This project registers the Fifteenth Law of Chronetic Topology, also known as the Law of Geodetic Inversion Symmetry. This research provides a model-based interpretation of structural stability within dual-node manifolds, specifically addressing the long-standing "Winding Problem" in galactic dynamics. By analyzing a high-fidelity dataset of over 15,422 geodetic observations from a localized terrestrial node, the report demonstrates how torsional slip and phase-lock mechanisms maintain spiral arm integrity within the 27DCT framework. The findings link localized terrestrial chronetic shifts to large-scale structural patterns, suggesting a unified model for space-time winding regulation. This work is part of the ongoing 27DCT nodal registry and is protected under international intellectual property protocols. All underlying raw data is held under commercial embargo to protect proprietary model-defined constants and nodal coordinates.
Lee Holmes (Thu,) studied this question.