Three Rings
Put your hand on your chest. Feel your heartbeat. That rhythm — that cycle — lives in a ring. Not a ring you wear, but a mathematical ring: a set of numbers where you can add, subtract, and multiply, and always land back inside.
Now here is the question. What if the ring could check itself? What if, when one channel stumbles, the ring knows — and can heal?
That is not a fantasy. It is what happens when you add a fifth channel. An eleventh prime. A guardian that carries no data of its own — only truth.
This is the story of three rings. One carries the data. One wraps it in a thin shield. And one — the True Form — gives every channel its full depth. Isn't it remarkable that you need exactly three?
Z/210Z — The Data Ring
Z/2310Z — The Thin Ring
Z/970200Z — The True Form
The data ring has four channels. The thin ring adds a fifth — mod L=11 — the guardian. The True Form fattens every channel: mod D3=8, mod K2=9, mod E2=25, mod b2=49, mod L=11. Same five primes, each raised to its natural power. Notice: the unit fraction (20.8%) is invariant across all three rings — as if the proportion of reversible transformations is a universal constant.