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ATOCore/docs/architecture/engineering-ontology-v1.md

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Engineering Ontology V1

Purpose

Define the first practical engineering ontology that can sit on top of AtoCore and represent a real engineering project as structured knowledge.

This ontology is intended to be:

  • useful to machines
  • inspectable by humans through derived views
  • aligned with AtoCore trust / provenance rules
  • expandable across mechanical, FEM, electrical, software, manufacturing, and operations

Goal

Represent a project as a system of objects and relationships, not as a pile of notes.

The ontology should support queries such as:

  • what is this subsystem?
  • what requirements does this component satisfy?
  • what result validates this claim?
  • what changed recently?
  • what interfaces are affected by a design change?
  • what is active vs superseded?

Object Families

Project structure

  • Project
  • System
  • Subsystem
  • Assembly
  • Component
  • Interface

Intent / design logic

  • Requirement
  • Constraint
  • Assumption
  • Decision
  • Rationale
  • Risk
  • Issue
  • Open Question
  • Change Request

Physical / technical definition

  • Material
  • Parameter
  • Equation
  • Configuration
  • Geometry Artifact
  • CAD Artifact
  • Tolerance
  • Operating Mode

Analysis / validation

  • Analysis Model
  • Load Case
  • Boundary Condition
  • Solver Setup
  • Result
  • Validation Claim
  • Test
  • Correlation Record

Manufacturing / delivery

  • Manufacturing Process
  • Vendor
  • BOM Item
  • Part Number
  • Assembly Procedure
  • Inspection Step
  • Cost Driver

Software / controls / electrical

  • Software Module
  • Control Function
  • State Machine
  • Signal
  • Sensor
  • Actuator
  • Electrical Interface
  • Firmware Artifact

Evidence / provenance

  • Source Document
  • Transcript Segment
  • Image / Screenshot
  • Session
  • Report
  • External Reference
  • Generated Summary

Minimum Viable V1 Scope

Initial implementation should start with:

  • Project
  • Subsystem
  • Component
  • Requirement
  • Constraint
  • Decision
  • Material
  • Parameter
  • Analysis Model
  • Result
  • Validation Claim
  • Artifact

This is enough to represent meaningful project state without trying to model everything immediately.

Core Relationship Types

Structural

  • CONTAINS
  • PART_OF
  • INTERFACES_WITH

Intent / logic

  • SATISFIES
  • CONSTRAINED_BY
  • BASED_ON_ASSUMPTION
  • AFFECTED_BY_DECISION
  • SUPERSEDES

Validation

  • ANALYZED_BY
  • VALIDATED_BY
  • SUPPORTS
  • CONFLICTS_WITH
  • DEPENDS_ON

Artifact / provenance

  • DESCRIBED_BY
  • UPDATED_BY_SESSION
  • EVIDENCED_BY
  • SUMMARIZED_IN

Example Statements

  • Subsystem:Lateral Support CONTAINS Component:Pivot Pin
  • Component:Pivot Pin CONSTRAINED_BY Requirement:low lateral friction
  • Decision:Use GF-PTFE pad AFFECTS Subsystem:Lateral Support
  • AnalysisModel:M1 static model ANALYZES Subsystem:Reference Frame
  • Result:deflection case 03 SUPPORTS ValidationClaim:vertical stiffness acceptable
  • Artifact:NX assembly DESCRIBES Component:Reference Frame
  • Session:gen-004 UPDATED_BY_SESSION Component:Vertical Support

Shared Required Fields

Every major object should support fields equivalent to:

  • id
  • type
  • name
  • project_id
  • status
  • confidence
  • source_refs
  • created_at
  • updated_at
  • notes (optional)

Suggested Status Lifecycle

For objects and claims:

  • candidate
  • active
  • superseded
  • invalid
  • needs_review

Trust Rules

  1. An object may exist before it becomes trusted.
  2. A generated markdown summary is not canonical truth by default.
  3. If evidence conflicts, prefer:
    1. trusted current project state
    2. validated structured records
    3. reviewed derived synthesis
    4. raw evidence
    5. historical notes
  4. Conflicts should be surfaced, not silently blended.

Mapping to the Existing Knowledge Base System

KB-CAD can map to

  • System
  • Subsystem
  • Component
  • Material
  • Decision
  • Constraint
  • Artifact

KB-FEM can map to

  • Analysis Model
  • Load Case
  • Boundary Condition
  • Result
  • Validation Claim
  • Correlation Record

Session generations can map to

  • Session
  • Generated Summary
  • object update history
  • provenance events

Human Mirror Possibilities

Once the ontology exists, AtoCore can generate pages such as:

  • project overview
  • subsystem page
  • component page
  • decision log
  • validation summary
  • requirement trace page

These should remain derived representations of structured state.

  1. minimal typed object registry
  2. minimal typed relationship registry
  3. evidence-linking support
  4. practical query support for:
    • component summary
    • subsystem current state
    • requirement coverage
    • result-to-claim mapping
    • decision history

What Not To Do In V1

  • do not model every engineering concept immediately
  • do not build a giant graph with no practical queries
  • do not collapse structured objects back into only markdown
  • do not let generated prose outrank structured truth
  • do not auto-promote trusted state too aggressively

Summary

Ontology V1 should be:

  • small enough to implement
  • rich enough to be useful
  • aligned with AtoCore trust philosophy
  • capable of absorbing the existing engineering Knowledge Base work

The first goal is not to model everything. The first goal is to represent enough of a real project that AtoCore can reason over structure, not just notes.