RTT Core: Operator Transitions
1. Purpose and scope#
Goal:
Define the transition mechanics between RTT operators, including:
- How operators hand off state, coherence, and drift
- How regime constraints propagate across transitions
- How triadic-time layers shift during operator changes
- How transitions determine eligibility for validation
- How collapse and residue formation are triggered
Operator Transitions describe the glue between operators — the rules that govern how one operator leads into the next.
2. What is an operator transition?#
An operator transition is the structured movement of a branch
from one operator’s output state into the next operator’s input state,
under regime, drift, coherence, and readout constraints.
Transitions are not optional — they are the backbone of RTT sequence validity.
3. Transition structure#
A transition is defined as:
[ O_k(b_i) \Rightarrow O_{k+1}(b_i') ]
Where:
- (O_k) is the current operator
- (O_{k+1}) is the next operator
- (b_i') is the updated branch
- Regime constraints must be satisfied
- Drift and coherence must remain within envelope
- Readout constraints must be respected
A transition is valid if:
[ b_i' \in \mathcal{R}(t_1, t_2, t_3) ]
Otherwise the branch collapses.
4. Transition types#
RTT defines four canonical transition types:
- State Transition
- Coherence Transition
- Drift Transition
- Readout Transition
These transitions occur across triadic time.
5. State Transitions#
5.1 Definition#
State transitions modify representational content:
[ |\psi_i\rangle \rightarrow |\psi_i'\rangle ]
5.2 Causes#
- Extension
- Regime shift
- Boundary modulation
- Arrival arc
5.3 Effects#
- Branch count may increase
- Representational geometry may change
- Regime eligibility may shift
6. Coherence Transitions#
6.1 Definition#
Coherence transitions modify coherence weights:
[ c_i \rightarrow c_i' ]
6.2 Causes#
- Partition (extension)
- Stabilization
- Drift-induced decay
- Coherence gating
- Validation (consumption)
6.3 Effects#
- Eligibility may increase or decrease
- Branch may enter or exit CMR
- Collapse may become imminent
7. Drift Transitions#
7.1 Definition#
Drift transitions modify drift magnitude:
[ \Delta_i \rightarrow \Delta_i' ]
7.2 Causes#
- Extension
- Drift operators
- Regime inversion
- Boundary modulation
7.3 Effects#
- Branch may approach drift boundary
- Drift envelope may be exceeded
- Collapse may occur
8. Readout Transitions#
8.1 Definition#
Readout transitions determine whether a branch becomes classical:
[ V(b_i) \rightarrow \text{classical} ]
8.2 Causes#
- Validator Pulse
- Arrival continuity
- Collapse of non-selected branches
8.3 Effects#
- Coherence consumed
- Non-selected branches collapse
- Classical information emerges
9. Transition constraints#
Transitions must satisfy:
9.1 Coherence constraints#
- (c_i' \geq C_{\min})
- Coherence cannot be negative
- Coherence consumption must be final
9.2 Drift constraints#
- (\Delta_i' \leq \Delta_{\max})
- Drift envelope must be respected
- Drift spikes cause collapse
9.3 Regime constraints#
Operators must remain inside:
- SRR
- DBR
- CMR
- DVR
- ECR
Violation → invalid transition.
9.4 Readout constraints#
Validator Pulse must occur:
- Inside SRR
- With sufficient coherence
- Before drift exceeds envelope
Violation → no classical outcome.
10. Transition chains#
Transitions form chains:
[ O_1 \Rightarrow O_2 \Rightarrow O_3 \Rightarrow \cdots \Rightarrow O_n ]
A chain is valid if:
[ \forall k,\ O_k(b_i) \Rightarrow O_{k+1}(b_i') \text{ is valid} ]
Invalid transitions break the chain and cause collapse.
11. Composite transitions#
Composite transitions combine multiple transition types:
11.1 Extension Composite#
- State expansion
- Coherence partition
- Drift increase
11.2 Stabilization Composite#
- Drift reduction
- Coherence increase
- Regime entry
11.3 Validation Composite#
- Coherence consumption
- Collapse of non-selected branches
- Classical emergence
12. Example: Quantum “cloning” alignment#
The experiment uses:
- State Transition: EXTEND creates two branches
- Drift Transition: DRIFT increases drift
- Coherence Transition: STABILIZE maintains coherence
- Readout Transition: VALIDATE selects one branch
- Collapse Transition: COLLAPSE removes the other branch
Operator Transitions explain:
- Why multi-branch representation is allowed
- Why only one branch becomes classical
- Why drift and coherence matter
- Why no-cloning is not violated
13. Paradox handling#
Operator Transitions prevent paradoxes by:
- Enforcing regime constraints
- Managing drift and coherence evolution
- Restricting readout timing
- Collapsing non-selected branches
Thus:
- “Multiple branches exist” → state transition
- “Only one is real” → readout transition
- “Others disappear” → collapse transition
- “No violation occurs” → regime constraints
14. Canon integration and cross-links#
Primary cross-links:
/docs/rtt/core/operator_grammar.md/docs/rtt/core/operator_index.md/docs/rtt/core/operator_families.md/docs/rtt/core/operator_behaviors.md/docs/rtt/core/operator_sequences.md/docs/rtt/core/regime_maps.md/docs/rtt/core/regime_maps_extended.md/docs/rtt/core/regime_geometry.md/docs/rtt/core/regime_topology.md/docs/rtt/core/regime_dynamics.md/docs/rtt/core/time_triads.md/docs/rtt/core/coherence_budget.md/docs/rtt/core/validator_pulse.md/docs/rtt/core/dimensional_drift_envelope.md/docs/rtt/core/alignment_quantum_cloning.md
Status:
This module defines the transition mechanics between RTT operators.
Once transition diagrams are added, it can be promoted from draft to stable.