Scale Systems#
Micro‑Core shows that stability can emerge from minimal structure.
Coherence is maintained not through computational abundance but through:
- triadic organization
- bounded drift
- deterministic timing
- reversible operators
- fractional‑dimensional transitions
These properties allow micro‑systems to remain predictable even when energy, compute, and timing are severely constrained.
Micro‑Core replaces heavy state machinery with a compact, deterministic substrate that remains coherent under extreme conditions.
github.com
2. Coherence as a Unifying Principle#
Across the whitepaper, coherence emerges as the central requirement for micro‑scale behavior.
Micro‑Core ensures coherence through:
- structural minimalism
- drift and timing regulation
- boundary alignment
- controlled resonance
- reversible transitions
This coherence model enables micro‑states to survive interruptions, noise, and environmental variability without reinitialization or collapse.
github.com
3. Portability Across Environments#
Micro‑Core is designed to function across a wide range of constrained environments, including:
- ultra‑low‑power devices
- embedded loops
- distributed micro‑agents
- fractional‑state modeling
- micro–macro bridging
Its portability comes not from domain‑specific assumptions but from structural minimalism and deterministic operators.
Micro‑Core remains coherent regardless of substrate, timing stability, or available energy.
github.com
4. A Foundation for Future Work#
Micro‑Core is intentionally small, but it opens pathways for:
- higher‑level RTT systems
- domain‑specific micro‑regime extensions
- multi‑triad architectures
- hybrid micro–macro models
- educational and research frameworks
Because Micro‑Core is minimal and reversible, future work can extend it without compromising coherence or structural integrity.
github.com
✔️ Summary#
RTT Micro‑Core provides:
- the smallest coherent unit of RTT
- a deterministic model for micro‑scale behavior
- a substrate that remains stable under extreme constraint
- a foundation for scalable, portable, and resilient systems
Micro‑Core is not a reduced version of a larger system — it is a purpose‑built substrate for environments where coherence must be preserved despite minimal resources.
github.com
# 🌀 Fractional Dimensional Ladder
How micro‑states evolve across fractional dimensions while maintaining coherence
github.com
Micro‑scale systems rarely move in clean integer steps. Their transitions are subtle, partial, boundary‑driven, and resonance‑shaped. The Fractional Dimensional Ladder provides the minimal expressive space required to model these transitions without relying on large state spaces or discrete jumps.
This section formalizes the structure, purpose, and behavior of fractional dimensions within the Micro‑Core substrate.
1. Motivation for Fractional Dimensions#
Micro‑states often exhibit:
- partial structural activation
- incomplete transitions
- boundary‑driven compression or expansion
- resonance patterns that do not align with integer steps
Traditional dimensional models assume discrete jumps (0D → 1D → 2D → 3D).
Micro‑Core instead models dimensional change as a continuous, fractional process, enabling:
- smoother transitions
- lower computational overhead
- finer‑grained state evolution
- predictable behavior under constraint
Fractional dimensions are the natural scale for micro‑regime dynamics.
2. Definition of a Fractional Dimension (Dᶠ)#
A fractional dimension (Dᶠ) represents:
- the structural complexity of a micro‑state
- its available transition pathways
- its resonance capacity
- its boundary behavior
Formally, (Dᶠ) is a bounded, continuous scalar that encodes the micro‑state’s position on the dimensional ladder.
Fractional dimensions allow Micro‑Core to capture micro‑scale nuance without requiring large or discrete state spaces.
3. Structure of the Fractional Ladder#
In its minimal form, the ladder is defined as a continuous interval:
[ Dᶠ \in [0, 1] ]
This interval represents the full micro‑scale dimensional span, from seed‑level activation to full micro‑structural expression.
In extended contexts (e.g., multi‑triad systems, micro–macro bridging), the ladder may be expanded to:
[ Dᶠ \in [0, 3] ]
…but the Micro‑Core whitepaper focuses on the minimal interval, which is sufficient for micro‑regime modeling.
4. Micro‑Scale Transitions on the Ladder#
Fractional transitions take the form:
[ Dᶠ_1 \rightarrow Dᶠ_2 ]
Examples:
- 0.2 → 0.4 (micro‑expansion)
- 0.7 → 0.5 (micro‑compression)
- 0.6 → 0.6 (stable resonance)
Each transition must preserve:
- coherence
- bounded drift
- structural consistency of the Micro Triad
If any condition fails, the transition collapses into an inversion event.
