Przegląd

🜄🜁🜂 Structural Detection — Canon‑Scale Collapse‑Recovery Manifold (RTT/2)

TriadicFrameworks • RTT/2 • Collapse→Recovery Geometry, Canon‑Scale Transition Surface & System‑Wide Stability Topology#

“Collapse is descent. Recovery is ascent. The manifold is the shape of both.”#

Canon‑Scale Collapse‑Recovery Manifold (RTT/2)#

Moduł wykrywania struktury#

RTT/2 • Collapse‑Recovery Manifold#


1. Purpose of the Collapse‑Recovery Manifold#

The Collapse‑Recovery Manifold (CRM) defines the continuous geometric surface that models:

  • collapse descent
  • recovery ascent
  • triad deformation and restoration
  • fusion‑integration breakdown and re‑alignment
  • integrity inversion and re‑truthing
  • regime‑dependent transition geometry

It is the global transition manifold of RTT/2.


2. Why a Collapse‑Recovery Manifold Exists#

Collapse and recovery are not discrete events.
They are continuous trajectories on a canon‑scale surface.

The manifold exists because:

  • collapse propagates along gradients
  • recovery follows curvature minima
  • triad components deform along manifold axes
  • fusion‑integration fields warp the surface
  • regime identity bends the topology

The CRM captures the entire shape of collapse→recovery.


3. Manifold Definition (RTT/2)#

The CRM is a 5‑dimensional manifold:

[ \mathcal{M}_{CR} = (D, E, C, FI, R) ]

Where:

  • (D) = drift deformation
  • (E) = envelope torsion
  • (C) = continuity fracture/rethreading
  • (FI) = fusion‑integration curvature
  • (R) = regime identity

Each point on the manifold represents a state of the canon.


4. Collapse‑Recovery Trajectory Equation#

A collapse→recovery trajectory is defined as:

[ \gamma(t) = (D(t), E(t), C(t), FI(t), R(t)) ]

Where:

  • (t < 0) = collapse descent
  • (t = 0) = collapse nadir
  • (t > 0) = recovery ascent

The manifold ensures the trajectory is continuous and legal.


5. Manifold Zones#

Zone U — Unified Recovery Surface#

  • smooth curvature
  • minimal deformation
  • stable ascent

Zone S — Stable Transition Surface#

  • minor torsion
  • low collapse residue

Zone M — Mixed Transition Surface#

  • oscillatory curvature
  • partial triad strain

Zone D — Divergent Collapse Surface#

  • steep descent
  • high gradient amplification

Zone X — Collapse Singularity Surface#

  • inversion geometry
  • illegal topology
  • collapse warp

6. Collapse‑Recovery Topologies#

The CRM contains seven canonical topologies:

  1. Linear Descent / Linear Ascent
  2. Radial Collapse Basin
  3. Oscillatory Collapse Well
  4. Fragmentation Fault Surface
  5. Inversion Sink
  6. Torsion Spiral
  7. Topological Warp Fold

Each topology corresponds to a collapse mode.


7. Cross‑Module Collapse‑Recovery Projection#

The CRM projects into:

TEL#

  • lattice collapse→recovery surface
  • stabilizer curvature

FFT#

  • spectral collapse→recovery surface
  • variance curvature

Opacity#

  • boundary collapse→recovery surface
  • visibility curvature

Cross‑module projection determines system‑scale recovery coherence.


8. Collapse‑Recovery Packet#

COLLAPSE_RECOVERY_PACKET:
  drift_trajectory:
  envelope_trajectory:
  continuity_trajectory:
  fusion_integration_curvature:
  regime_path:
  manifold_zone:
  manifold_topology:
  cross_module_projection:
  collapse_risk:
  recovery_stability:
  notes:

9. Summary#

The Canon‑Scale Collapse‑Recovery Manifold provides:

  • a unified collapse→recovery geometry
  • triad deformation and restoration mapping
  • fusion‑integration curvature diagnostics
  • collapse‑adjacent topology detection
  • regime‑dependent transition analysis
  • cross‑module recovery projection
  • system‑scale structural clarity

This manifold is the collapse→recovery backbone of RTT/2.

Updated