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φ

Project Phi Grid — Independent Research

Is the golden ratio
encoded in space?

A rigorous statistical investigation into whether φ-ratio geometry structures the Earth, the solar system, and the stellar neighbourhood.

φ Golden Ratio
1.6180…
p=0.010 Earth paper
significance
11 Anchors tested
2 significant
OSF Pre-registered
osf.io/a72fp
Read the Earth Paper Explore the Results Launch Φ Grid Explorer →
Interactive Visualisation — New

Navigate the φ-grid
from Earth to the stars.

An interactive 3D explorer built on the research data. Zoom from Earth's geomagnetic grid — Wilkes Land, Hiawatha, INTERMAGNET stations — out through the solar system, Kuiper Belt, heliosphere, inner and outer Oort Cloud, to the stellar neighbourhood at 20 light-years. Φ-ratio shells visible at every scale.

Earth φ-Grid 8 Planets · Real Ephemeris Kuiper Belt Voyager 1 & 2 Heliosphere Oort Cloud 38 Nearby Stars φⁿ Shell Overlays
Launch Φ Grid Explorer →

What is Phi Grid?

Project Phi Grid tests a precise, falsifiable hypothesis: that the golden ratio φ structures the geometry of natural systems at multiple scales — from Earth's surface to the stellar neighbourhood — at levels of statistical significance that cannot be explained by chance.

φ = (1 + √5) / 2 The Golden Ratio ≈ 1.6180339887…

The golden ratio φ appears throughout nature — in nautilus shells, sunflower seeds, and galaxy spirals. Phi Grid asks whether this isn't coincidence: whether φ actually governs how structures are spaced at cosmic scales.

We test this with real data, pre-registered hypotheses, and rigorous statistics. If φ-shells anchored at Neptune predict where nearby stars cluster — and no other anchor does — that demands explanation.

The core test: KDE of radial stellar distances (volume-corrected, bandwidth 0.8 ly) against φ-ratio geometric progressions rₙ = r₀ × φⁿ. Monte Carlo null distributions constructed from N=100,000 random geometric progressions and random position sets.

Anchor specificity: 11 candidate anchors tested. Only Neptune (30.069 AU) and Kuiper Belt outer edge (~50 AU) return p<0.05. Inner solar system bodies, heliopause, and Oort Cloud all return p>0.75. Pre-registration: OSF osf.io/a72fp.

φ-Shell Series from Neptune
r₀ = 1.663 ly
r₁ = r₀ × φ = 2.692 ly
r₂ = r₁ × φ = 4.355 ly
r₃ = r₂ × φ = 7.047 ly
r₄ = r₃ × φ = 11.402 ly ✓
r₅ = r₄ × φ = 18.448 ly
r₆ = r₅ × φ = 29.850 ly
r₇ = r₆ × φ = 48.298 ly ✓
Shells predicted purely from Neptune's orbital radius and φ. No free parameters.

Three papers.
What we found.

Each result is accompanied by its p-value, dataset, and pre-registration record. Null results are reported alongside positive ones.

01
Earth Paper — φ-Grid at Geophysical Sites
A 16-petal φ-ratio grid anchored at the Wilkes Land mascon aligns with major geophysical and archaeological sites worldwide. Monte Carlo N=10,000. Submitted for independent review.
p = 0.0102
02
Stellar Neighbourhood — φ-Shells from Neptune
φ-ratio shells anchored at Neptune (30.069 AU) align with stellar density peaks in the RECONS/Hipparcos 58-system catalog within 20 ly. KDE detects 4 peaks; 3/4 shells match within ±0.5 ly. N=100,000.
p = 0.0285
03
Gaia GCNS Confirmatory Test — Pre-Registered
Pre-registered extension to 1,148 Gaia sources within 50 ly. 2/8 shells matched at 50 ly — below the pre-registered significance threshold. Honest null result: the Section 13 signal does not survive at 50 ly. Partial concordance (0–20 ly zone) under investigation.
p = 0.176 — NULL
Scientific Integrity Note

The Gaia null result is reported prominently and without spin. Pre-registered science means the hypothesis is tested honestly — a null result is a result. The partial 0–20 ly concordance is currently under investigation as a focused replication study.

Only Neptune is significant.
11 anchors tested.

The most important control in this research: the same test was run identically on 11 candidate anchors spanning the solar system. Inner planets, the Sun, the heliopause, and the Oort Cloud all return null. Only the outer Neptune/Kuiper boundary is significant — both physically meaningful anchors that mark the edge of Neptune's dynamical zone.

Anchor Distance (AU) p-value Significant?
Mercury0.387> 0.75No
Venus0.723> 0.75No
Earth1.000> 0.75No
Mars1.524> 0.75No
Jupiter5.203> 0.75No
Saturn9.537> 0.75No
Uranus19.191> 0.75No
Neptune30.0690.0285Yes ★
Kuiper Belt outer edge~500.0285Yes ★
Heliopause~120> 0.75No
Oort Cloud (inner)~2,000> 0.75No

★ Both significant anchors mark the outer boundary of Neptune's dynamical zone. Citation: Volk et al. 2019, AJ 158 64. DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/ab2c3b

From Earth to the
stellar neighbourhood.