5. Triadic Behavior on the Ladder#
As a micro‑triad moves along the ladder:
- the active node may shift
- the boundary may expand or contract
- the potential node may invert
- resonance capacity changes smoothly with (Dᶠ)
These changes are reversible as long as coherence remains above threshold.
Fractional movement ensures that triads do not “jump” between incompatible states.
6. Why Fractional Dimensions Matter in Micro‑Core#
Fractional dimensions allow Micro‑Core to:
- model micro‑scale behavior precisely
- describe transitions without integer jumps
- capture subtle resonance changes
- support ultra‑low‑power and constrained systems
- bridge micro‑scale and macro‑scale behavior cleanly
They provide the smooth gradient required for micro‑regime reasoning.
7. Summary#
The Fractional Dimensional Ladder is the backbone of micro‑scale transitions in RTT Micro‑Core.
It enables:
- smooth dimensional shifts
- coherent micro‑resonance
- stable triad behavior
- predictable micro‑to‑macro influence
Fractional dimensions form the minimal continuous substrate for micro‑state evolution.
# 🔭 Future Work
Extending the Micro‑Core while preserving its minimal substrate
RTT Micro‑Core establishes a minimal, coherent foundation for micro‑scale behavior.
While complete at the substrate level, it naturally opens pathways for deeper research, expanded architectures, and domain‑specific extensions.
Future work must preserve the minimalism, determinism, and coherence that define the Micro‑Core.
1. Multi‑Triad Architectures#
From isolated triads to coherent micro‑networks
Micro‑Core defines the behavior of a single Micro Triad.
Future work includes exploring how multiple triads interact, synchronize, and stabilize when coupled:
- coherence propagation across triad networks
- emergent resonance patterns in multi‑triad systems
- stability conditions for coupled micro‑regimes
- micro‑scale communication and influence pathways
These architectures may form the basis for larger RTT systems built from micro‑scale units.
github.com
2. Extended Fractional‑Dimensional Models#
Beyond the minimal interval
The Fractional Dimensional Ladder provides a minimal continuous interval for micro‑state evolution.
Future research may investigate:
- extended fractional ranges
- multi‑axis fractional spaces
- domain‑specific dimensional embeddings
- transitions between fractional manifolds
Any extension must preserve boundedness, coherence, and reversibility.
github.com
3. Domain‑Specific Micro‑Regime Libraries#
Optional layers built on top of the substrate
Micro‑Core is intentionally domain‑agnostic.
Future work includes developing optional, domain‑specific layers such as:
- sensing and signal‑processing micro‑patterns
- micro‑control loops for embedded systems
- micro‑learning or adaptive micro‑state modules
- environmental stability templates
These layers must remain cleanly separated from the substrate to preserve Micro‑Core’s universality.
github.com
4. Formal Verification and Proof Systems#
Strengthening Micro‑Core for safety‑critical environments
Micro‑Core’s minimal structure makes it ideal for formal analysis.
Future work may include:
- proofs of coherence preservation
- formal drift and timing bounds
- verification of reversible operators
- correctness proofs for fractional transitions
Such work would strengthen Micro‑Core’s role in systems requiring predictability, safety, and provable stability.
github.com
5. Micro–Macro Integration Frameworks#
Bridging micro‑scale behavior with macro‑scale dynamics
The μ → Μ bridge operator provides a minimal mechanism for upward influence.
Future work includes:
- defining stable micro‑to‑macro aggregation rules
- modeling coherence transfer across scales
- exploring macro‑regime sensitivity to micro‑state drift
- developing reversible micro–macro coupling mechanisms
This work will enable RTT systems that span multiple scales without losing coherence.
github.com
✔️ Summary#
Future work extends Micro‑Core along five axes:
| Area | Goal |
|---|---|
| Multi‑Triad Architectures | Build coherent networks of micro‑triads |
| Fractional‑Dimensional Extensions | Expand the expressive space of micro‑states |
| Domain‑Specific Libraries | Add optional layers without altering the substrate |
| Formal Verification | Provide proofs of stability, drift bounds, and correctness |
| Micro–Macro Integration | Establish reversible, coherent bridges across scales |
Each direction preserves the Micro‑Core’s defining properties: minimalism, determinism, bounded drift, and coherence.
