This paper introduces a gravitational constraint principle to explain the emergence of network topology, expanding the framework established in Parts I through III. Operating on an isometric canvas shaped by discrete Ricci flow (Hamilton, 1982; Perelman, 2002) and Pythagorean curvature regularization, we define structural fragments as connected components of level sets within a scalar topographic height function. This height function integrates local node density via the Fisher information metric (Rao, 1945; Amari & Nagaoka, 2000) with local Pythagorean curvature. Each fragment is characterized by its structural mass and spatial center of mass. We argue that network topology is not a consequence of simple geodesic proximity or latent space projections (Krioukov et al., 2010). Instead, it emerges from the minimum energy configuration of a system of fragments responding to two competing potentials: a geometric constraint energy exerted by the canvas itself, and a structural gravitational interaction drawing fragments together across the curved metric space (Papadopoulos et al., 2012). The total free energy functional yields static equilibrium conditions subject to a universal coupling constraint (Barabási & Albert, 1999). We establish structural stability by verifying that the joint Hessian is positive definite on the subspace orthogonal to global canvas isometries. The resulting induced topology is mapped as a relational graph where directional links form only when mutual gravitational attraction overcomes the local geometric restoring force. This formulation naturally honors established algebraic invariants, including Pythagorean residue conservation, spectral ratio bounds, and vanishing boundary torsion line integrals (Chung, 1997). Ultimately, this framework demonstrates that while individual fragments function as statistical entities with fluctuating internal distributions, their relative equilibrium positions are deterministically fixed by the geometry of the space. This approach yields a stable topological representation that preserves statistical degrees of freedom while bypassing hidden linkage assumptions.
Avishai Roif (Sat,) studied this question.