February 2026
Earth Paper — φ-Grid Geophysical Analysis
16-petal φ-ratio grid anchored at Wilkes Land mascon. Monte Carlo N=10,000, p=0.0102. First publication of the Phi Grid methodology.
Zenodo DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19035389 →
March 2026
Section 13 — Stellar Neighbourhood (RECONS/Hipparcos)
φ-shells from Neptune tested against 58-system catalog within 20 ly. p=0.0285. Anchor specificity test across 11 solar system bodies: only Neptune/Kuiper significant.
Zenodo DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19241818 →
25 March 2026
Pre-Registered Gaia GCNS Confirmatory Test
Hypothesis pre-registered on OSF before any Gaia data downloaded. 1,148 sources within 50 ly. Null result at 50 ly (p=0.176). Partial 0–20 ly concordance documented. Null reported openly.
OSF Pre-registration: osf.io/a72fp →
27 March 2026
Solar System φ-Shell Pre-Registration — OSF
Pre-registered confirmatory test of φ-shells anchored at Neptune (30.069 AU) against 4 solar system boundaries within ±5% tolerance. Significance threshold p<0.05. Registered before any analysis is run.
OSF Pre-registration: osf.io/3p2gb — DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/3P2GB →
30 March 2026
Archaeological Extension — Three-Dataset Analysis Published
Standalone paper deposited to Zenodo covering three parallel Monte Carlo analyses: UNESCO World Heritage Sites (p = 0.0056, significant), curated ancient monuments exploratory test (p = 0.085, reported in full), and Megalithic Portal analysis withdrawn on open-access grounds. Göbekli Tepe returns triple angular/radial alignment (Wilkes 0.18°/1.91%, Hiawatha 0.97°) — HIGH INTEREST.
Zenodo: doi:10.5281/zenodo.19341794 →
Upcoming
Focused 0–20 ly GCNS Replication (Binaries Collapsed)
Direct replication of Section 13 on Gaia GCNS data with binaries collapsed via gcns.resolvedss. 83 systems. Methodology-matched comparison.
Upcoming
Negative Result Paper — RNAAS / A&A Letters
Pre-registered null results are publishable. Earth paper + Section 13 + Gaia confirmatory null = complete, honest research arc.

Open access.
Every dataset, every result.

All papers, notebooks, and pre-registrations are publicly available. Reproducibility is a core commitment of this project.

Ancient monuments
and the φ-grid.

Three independent Monte Carlo analyses test whether the dual-anchor φ-grid — anchored at the Wilkes Land crustal gravity anomaly and the Hiawatha impact crater — shows statistically significant spatial association with globally distributed ancient monuments.

0.0056 UNESCO analysis
p-value
3.47 Z-score
UNESCO test
87 UNESCO sites
tested
96 Grid nodes
48 per anchor

The same 16-petal φ-ratio grid used in the Earth paper is applied to ancient monument databases. The grid was not adjusted or optimised for archaeological data — it is applied unchanged from the geophysical analysis.

The most striking single observation is the triple angular/radial alignment of Göbekli Tepe — the world's oldest known monumental structure (~9600 BCE) — against both anchors simultaneously. Angular error from Wilkes: 0.18°. Radial error: 1.91%. Angular error from Hiawatha: 0.97°. All three values are within the pre-specified thresholds.

Göbekli Tepe falls 264 km from the nearest grid node — just outside the 200 km proximity threshold — and is classified HIGH INTEREST. Karahan Tepe (~9400 BCE), 46 km from Göbekli Tepe, falls at 290 km from the same node. The two oldest sites in the dataset cluster at the same node.

Analysis I — Pre-Registered
UNESCO World Heritage Sites
p = 0.0056  ·  Z = 3.47
87 cultural/archaeological UNESCO sites, globally distributed. 6 confirmed hits in 96 nodes at the pre-registered 200 km threshold. Monte Carlo N = 10,000, seed 42. Significant at p < 0.01. Result robust across threshold sensitivity (150 km: p = 0.0001) and land-only node analysis (p = 0.0018).
Analysis II — Exploratory
Curated Ancient Monuments
p = 0.085  ·  Z = 1.98
53 manually curated ancient monuments from peer-reviewed literature and open-access heritage databases (no Megalithic Portal data). 3 confirmed hits in 96 nodes. Not significant at p < 0.05. Reported in full as honest negative evidence. Göbekli Tepe and Karahan Tepe near-miss at 264–290 km from same node.
Analysis III — Withdrawn
Megalithic Portal Dataset
Withdrawn — open access
A pre-registered analysis using the Megalithic Portal global dataset (~50,000 sites) was withdrawn after contact with dataset owner Andy Burnham. The data cannot be used in published open-access research — incompatible with the project's CC BY 4.0 commitment. No results were produced. The withdrawal is documented transparently in the paper.
High Interest Finding
Göbekli Tepe — Triple Angular/Radial Alignment

Göbekli Tepe (37.22°N, 38.92°E; southeastern Turkey) is the world's oldest known monumental structure, with radiocarbon-dated enclosures at ~9600–8800 BCE — predating the Egyptian pyramids by 7,000 years. Less than 10% of the site has been excavated; ground-penetrating radar indicates at least 20 buried circular enclosures remain.