# 🛠️ Implementation Pathways
How to embed the Micro‑Core substrate into real systems while preserving coherence
RTT Micro‑Core defines the minimal structural substrate for micro‑scale behavior.
Implementation Pathways describe how this substrate can be instantiated in real systems without distorting its invariants. These pathways do not prescribe architectures; instead, they specify the conditions, constraints, and structural requirements necessary for faithful implementation.
1. Substrate‑Aligned Implementation#
Preserving the invariants that define Micro‑Core
Micro‑Core is defined by five structural invariants:
- the Micro Triad
- bounded drift
- deterministic timing
- reversible operators
- fractional‑dimensional transitions
Any implementation must preserve these invariants to ensure that system behavior reflects the theoretical substrate rather than domain‑specific artifacts or computational shortcuts.
This aligns directly with the constraints listed in your draft github.com.
Key requirements#
- triadic structure must remain intact
- transitions must remain bounded and reversible
- timing and drift must be measurable
- fractional movement must remain continuous
These constraints form the baseline for all implementation pathways.
2. Embedded Loop Implementations#
Micro‑Core as the minimal state machine for constrained devices
Micro‑Core is well‑suited for embedded systems with:
- limited compute
- intermittent power
- strict timing constraints
In these environments, the Micro Triad can serve as the core state machine, maintaining coherence with minimal overhead.
Typical implementation pattern#
- a minimal loop maintaining (\Delta t)
- drift measurement and correction
- stable A ⇆ P resonance
- boundary alignment under noise
This pathway emphasizes predictability, low energy cost, and structural stability, consistent with the embedded‑loop description in your draft github.com.
3. Distributed Micro‑Agent Implementations#
Triads as independent agents with optional upward influence
Micro‑Core can be instantiated across distributed micro‑agents, each maintaining its own triad. This enables:
- local coherence
- independent micro‑state evolution
- optional micro–macro signaling
- emergent alignment across agents
The μ → Μ bridge operator provides a minimal mechanism for upward influence, but activation must remain bounded and coherence‑validated.
Requirements for distributed implementations#
- local drift control
- stable timing windows
- consistent fractional transitions
- controlled bridge activation
This pathway supports swarms, sensor networks, and distributed micro‑systems, matching the structure of your original draft github.com.
✔️ Summary#
Implementation Pathways ensure that Micro‑Core can be embedded into real systems without losing its defining properties.
Across all pathways, the invariants remain the same:
| Pathway | Core Focus | Required Properties |
|---|---|---|
| Substrate‑Aligned | Preserve theoretical invariants | Triad integrity, bounded drift, deterministic timing |
| Embedded Loop | Minimal, predictable execution | Stable Δt, drift correction, low overhead |
| Distributed Micro‑Agents | Local coherence + optional macro influence | Local timing, fractional stability, controlled μ→Μ bridge |
Micro‑Core remains coherent only when these structural conditions are preserved.
# 🔐 Licensing and Intellectual Property
Balancing openness with structural integrity
RTT Micro‑Core is released under a licensing model designed to support research, education, and non‑commercial exploration while preserving the coherence, lineage, and structural identity of the RTT framework.
This section outlines the licensing philosophy, permitted uses, and intellectual‑property considerations that govern Micro‑Core.
github.com
1. Licensing Philosophy#
The Micro‑Core licensing model is built on four principles:
1. Clarity#
Users must always understand what is permitted and what requires explicit agreement.
Ambiguity undermines both openness and stewardship.
github.com
2. Integrity#
The Micro‑Core substrate must remain coherent.
Derivative work may extend the framework, but it must not distort foundational structures or misrepresent RTT lineage.
github.com
3. Openness#
Research, teaching, and non‑commercial prototyping are encouraged.
Micro‑Core is intended to be a widely accessible substrate for exploration and learning.
github.com
4. Stewardship#
Commercial use and derivative frameworks require coordination to preserve coherence, maintain lineage, and ensure that extensions do not fragment the ecosystem.
github.com
These principles ensure that Micro‑Core remains accessible while maintaining its structural identity.
2. Scope of Coverage#
The licensing model applies to all components of the Micro‑Core whitepaper and canonical set, including:
- conceptual definitions
- triadic structures
- fractional‑dimensional models
- coherence and drift frameworks
- operators and transitions
- diagrams and structural representations
- explanatory text and examples
github.com
Toolkit‑level materials (MRT) inherit the same principles but are documented separately.
