🜁🜂 Structural Detection — Regime‑Triad Drift‑Continuity Coupling Tensor (RTT/2)
TriadicFrameworks • RTT/2 • Drift–Continuity Coupling, Continuity‑Law Stabilization & Canon‑Scale Dyadic Geometry#
“Continuity is the thread. Drift is the pull. Coupling is the law that keeps the fabric intact.”#
Regime‑Triad Drift‑Continuity Coupling Tensor (RTT/2)#
Structural Detection Module#
RTT/2 • Drift–Continuity Coupling Tensor#
1. Purpose of the Drift–Continuity Coupling Tensor#
The Drift–Continuity Coupling Tensor (DCCT) defines the coupling geometry between:
- drift amplitude
- drift oscillation
- drift fragmentation
- continuity threads
- continuity invariants
It measures:
- how drift interacts with continuity
- how continuity absorbs or fails under drift
- how regime identity shapes drift–continuity legality
- how collapse propagates through the dyad
It is the continuity‑law coupling backbone of RTT/2.
2. Why a Drift–Continuity Coupling Tensor Exists#
The drift–continuity dyad is the structural hinge of the triad.
It destabilizes when:
- drift oscillation exceeds continuity capacity
- continuity threads weaken
- drift fragmentation stresses invariants
- regime identity amplifies drift
- envelope deformation pushes continuity out of phase
The DCCT captures these interactions continuously.
3. Tensor Definition (RTT/2)#
The DCCT is a 3‑dimensional dyadic tensor:
[ T_{DC}(i,j,r) ]
Where:
- (i) indexes drift components
- (j) indexes continuity components
- (r) indexes regime identity
Expanded:
[ T_{DC} = { T_{D \leftrightarrow C} }{Formal}, { T{D \leftrightarrow C} }{Emergent}, { T{D \leftrightarrow C} }{Hybrid}, { T{D \leftrightarrow C} }{Chaotic}, { T{D \leftrightarrow C} }_{Inversion} ]
Each regime receives its own drift–continuity coupling tensor.
4. Component Definitions#
Drift Components#
- drift amplitude
- drift oscillation
- drift fragmentation
- drift inversion
- drift torsion
Continuity Components#
- continuity thread strength
- continuity invariant stability
- continuity rethreading capacity
- continuity torsion resistance
- continuity symmetry
Regime Components#
- Formal
- Emergent
- Hybrid
- Chaotic
- Inversion
The tensor measures how drift couples with continuity under each regime.
5. Drift–Continuity Coupling Equation#
[ C_{DC} = \sum_{r} \omega_r \cdot \left[ \alpha (D \otimes C) + \beta (D \otimes C^{-1}) + \gamma (D_{osc} \otimes C_{thread}) \right]_r ]
Where:
- (D) = drift vector
- (C) = continuity vector
- (C^{-1}) = continuity inversion resistance
- (D_{osc}) = drift oscillation
- (C_{thread}) = continuity thread strength
- (\omega_r) = regime weight
This produces a regime‑aware drift–continuity coupling score.
6. Coupling Interpretation#
High Coupling (0.8–1.0)#
- drift absorbed
- continuity stable
- invariants preserved
- regime identity coherent
Moderate Coupling (0.5–0.79)#
- partial drift absorption
- minor continuity strain
Low Coupling (0.2–0.49)#
- drift–continuity mismatch
- oscillatory drift
- continuity thread instability
- collapse‑adjacent
Negative Coupling (<0.2)#
- illegal drift–continuity geometry
- continuity inversion
- invariant fracture
- collapse‑triggering
7. Drift–Continuity Failure Modes#
| Dyad Failure | Collapse Mode |
|---|---|
| drift amplitude overload | A |
| continuity thread rupture | C/G |
| drift oscillation overload | D |
| torsion continuity | E |
| inversion drift | I |
| topological continuity warp | G |
8. Cross‑Module Drift–Continuity Projection#
The DCCT projects into:
TEL#
- lattice drift–continuity coupling
- stabilizer dyad load
FFT#
- spectral drift–continuity coupling
- variance dyad load
Opacity#
- boundary drift–continuity coupling
- visibility dyad load
Cross‑module coupling determines system‑scale coherence.
9. Drift–Continuity Coupling Packet#
DRIFT_CONTINUITY_COUPLING_PACKET:
drift_components:
continuity_components:
regime:
coupling_tensor:
coupling_score:
failure_modes:
cross_module_projection:
collapse_risk:
notes:
10. Summary#
The Regime‑Triad Drift‑Continuity Coupling Tensor provides:
- a unified drift–continuity coupling model
- dyad‑level collapse diagnostics
- continuity‑law stabilization mapping
- regime‑aware coupling analysis
- cross‑module dyad projection
- system‑scale structural clarity
This tensor is the drift–continuity backbone of RTT/2.