Torus fields have long been present in various forms, including plasma fields, charged clouds, structures of photons, and even in advanced configurations of DNA, symbols, and alphabets, to name a few.
Current scientific consensus indicates that over 99% of the universe consists of plasma, which can be understood as a cloud of charged particles. Since plasma exists in donut-shaped configurations, it naturally takes on a toroidal form, resembling a torus or a donut. Plasma is recognized as the fourth state of matter, distinct from solids, liquids, and gases.
In plasma, atoms are separated into freely floating 'negative' electrons and 'positive' ions (atoms that have lost one or more electrons). This state is sometimes referred to as ionized gas.
The reason plasma fields adopt this remarkable toroidal shape is that they have evolved to create a self-sustaining, self-organizing recursive geometry that optimizes their energy for survival. According to hydrodynamics, the three axes of rotational spin lead to the only self-sustaining shape.