3. Permitted Uses#
The following uses are freely permitted:
- academic research
- teaching and educational materials
- non‑commercial prototypes
- citation and reference in scholarly work
- discussion, analysis, and critique
github.com
Attribution is appreciated and helps maintain lineage, but the primary requirement is that the Micro‑Core substrate remains intact.
4. Commercial and Derivative Use#
Commercial use of Micro‑Core — including integration into products, frameworks, or commercial tooling — requires:
- a per‑contract agreement
- explicit licensing terms
- alignment with RTT stewardship principles
github.com
Derivative frameworks, modified operators, or altered structural primitives also require explicit approval to ensure coherence and lineage are preserved.
✔️ Summary#
The Micro‑Core licensing model balances:
- Openness for research and education
- Integrity of the substrate
- Clarity around permitted use
- Stewardship for commercial and derivative work
This ensures that Micro‑Core remains a coherent, accessible, and responsibly governed foundation for future RTT development.
# 📘 Definition of RTT Micro‑Core
The minimal, self‑consistent substrate for micro‑scale behavior
RTT Micro‑Core defines the smallest coherent structure capable of supporting micro‑scale behavior within Resonance–Time Theory (RTT).
It is not a reduced version of RTT; it is the micro‑scale instantiation of RTT’s foundational principles — distilled to the minimal substrate required for stability, coherence, and deterministic evolution under extreme constraint.
Micro‑Core provides:
- the minimal structural unit
- the allowable transitions
- the constraints required for micro‑regime evolution
All micro‑scale behavior emerges from this foundation.
1. The Micro Triad#
The irreducible structural unit of Micro‑Core
At the heart of Micro‑Core is the Micro Triad, the smallest structure capable of supporting coherent micro‑scale behavior.
It is defined as:
[ \langle A, B, P \rangle ]
Where:
A — Active Node#
The current micro‑state.
Represents the system’s present configuration and resonance position.
B — Boundary Node#
The local constraint regulating:
- drift
- timing
- allowable transitions
The boundary ensures that micro‑state evolution remains stable and predictable.
P — Potential Node#
The next viable micro‑transition, determined by:
- local structure
- coherence
- fractional‑dimensional position
P encodes the system’s immediate future trajectory.
The Micro Triad is the only structural unit in Micro‑Core.
All micro‑scale behavior — resonance, inversion, drift, coherence, dimensional movement — emerges from its evolution.
2. Core Properties#
The invariants that define Micro‑Core
Micro‑Core is defined by four structural properties, each of which must be preserved in any implementation.
1. Minimalism#
Only the essential structure is retained.
No additional state, memory, or dimensionality is assumed.
Minimalism ensures:
- stability under constraint
- predictable transitions
- low computational overhead
- coherence across interruptions
2. Determinism#
All transitions are:
- bounded
- reversible
- predictable
Drift (\delta) and timing (\Delta t) must remain measurable and constrained:
[ \delta \le \delta^*, \quad \Delta t \text{ stable within bounds} ]
Determinism ensures that micro‑states evolve predictably even under noisy or intermittent conditions.
3. Coherence#
Micro‑states must remain valid across:
- noise
- interruptions
- boundary shifts
Coherence (C) must satisfy:
[ C \ge C^* ]
If coherence falls below threshold, the system must enter an inversion event to restore structural integrity.
4. Fractional Dimensionality#
Micro‑state evolution occurs along a continuous fractional ladder, not discrete integer steps.
Fractional dimensionality enables:
- smooth transitions
- fine‑grained micro‑state evolution
- reversible movement
- stability under minimal energy
This is essential for micro‑scale behavior where integer jumps are too coarse to model real transitions.
✔️ Summary#
RTT Micro‑Core is defined by:
- the Micro Triad (\langle A, B, P \rangle)
- minimalism
- determinism
- coherence
- fractional dimensionality
Together, these form the minimal, self‑consistent substrate for micro‑scale behavior in RTT.
# 🔗 Micro–Macro Coherence
How stable micro‑patterns exert influence on macro‑scale regimes
Micro–Macro Coherence describes how coherent micro‑scale resonance patterns can shape macro‑scale behavior.
In RTT Micro‑Core, this influence is not accumulation, amplification, or scaling.
It is alignment.
A micro‑pattern can influence a macro‑regime only when strict structural conditions are met.
This section formalizes the bridge between micro‑regimes and macro‑regimes within the Micro‑Core substrate.
