In this chart the unit trend has been identified using the 1x1 Gann Box. Consequently the roots radii and the unit box represent growth limits based on the initial unit trend that has been established. By ensuring that the circle and the squared unit align the curvature becomes a valid support and resistance trajectory.
The gann box has four corner points and opposite to where price is moving (up or down) the circles can project relevant circular support or resistance which stems from the identity of the unit trend.
A unit trend evolves and will not remain a unit trend over time, however the propagation does frequently follow a root process. E.g. Expansion happens with the root 1.414 (sqrt2) or contraction 0.707 (1/sqrt2).
It is no coincidence that many of these circular curve indeed do align with prior resistance points and seem create a significant path of interaction (support/resistance) in both past and future.
Reading these charts and creating them requires practice because working with linear, horizontal or vertical lines is easy. Curvature comes with a whole new level of complexity as it matters where and when price and geometry interact and not so much a single fixed price point.
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