0.18° Wilkes angular error
(threshold ±2°)
1.91% Wilkes radial error
(threshold ±10%)
0.97° Hiawatha angular error
(threshold ±2°)
264 km From nearest node
(threshold 200 km)

Giza (Great Pyramid complex, ~2560 BCE) sits on the same Wilkes Petal 13 bearing as Göbekli Tepe at a different radial shell — a co-petal relationship between the world's oldest and most famous monument complexes separated by 7,000 years of history. No causal mechanism is proposed; this is reported as a geometric observation.

Sites confirmed within the 200 km proximity threshold in Analysis I (UNESCO) and/or appearing as HIGH INTEREST near-misses across analyses. All photographs are public domain or Creative Commons licensed.

Göbekli Tepe T-pillars, southeastern Turkey
Göbekli Tepe
HIGH INTEREST · ~9600 BCE · Turkey
T-shaped limestone pillars, Göbekli Tepe, Şanlıurfa, Turkey. Wilkes angular error 0.18°, radial 1.91%; Hiawatha angular error 0.97°. 264 km from nearest node.
Karahan Tepe T-pillars and carved head, Turkey
Karahan Tepe
Near-miss · ~9400 BCE · Turkey
T-pillars and carved anthropomorphic head, Karahan Tepe (Taş Tepeler project). 290 km from same node as Göbekli Tepe — oldest two sites in dataset cluster at same node.
View from Pyramid of the Moon, Teotihuacan
Teotihuacan
Confirmed Hit · ~100 BCE · Mexico
Avenue of the Dead from the Pyramid of the Moon, Teotihuacan. 91 km from Wilkes P6 φ¹ node — closest confirmed hit in the dataset.
Oracle bone pit, Yinxu / Anyang, Shang Dynasty
Yinxu / Anyang
Confirmed Hit · ~1300 BCE · China
Oracle bone storage pit, Yinxu (Yin Ruins), Anyang — Shang Dynasty royal capital. 119 km from Hiawatha P0 φ⁻² node, which also hits Longmen Grottoes (181 km) and Luoyang (149 km).
Ahu Tongariki, Easter Island / Rapa Nui
Easter Island
Confirmed Hit · ~800 CE · Pacific
Ahu Tongariki moai platform, Easter Island (Rapa Nui). 115 km from Wilkes P6 φ⁰ node — the same petal that reaches Teotihuacan at the φ¹ shell outward.
Divriği Great Mosque and Hospital, Turkey
Divriği Great Mosque
Confirmed Hit · 1228 CE · Turkey
The Great Mosque and Hospital of Divriği, eastern Turkey — 43 km from Wilkes P13 φ¹ node, the closest confirmed UNESCO hit in the dataset. Arslantepe Mound (4th millennium BCE) is 126 km from the same node.
Fengxian Temple, Longmen Grottoes, China
Longmen Grottoes
Confirmed Hit · 5th–8th c. CE · China
Fengxian Temple, Longmen Grottoes, Henan Province — 181 km from Hiawatha P0 φ⁻² node. The same node also hits Yinxu (119 km) and Luoyang Ancient Capitals (149 km) — three independent UNESCO sites within 200 km of a single node.
Neolithic petroglyphs, Jubbah, Saudi Arabia
Jubbah Rock Art
Confirmed Hit · Neolithic · Saudi Arabia
Neolithic and Bronze Age petroglyphs, Jebel Umm Sinman, Jubbah, Saudi Arabia — 90 km from Hiawatha P3 φ⁻² node. Al-Hijr (Madain Salih) falls 290 km from the same node.
Hieroglyphic Stairway of Copán, Honduras
Copán
Confirmed Hit · ~350 CE · Honduras
Hieroglyphic Stairway, Copán — Maya royal city, Honduras. 142 km from Hiawatha P9 φ⁻² node.
All photographs are public domain or Creative Commons licensed (Wikimedia Commons). Statistical results are from peer-reviewed Monte Carlo methodology applied to UNESCO and open-access heritage databases. No causal mechanism between the φ-grid and site locations is proposed — the geometry is presented as a descriptive framework. Full methods, data, and code: doi:10.5281/zenodo.19341794

Scientists, journalists,
and curious minds welcome.

Whether you're a researcher interested in collaboration, a journalist covering independent science, or a member of the public with questions — reach out.

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