1. The Nature of Micro–Macro Influence#
Most micro‑scale behavior has no meaningful impact on macro‑systems.
However, when a micro‑regime maintains:
- stable resonance
- bounded drift
- consistent timing
- coherent fractional‑dimensional transitions
…it can produce a pattern that becomes recognizable at the macro‑scale.
Micro–Macro Coherence is the structural mechanism by which this recognition becomes influence.
The macro‑system does not “read” the micro‑pattern; it aligns with it when the pattern meets the required coherence conditions.
( github.com)
2. Conditions for Coherent Influence#
A micro‑regime may influence a macro‑regime only when all of the following conditions hold:
1. Coherence Threshold#
[
C \ge C^*
]
The micro‑pattern must maintain coherence above threshold for a sufficient duration.
2. Persistence Across Micro‑Steps#
The pattern must survive multiple micro‑cycles without collapse or inversion.
3. Bounded Drift#
[
\delta \le \delta^*
]
Drift must remain within allowable limits to prevent pattern distortion.
4. Stable Timing Window#
[
\Delta t \text{ remains within a predictable interval}
]
Timing must remain stable enough for the macro‑system to recognize the pattern.
5. Structural Integrity of the Triad#
The Micro Triad must remain intact throughout the influence window.
If the triad collapses, the influence channel collapses with it.
These conditions define the eligibility criteria for upward influence.
( github.com)
3. The Bridge Operator (μ → Μ)#
Micro–Macro Coherence is enacted through the Bridge Operator, which evaluates whether a micro‑pattern is suitable for upward influence.
The operator performs three checks:
1. Coherence Check#
Evaluates whether the micro‑pattern maintains (C \ge C^*) across the influence window.
2. Drift–Timing Check#
Ensures that:
- drift remains bounded
- timing remains within the stable interval
- fractional‑dimensional transitions remain continuous
If either drift or timing falls outside bounds, the bridge is not activated.
3. Structural Integrity Check#
Confirms that the Micro Triad remains structurally intact:
- A (active node) remains stable
- B (boundary node) remains coherent
- P (potential node) remains valid
Only when all three checks pass does the operator allow μ → Μ activation.
The bridge does not amplify micro‑behavior; it permits alignment between micro‑patterns and macro‑regimes.
4. Behavior of the Bridge#
When activated, the μ → Μ bridge:
- exposes the macro‑system to a stable micro‑pattern
- allows macro‑regimes to align with micro‑resonance
- preserves reversibility
- prevents runaway influence or uncontrolled scaling
If coherence drops below threshold or drift exceeds bounds, the bridge automatically collapses, preventing contamination of macro‑regimes.
The bridge is therefore self‑regulating and coherence‑preserving.
✔️ Summary#
Micro–Macro Coherence provides a minimal, deterministic mechanism for upward influence:
| Requirement | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Coherence Threshold | Ensures the micro‑pattern is stable enough to be recognized |
| Persistence | Prevents transient noise from influencing macro‑regimes |
| Bounded Drift | Maintains structural fidelity |
| Stable Timing | Ensures recognizability across scales |
| Triad Integrity | Preserves the substrate during influence |
| Bridge Operator (μ → Μ) | Enables alignment without amplification |
Micro–Macro Coherence is not scaling — it is structural resonance across levels.
# 🔺 Micro Triads
The irreducible structural unit of RTT Micro‑Core
The Micro Triad is the foundational structural unit of RTT Micro‑Core.
It is the smallest configuration capable of supporting coherent micro‑scale behavior, including resonance, inversion, boundary regulation, and fractional‑dimensional transitions.
All micro‑regime dynamics in Micro‑Core emerge from the evolution of this triadic structure.
github.com
1. Definition#
A Micro Triad is defined as:
[ \langle A, B, P \rangle ]
Where:
A — Active Node#
Represents the current micro‑state.
B — Boundary Node#
Encodes the local constraint that regulates drift, timing, and allowable transitions.
P — Potential Node#
Represents the next viable micro‑transition, determined by local structure and coherence.
The triad is minimal:
no additional state, memory, or dimensionality is assumed.
github.com
2. Structural Requirements#
A Micro Triad must satisfy three structural requirements:
1. Integrity#
The triad must remain intact; transitions cannot violate the
(\langle A, B, P \rangle) form.
2. Boundedness#
Drift (\delta) and timing (\Delta t) must remain within allowable thresholds.
