Hydrogen-Class Configuration
Definition
The hydrogen-class configuration is a composite seating structure formed by the admissible relation between an electron-class open half-fold configuration and a proton-class basin configuration.
It is not defined by orbital motion, electrostatic attraction, or standard atomic dynamics in Tier 1.
Within LMR, hydrogen-class structure is read as admissible seating, interface restriction, and composite persistence.
Tier Placement
Primary tier: Tier 1
Role: Composite structural configuration
The hydrogen-class configuration belongs to the structural classification layer established in Paper III.
Source
Primary source: Paper III — Emergence and Structure
Authority level: Foundational structural classification
Paper III establishes hydrogen-class structure as composite seating without torsion locking.
Function in LMR
The hydrogen-class configuration functions as the first primitive composite seating case.
It supports:
- admissible seating
- electron-class / proton-class relation
- interface facing restriction
- composite persistence
- phase restriction without closure
- later spectroscopy and measurement branches
Hydrogen-class structure is the first major test case for how primitive persistent configurations may coexist under admissibility constraints.
Allowed Use
The hydrogen-class configuration may be used as a Tier 1 structural class.
It may be discussed in relation to admissible seating, interface facings, composite persistence, and restriction of open half-fold structure.
Prohibited Misuse
The hydrogen-class configuration must not be treated in Tier 1 as:
- a Bohr orbit
- an electron moving around a proton
- electrostatic binding
- a quantum orbital
- a force-balanced atom
- a field-bound system
- a dynamical two-body problem
Standard hydrogen comparisons belong to Tier 3 or later declared overlays.
Related Concepts
- Electron-Class Configuration
- Proton-Class Configuration
- Admissibility
- Persistence
- Projection
- External Legibility
See Also
- Paper III — Emergence and Structure
- Paper IV — Electromagnetic Routing and Projection (in preparation)
- Codex Rules