Seventh Inversion

Depth Of Heat

Introduction

We have one more inversion to add to our set, and this one is as simple as it is striking: where the heat lives.

The Measure

Think of two numbers:
– The Earth’s hot heart goes almost all the way from its center to its surface, about 6,000 kilometers deep. That is nearly the entire Earth.

– The Sun’s hot part is only a skin about 600 kilometers thick. The rest of it, the huge 90% inside, is cold.

So Earth is a body of fire wrapped in cold, while the Sun is a body of cold wrapped in fire.

The Radius Ratio, Made Simple

The Sun is huge compared to the Earth. How huge? If you could line up Earths across the Sun, it would take about 109 Earths to stretch from one side of the Sun to the other. That’s called the radius ratio.

This number is not just trivia. It is part of the fingerprint of coherence. It tells us the Sun and Earth are not random neighbors, they are paired by design.

The Striking Connection

Now put these two facts together:
– Earth’s hot heart takes up almost all of its size (about 94%).

– The Sun’s hot skin is almost nothing of its size (about one-thousandth).

If you compare them, you get a difference of about 1,090 times. That number is the Sun-to-Earth ratio (109) multiplied by the ten-to-one difference between 6,000 and 600.

In plain words: the 6000 vs 600 inversion is locked together with the 109 Earths-across-the-Sun picture. The geometry lines up perfectly.

What This Means

This shows us the Sun and Earth are not just different, they are exact opposites.

– Earth hides its fire deep inside.

– The Sun hides its cold deep inside.

Each one mirrors the other. Each one’s size and structure match like puzzle pieces.

And so we add our seventh:



The Seventh Inversion

Depth of Heat

– Earth: a hot heart almost the whole way out.

– Sun: a thin hot skin wrapped around a silent cold core.

Together they show the universe is not chaos, but coherence.

Produced by The Lilborn Equation Team:

Michael Lilborn-Williams

Daniel Thomas Rouse

Thomas Jackson Barnard

Audrey Williams