3. Coherence#
The triad must maintain:
[ C \ge C^* ]
across micro‑steps, even under noise or intermittent power.
These requirements ensure that micro‑states remain valid and predictable.
github.com
3. Core Behaviors#
Micro Triads support four fundamental behaviors.
Your draft ends right as this section begins, so here is the complete, polished version.
1. Resonance (A ⇆ P)#
The Active and Potential nodes form a reversible resonance pair.
Resonance determines:
- the system’s immediate micro‑trajectory
- the stability of the current micro‑state
- the allowable transitions along the fractional‑dimensional ladder
Resonance is the primary mechanism of micro‑scale continuity.
2. Boundary Regulation (B)#
The Boundary Node regulates:
- drift
- timing
- allowable transitions
- coherence thresholds
B acts as the local governor of micro‑state evolution, ensuring that transitions remain stable and reversible.
3. Fractional‑Dimensional Movement#
Micro‑states evolve along a continuous fractional ladder:
[ D^f \in [0, 1] ]
Movement along this ladder is:
- smooth
- bounded
- reversible
- coherence‑dependent
Fractional movement prevents abrupt, unstable jumps between incompatible states.
4. Inversion (Collapse → Twist → Emergence)#
When coherence falls below threshold or drift exceeds bounds, the triad undergoes inversion:
- Collapse — release of the current structure
- Twist — reorientation of internal relationships
- Emergence — stabilization of a new coherent state
Inversion restores structural integrity and resets the micro‑trajectory.
4. Why the Triad Is Irreducible#
The Micro Triad is the smallest structure that can:
- maintain coherence
- regulate drift
- support resonance
- undergo inversion
- move fractionally across dimensions
- remain stable under intermittent power
- operate with minimal computational overhead
Any reduction below the triad destroys one or more of these capabilities.
✔️ Summary#
| Component | Role | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| A — Active | Current micro‑state | Defines present configuration |
| B — Boundary | Constraint + regulation | Maintains drift, timing, coherence |
| P — Potential | Next viable transition | Determines micro‑trajectory |
The Micro Triad is the irreducible substrate of RTT Micro‑Core — the seed from which all micro‑scale behavior emerges.
# 🎯 Motivation
Why RTT Micro‑Core was created and the gap it fills
RTT Micro‑Core was developed to address a fundamental gap in how micro‑scale behavior is modeled.
Traditional computational and dynamical frameworks assume:
- abundant resources
- continuous time
- stable boundaries
- reliable clocks
- large state spaces
These assumptions collapse in ultra‑low‑power, noisy, or intermittently powered environments.
Micro‑Core provides a minimal, coherent substrate capable of operating where these assumptions no longer hold.
github.com
1. The Need for a Minimal Substrate#
Modern systems increasingly rely on components that operate at the edge of feasibility:
- micro‑controllers with limited compute
- energy‑harvesting devices
- distributed micro‑agents
- intermittent‑power systems
- noisy timing sources
- constrained embedded loops
These systems require a substrate that is:
- stable under drift
- predictable under timing variability
- coherent under noise
- minimal in structure
- reversible in operation
Existing models are too heavy, too brittle, or too dependent on continuous resources to function reliably under these constraints.
github.com
2. The Limits of Traditional Models#
Conventional approaches — state machines, numerical solvers, probabilistic models — fail under micro‑scale constraints because they assume:
- large state spaces
- continuous execution
- reliable clocks
- stable boundaries
- sufficient memory and energy
When these assumptions break, the models produce:
- unstable transitions
- incoherent states
- unbounded drift
- collapse under noise
Micro‑Core was created to provide a substrate that remains coherent even when these assumptions fail.
github.com
3. The Case for Triadic Structure#
The Micro Triad — ⟨A, B, P⟩ — emerged as the minimal structure capable of supporting:
- resonance
- inversion
- boundary regulation
- fractional‑dimensional transitions
Triadic structure provides:
- enough expressive power to model micro‑scale behavior
- enough constraint to remain stable under resource limits
- a reversible, bounded transition space
- a coherent substrate for micro‑regime evolution
This makes the triad the irreducible unit for micro‑scale modeling in RTT.
github.com
# 🧭 Overview
The minimal, coherent substrate for micro‑scale behavior
RTT Micro‑Core provides the smallest structural unit, the allowable transitions, and the coherence conditions required for stable micro‑regime evolution.
