Recent experiments have shown that certain polar antiferromagnets exhibit "giant" phonon magnetic moments (PMM), traditionally unexpected for charge-neutral lattice vibrations. Within the Aether Physics Model (APM) and Quantum Measurement Units (QMU), these results arise naturally from the interaction between low-frequency time modes and the distributed magnetic charge dimension eₑmax^2 under curl exposure. In this work we demonstrate that the magnetic-flux unit and the Aether curl unit satisfy the dimensional identity curl = C Fq, that the phonon magnetic moment is fundamentally a length–frequency object. The phonon magnetic moment therefore takes the QMU form\₇^ (QMU) = C Fq \, ₇, ₇ is not a phenomenological parameter but a geometric participation factor defined on the Aether torus. A central result of this paper is that ₇ is the long-time overlap between (i) the helical displacement pattern of a chiral phonon and (ii) the intrinsic helical geometry of the magnetic-charge distribution eₑmax^2. This places PMM behavior within the topological structure of the Aether unit. Because the magnetic-charge helix and the phonon helix generally possess incommensurate winding numbers, the magnitude of PMM depends on the efficiency with which the phonon samples the magnetic sector. The Golden Angle, \ = 2^{2}, as the most efficient rotational phase for sampling the Aether magnetic helix, maximizing ₇ through uniform toroidal coverage. This explains the observed "giant PMM not as an anomaly, but as the geometric resonance of a chiral phonon whose phase angle coincides with the maximally irrational rotation of the Aether torus. We further interpret the enhancement of PMM near magnetic critical temperatures as an Aether-level curl-softening phenomenon, analogous to the turning point in sphere eversion, where torsional resistance momentarily collapses and curl exposure spikes. The material Fe₂Mo₃O₈ is analyzed as a specific test platform, and several experimental predictions are provided, including a direct connection between the thermal Hall effect and the curl susceptibility ₇^curl. This paper unifies phonon magnetism, topological Aether geometry, curl dynamics, and QMU dimensional analysis into a single ledger, suggesting that mechanical, magnetic, and thermodynamic effects are distinct manifestations of a unified Aether structure.
Thomson David (Sat,) studied this question.