Paper LXXIX established that the monodromy of the brane wave equation around a black hole encodes both the gravitational acceleration (imaginary part of the null geodesic holonomy) and the Hawking temperature (phase of the Bogoliubov trans- formation). We now ask: can this monodromy act as a reective barrier for incoming brane modes, and if so, what happens at a particular incident angle? The answer is yes, and the consequences are signicant. The e7 Fano node the topological sepa- rator between the H+ matter sector and the H−bulk beyond the horizon generates a Z2 monodromy Me7 = −1 that acts as a sector-selective reective barrier. The re- ection amplitude is angle-dependent: R(θ) = sin2 θ, where θ is the alignment angle between the incoming H+ polarization vector and the e7 monodromy axis. At θ = π/2 (transverse incidence): total reection, R = 1. At θ = 0 (parallel incidence): total transmission, R = 0. At the critical angle θ∗= π/4: R = 1/2, the mode is half-transmitted and half-reected. This critical angle is precisely the Hawking thermal equilibrium condition: at θ∗, the transmission and reection rates are equal and the reected power corresponds to a Planck spectrum at temperature TH = ℏκ/2πkB. The greybody factor is thus given a geometric interpretation: it is the solid angle subtended by the θ π/4 are reected at the photon sphere and never reach the event horizon. These modes carry the full information of the incident wave back to innity. The event horizon is shielded by the photon sphere monodromy barrier. A brane mode at transverse incidence (θ = π/2) experiences total reection at the photon sphere: it bounces o the black hole without ever crossing the horizon. This provides a classical-topological mechanism for information preservation that does not require quantum rewalls or black hole complementarity. Three phenomena known from black hole physics greybody factors, quasi-normal modes, and superradiance are shown to be dierent manifes- tations of the same e7 monodromy reection, unied by the incident-angle structure of the topological barrier. Four new predictions follow (Predictions 180183). Part of the One-Octonion Brane-Bulk Framework series. Anchor DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19120873. Community: one-octonion-brane-bulk. Author: Bharathi Dasan Jagadeesan, M.D., University of Minnesota. ORCID: 0000-0002-1143-941X.
Bharathi Jagadeesan (Tue,) studied this question.