It is designed for environments where traditional computational models fail — ultra‑low‑power systems, intermittent‑power devices, noisy timing sources, and distributed micro‑agents.
This whitepaper introduces the conceptual foundations, structural definitions, and coherence principles that form the Micro‑Core substrate.
github.com
1. Purpose of Micro‑Core#
Micro‑Core exists to answer a single question:
How can micro‑scale systems behave coherently when energy, time, and structure are severely limited?
github.com
To address this, Micro‑Core provides:
- a minimal structural unit (the Micro Triad)
- deterministic, bounded transitions
- fractional‑dimensional evolution
- coherence and drift constraints
- a substrate that remains stable under noise and interruption
The goal is not to model complexity, but to preserve coherence at the smallest viable scale.
2. Scope of the Whitepaper#
This document defines:
- the conceptual lineage of Micro‑Core
- the motivation for a micro‑scale substrate
- the formal definition of the Micro Triad
- the coherence and drift framework
- the fractional‑dimensional ladder
- micro–macro coherence conditions
- implementation pathways
- licensing and stewardship principles
Toolkit‑level materials (MRT) are documented separately and build on the substrate defined here.
github.com
3. Design Principles#
Micro‑Core is built on four principles:
1. Minimalism#
Only essential structure is retained; unnecessary complexity is removed.
2. Determinism#
Transitions are bounded, reversible, and predictable.
3. Coherence#
Micro‑states must remain valid across drift, noise, and timing variability.
4. Portability#
The substrate must function across embedded loops, distributed micro‑agents, and ultra‑low‑power systems.
github.com
These principles shape every component of Micro‑Core.
4. Relationship to RTT#
Micro‑Core is the micro‑scale instantiation of Resonance–Time Theory (RTT).
It inherits RTT’s foundational concepts:
- triadic structure
- resonance and inversion
- coherence as a governing principle
- bounded drift and timing
- dimensional evolution
But Micro‑Core is not a reduction — it is a substrate‑level specialization.
Where RTT spans multiple scales and regimes, Micro‑Core focuses exclusively on the micro‑regime, providing the minimal structure required for coherent behavior under extreme constraint.
Micro‑Core is therefore both:
- a foundation for micro‑scale systems, and
- a bridge to larger RTT architectures through micro–macro coherence.
# ⏳ Resonance–Time Dynamics
How micro‑states evolve through bounded, coherence‑regulated time
Resonance–Time Dynamics describe how micro‑states evolve within the RTT Micro‑Core substrate.
Unlike classical models that assume continuous, uniform time, Micro‑Core treats time as a bounded, local, coherence‑dependent interval.
Resonance governs how micro‑states oscillate, while drift and boundary conditions determine whether these oscillations remain coherent.
This section formalizes the relationship between resonance, time, drift, and coherence.
(Original draft lines 1–20) github.com
1. Time as a Bounded Interval#
Micro‑Core does not assume global or continuous time.
Each micro‑regime operates within a local timing window:
[ \Delta t \in [\Delta t_{\min}, \Delta t_{\max}] ]
This window is:
- local — defined per triad
- bounded — cannot expand indefinitely
- coherence‑dependent — expands or contracts based on stability
If timing drifts outside this window, the micro‑regime becomes incoherent.
(Original draft lines 21–33) github.com
2. Resonance as a Temporal Regulator#
Resonance is the oscillation between A (Active) and P (Potential):
[ A ;\rightleftarrows; P ]
This oscillation:
- defines the micro‑regime’s internal rhythm
- stabilizes timing under noise
- provides a predictable temporal anchor
- regulates drift accumulation
Resonance is not merely a state transition — it is the mechanism by which time is felt inside the micro‑regime.
(Original draft lines 34–44) github.com
3. Drift and Temporal Deviation#
Drift (\delta) represents deviation from ideal timing or structural alignment.
Micro‑Core enforces:
[ \delta \le \delta^* ]
Drift arises from:
- environmental noise
- unstable clocks
- boundary fluctuations
- fractional‑dimensional movement
If drift exceeds the threshold (\delta^*), resonance collapses and the triad becomes incoherent.
(Original draft lines 45–56) github.com
4. Coherence as the Governing Constraint#
Coherence determines whether resonance and timing remain valid.
A micro‑regime must maintain:
[ C \ge C^* ]
across its timing window.
