Operator Examples — General Relativity
TriadicFrameworks /docs/theories/general_relativity/operator_examples.md#
These examples illustrate General Relativity as a geometric coherence
theory, not a force model.
Curvature is a geometric operator field.
Geodesics are coherence‑preserving trajectories.
Stress‑energy is a curvature‑source operator.
All examples avoid force metaphors, rubber‑sheet analogies, and Newtonian drift.
1. Metric Operator Example (𝓖)#
Goal#
Construct a stable metric structure.
Input#
metric_signature = diag(-1, 1, 1, 1)
Operation#
g = 𝓖(metric_signature)
Interpretation#
- metric is non‑degenerate
- defines causal cones
- supports curvature computation
2. Curvature Operator Example (𝓡)#
Goal#
Compute curvature from a metric.
Input#
g = 𝓖(diag(-1, 1, 1, 1))
Operation#
R = 𝓡(g)
Interpretation#
- curvature is structural
- no rubber‑sheet visualization
- determines geodesic deviation
3. Stress‑Energy Operator Example (𝓣)#
Goal#
Apply stress‑energy as a curvature‑source operator.
Input#
Tμν = perfect_fluid(ρ, p)
R = 𝓡(g)
Operation#
R' = 𝓣(Tμν, g)
Interpretation#
- stress‑energy deforms curvature
- no “mass attracts” metaphor
- operator must preserve coherence
4. Deformation Operator Example (𝓓𝓮𝓯)#
Goal#
Apply a geometric deformation to the metric.
Input#
geometry = g
deformation_signature = small_perturbation(hμν)
Operation#
g' = 𝓓𝓮𝓯(geometry, deformation_signature)
Interpretation#
- deformation must preserve invariants
- no Newtonian fallback
- supports gravitational wave modeling
5. Geodesic Operator Example (𝓖𝓮𝓸)#
Goal#
Generate geodesics as coherence trajectories.
Input#
g = Schwarzschild_metric(M)
initial_conditions = {position, velocity}
Operation#
γ = 𝓖𝓮𝓸(g, initial_conditions)
Interpretation#
- geodesics are not force‑driven
- they preserve coherence under curvature
- causal structure must remain intact
6. Coherence Operator Example (𝓒)#
Goal#
Evaluate geometric coherence.
Input#
geometry = g
curvature = R
geodesics = γ
Operation#
coh = 𝓒(geometry, curvature, geodesics)
Interpretation#
- coherence = geometric stability
- no entropy or probabilistic metrics
- coherence must be structural
7. Adjacency Operator Example (𝓐)#
Goal#
Measure geometric adjacency between two events.
Input#
p, q = events in spacetime
g = metric
Operation#
adj = 𝓐(p, q, g)
Interpretation#
- adjacency is geometric, not semantic
- supports causal and metric neighborhoods
- must be regime‑stable
8. Causal Structure Operator Example (𝓢)#
Goal#
Construct causal cones.
Input#
g = metric
Operation#
C = 𝓢(g)
Interpretation#
- causal structure must remain coherent
- no superluminal drift
- no semantic interpretations
9. Regime Transition Example (𝓡𝓮𝓰)#
Goal#
Transition geometry from R1 → R2.
Input#
geometry = g
Operation#
g₂ = 𝓡𝓮𝓰(g, R1 → R2)
Interpretation#
- curvature operators activate in R2
- transitions must preserve coherence
- illegal transitions trigger collapse
10. Collapse Operator Example (𝓒𝓁)#
Goal#
Classify geometric failure.
Input#
geometry = g?
Operation#
mode = 𝓒𝓁(geometry)
Possible Outputs#
- G1: metric degeneracy
- G2: curvature divergence
- G3: geodesic incoherence
- G4: causal structure failure
Interpretation#
Collapse is geometric, not probabilistic.
Summary#
These examples show GR as:
- curvature‑first
- coherence‑based
- operator‑driven
- regime‑aware
- zero drift
Gravity = coherent curvature.
Geodesics = coherence trajectories.
Spacetime = a geometric operator field.