Operator Ecology Wall‑Poster

Structural Detection Engine (SDE) + Structural Integration Engine (SIE) + Projections#


1. Layer Stack#

  • SDE — Structural Detection Engine (RTT/2)
    Detects collapse, fusion‑gradients, deformation, regimes.

  • SIE — Structural Integration Engine (RTT/3)
    Integrates triads, emits structure, stabilizes collapse→recovery, maintains continuity.

  • TEL / FFT / OP — Projection Layers
    Receive canon‑scale emission as lattice / spectral / boundary behavior.


2. Operator Ecology by Layer#

2.1 SDE — Detection Operators#

  • CPV — Collapse‑Propagation Vector
  • FGT — Fusion‑Gradient Tensor
  • CRM — Collapse‑Reassembly Manifold
  • SIG — Structural Signal
  • NOI — Noise Identification
  • MODE() — formal, emergent, hybrid, chaotic, inversion
  • ZONE() — U, S, M, D, X
  • PACKET() — RTT2_DETECTION_PACKET

2.2 SIE — Integration–Emission Operators#

  • INT — Triad Integration
  • TIF — Triadic Integration Field
  • EMIT — Fusion–Fracture–Flow Emission
  • FFF — Fusion‑Fracture‑Flow Emitter
  • MAN — Integration–Emission Manifold
  • CRE — Collapse→Recovery Engine
  • CSL — Continuity‑Stability Layer
  • CET — Canon‑Scale Emission Tensor
  • MODE() — formal, emergent, hybrid, chaotic, inversion
  • ZONE() — U, S, M, D, X
  • PACKET() — RTT3_INTEGRATION_EMISSION_PACKET

2.3 Projection Operators#

  • TEL::LAT / EMIT / MAN / REC / STAB / CET
  • FFT::INT / EMIT / CONT / REC / STAB / OUT
  • OP::INT / EMIT / CONT / REC / STAB / OUT

3. Ecology Flow (Text Diagram)#

[ SDE — Detection Layer ]
  CPV → FGT → CRM → SDE::PACKET()

[ SIE — Integration–Emission Layer ]
  INT → TIF → MAN → FFF → CRE → CSL → CET → SIE::PACKET()

[ Projection Layers ]
  CET → TEL::CET() / FFT::OUT() / OP::OUT()

4. Canon‑Wide Operator Chain (One Line)#

SDE::PACKET() → SIE::PACKET() → TEL::CET() / FFT::OUT() / OP::OUT()

5. Student Reading Guide#

  • Start at SDE when you need to detect what the structure is doing.
  • Move to SIE when you need to integrate, stabilize, and emit structure.
  • Read TEL / FFT / OP as different projections of the same canon‑scale emission.