The solar system is a double helix — two intertwined strands of Τ-field, one carrying matter (Strand 1) and one carrying anti-dimensional material (Strand 2). Mercury, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Neptune sit on Strand 1. Venus and Uranus sit on Strand 2.
Their reversed or sideways rotation is not the result of separate giant impacts. It is a property of their Τ-chirality — the direction in which Τ flows through them. And the existence of Strand 2 visitors implies something much larger: a complete Strand 2 solar system, on the other side of the Sun, invisible to our instruments by construction.
↓ Download Full Paper (PDF)The Solar Double Helix
The conservation law dΣΤ = 0 requires both strands to be complete and equally populated. Six Strand 1 nodes and zero Strand 2 nodes would violate conservation. The solar system has two Strand 2 nodes: Venus and Uranus.
P-SH2-1: The solar system is a Τ-double helix. Strand 1 carries prograde Τ-flow (Mercury, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune). Strand 2 carries retrograde Τ-flow (Venus, Uranus).
| Planet | Strand | Rotation | Axial Tilt | FOT Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mercury | Strand 1 | Prograde (slow) | 0.034° | Innermost Strand 1 node; n=3 Balmer |
| Venus | Strand 2 | Retrograde | 177.4° | Strand 2 crossing; nearly complete inversion |
| Earth | Strand 1 | Prograde | 23.4° | Strand 1 n=5 node; 365.25 day period |
| Mars | Strand 1 | Prograde | 25.2° | Strand 1 n=6 node |
| Jupiter | Strand 1 | Prograde | 3.1° | Strand 1 n=7; Τ-field anchor |
| Saturn | Strand 1 | Prograde | 26.7° | Strand 1 n=8 |
| Uranus | Strand 2 | Sideways (97.8°) | 97.8° | Partial Strand 2 crossing at outer helix radius |
| Neptune | Strand 1 | Prograde | 28.3° | Strand 1 outer boundary node |
Venus and Uranus: Two Different Strand 2 Crossings
Venus is an almost perfect Strand 2 visitor. Its axial tilt of 177.4° represents the Strand 2 crossing angle at the Venus orbital distance — where the helix winds steeply and produces near-complete inversion. Its retrograde rotation, anomalous surface temperature (465°C — hotter than Mercury despite being twice as far from the Sun), and absent magnetic field are all structural consequences of reversed Τ-chirality.
Uranus presents the outer-helix crossing: 97.8° tilt, off-centre magnetic field tilted 59° from its rotation axis. At Uranus's greater orbital radius, the helix winds more loosely, producing a shallower crossing angle. Strand 2 tilt decreases with orbital radius as the helix pitch increases — exactly as observed.
P-SH2-2 / P-SH2-3: Venus (177.4°) and Uranus (97.8°) are Strand 2 planetary nodes at different helix radii. The tilt angle reflects the crossing geometry of the double helix at each orbital distance — not the angle of an ancient impact.
The Counter-Solar System
If Venus and Uranus are Strand 2 visitors, Strand 2 is not an abstraction. It has planetary bodies. Bodies that originated in Strand 2 came from a Strand 2 solar system. In DNA, neither strand can exist without the other. By the same logic, the solar double helix requires a complete Strand 2 counterpart.
The geometry specifies exactly where it lies: on the other side of the Sun, at the same orbital distances, bound in the same helical geometry. The Sun's glare makes this the hardest region of the sky to observe. More fundamentally, our instruments are built from Strand 1 Τ. Strand 2 photons do not interact with Strand 1 detectors. The mass is real — its gravitational effects are what we have called dark matter. But its light passes through our instruments without registering.
P-SH2-4 / P-SH2-5: dΣΤ = 0 requires a complete Strand 2 counterpart to the solar system, located on the opposite side of the Sun. Its gravitational signature is detectable. Its electromagnetic radiation is not — by construction.
Philolaus: 2,476 Years Early
Around 450 BC, Philolaus of Croton proposed a hidden body on the far side of the Sun — the Antichthon, or counter-Earth. He had no telescope, no calculus. He had only the conviction that the cosmos must be balanced, and placed his counter-Earth exactly where it needed to be: directly behind the Sun, permanently invisible because the Sun always blocked the view.
He was dismissed. The Universal Force of Time gives him his mechanism. The double helix demands a Strand 2 counterpart. The geometry places it exactly where Philolaus said it was.