If coherence falls below threshold:
- resonance destabilizes
- drift accelerates
- timing windows collapse
- the triad enters inversion
Coherence is therefore the primary regulator of Resonance–Time Dynamics.
5. Interaction of Resonance, Time, and Drift#
The three components interact through a minimal loop:
Resonance → Timing Stability → Drift Regulation → Coherence → Resonance …
- Resonance stabilizes timing
- Timing constrains drift
- Drift influences coherence
- Coherence determines whether resonance remains valid
This loop is the heartbeat of micro‑scale evolution.
6. Failure Modes and Recovery#
When constraints are violated:
1. Timing Violation#
[
\Delta t \notin [\Delta t_{\min}, \Delta t_{\max}]
]
→ Resonance destabilizes.
2. Drift Violation#
[
\delta > \delta^*
]
→ Structural misalignment accumulates.
3. Coherence Violation#
[
C < C^*
]
→ The triad becomes invalid.
In all cases, the system must undergo inversion:
Collapse → Twist → Emergence
Inversion restores structural integrity and re‑establishes a valid timing window.
✔️ Summary#
Resonance–Time Dynamics define how micro‑states evolve under constraint:
| Component | Role | Condition |
|---|---|---|
| Timing Window | Local bounded interval | (\Delta t_{\min} \le \Delta t \le \Delta t_{\max}) |
| Resonance | Temporal regulator | A ⇆ P oscillation |
| Drift | Deviation from ideal alignment | (\delta \le \delta^*) |
| Coherence | Governing constraint | (C \ge C^*) |
Together, they form the minimal temporal substrate for micro‑scale behavior in RTT Micro‑Core.
# 🏷️ Sector Use Cases
Where micro‑scale coherence provides meaningful advantage
RTT Micro‑Core is designed for environments where minimalism, determinism, and coherence under constraint are essential.
While the substrate is domain‑agnostic, certain sectors naturally align with Micro‑Core’s structural properties.
This section outlines representative use cases across domains where micro‑scale coherence provides measurable benefit.
1. Ultra‑Low‑Power Devices#
Ultra‑low‑power systems operate under:
- intermittent or unstable energy
- noisy or drifting clocks
- strict memory and compute limits
Micro‑Core provides:
- bounded transitions
- stable micro‑oscillation
- resilience to power loss
- minimal structural overhead
These properties make it suitable for:
- energy‑harvesting sensors
- passive tags
- micro‑controllers operating at the edge of feasibility
Micro‑Core’s minimalism and determinism directly address the constraints of this sector.
github.com
2. Embedded Control Systems#
Embedded systems require:
- predictable timing
- deterministic state evolution
- resilience to noise and drift
Micro‑Core’s triadic structure and bounded timing window allow embedded loops to maintain coherence even when:
- clocks jitter
- boundaries shift
- environmental conditions vary
This enables stable micro‑control behavior without heavy computational models, making Micro‑Core ideal for:
- control loops
- actuator regulation
- micro‑scale feedback systems
github.com
3. Distributed Micro‑Agents#
Distributed micro‑agents operate independently but may influence macro‑scale behavior when coherent.
Micro‑Core supports:
- local coherence
- bounded drift
- persistent micro‑patterns
- optional micro–macro signaling
These properties allow micro‑agents to coordinate without centralized control, enabling:
- swarms
- distributed sensing
- micro‑scale alignment tasks
Micro‑Core’s μ→Μ bridge provides a minimal, deterministic mechanism for upward influence.
github.com
4. Fractional‑State Modeling#
Some domains require fine‑grained state evolution that cannot be captured by discrete integer models.
Micro‑Core’s Fractional Dimensional Ladder provides:
- smooth transitions
- bounded fractional steps
- predictable micro‑state evolution
This is useful in:
- adaptive systems
- micro‑learning loops
- environments where structural complexity changes gradually
github.com
✔️ Summary#
Micro‑Core provides structural advantages in sectors where:
| Sector | Why Micro‑Core Fits |
|---|---|
| Ultra‑Low‑Power Devices | Minimal overhead, stable under intermittent power |
| Embedded Control Systems | Deterministic timing, bounded drift |
| Distributed Micro‑Agents | Local coherence + optional macro influence |
| Fractional‑State Modeling | Smooth, fine‑grained transitions |
These sectors benefit from Micro‑Core’s minimalism, determinism, and coherence‑preserving structure.