Biological Influence
by Barry Carter
How do ORMEs influence the body and mind of someone who consumes them? If they are not involved in
chemical reactions, what is the nature of their influence?
In his lectures David Hudson suggested that their influence was through "resonance coupling" or vibration. Here is
the initial statement to this effect from Hudson's first Dallas lecture:
"Which means that the material is a resonance connected, quantum oscillator, resonating in two
dimensions, which just happens to be the definition of superconductor."
Hudson covers this extensively later in his lecture and I am going to post the entire segment that is relevant
here:
[39:00] This is a 1960's book that my Ph.D. studied at Iowa State University and it's actually an
article about nuclear quadrapole moment and nuclear quadrapole moment spectroscopy. They actually find that by
applying these 800,000 gauss magnetic fields that they could cause the nucleus to spin flip to the high-spin
state. And then when they release these fields they read the resonance that comes out of the nucleus as the
nucleus drops back down to the low spin state. Now this was discovered in the 1960's, but if you have to keep
800,000 gauss applied to this nucleus to keep it in the high-spin state, you know, it's a tremendous amount of
energy. But what they found, is they found a phenomena, and I want you to read this.
"There is another effect called spin-spin or transverse relaxation operative in solids. This involves
transfer of energy from one high energy nucleus to another. There is no net loss of energy." There is no net
loss of energy in the transfer of energy from one high-spin nucleus to the other high-spin nucleus. Now they've
know this since the 1960's, but if it takes 700,000 gauss to keep these nucleuses in the high-spin state, so
what if energy flows from one to the next with no push. I mean you got more energy here than it takes to push
energy all across the country on a wire, so, big deal. It's one of those esoteric things. But if they could
ever get nuclei that would go in a high-spin state and stay in the high-spin state, then you should have a
superconductor.
Now let's go back to the first paper I had you take off, the first one I told you to save (talking to
projector operator).
[41:04] Okay, "Quantum size effects in rapidly rotating nuclei". April of 1990. This is the Niels
Bohr Institute, Physical Review C, Volume 41, Number 4 [pp. 1865-1868]. Here it is, the whole story, they
finally put it down in print and admitted this was what they were chasing; these high-spin nuclei. What they
are talking about is, "In the nuclear case," I'll start reading right here, "a variety of symmetries are
spontaneously broken. In particular rotational and gauge invariance as testified by the occurrence of families
of collective excitations displaying rotational relationships for the different observables." Skipping on down
here, "It has been conjectured the usual Cooper instability...", now for those of you who don't know what
Cooper instabilities means, they gave a Nobel Prize to Bardeen, Cooper and Schrieffer [John Bardeen, Leon N.
Cooper and John Robert Schrieffer], who worked for GE. It was the theory of superconductivity. And "Cooper
pairs" are when a time foreword electron pairs with a time reverse electron, it's spin 1/2 and spin 1/2. But
spin 1/2 plus spin 1/2 is spin 1, and now both particles become pure light with no particles. There's no
particle aspect anymore, it's light. Okay?
Here it is, right here. The "Cooper instability will not exist anymore in small particles containing
a reduced number of fermions, like e.g., metallic particles. Therefore superconductivity should disappear for
particles in the quantal size effects (QSE) regime, when the energy differs between two discrete one-electron
states is comparable to the energy gap of the superconducting state." Anyway it goes on to describe the
physics. That's why in 1988 when I filed my patents, I filed 11 patents on the monoatomic state and I filed
another 11 patents on the "many-atom system" and it requires a minimum number of atoms, and they actually, in
their paper theorize, that the, ah, they're coming up with a number here, 10 to the 4th to 10 to the 5th
electrons. I didn't say how many nuclei had to be there, how many atoms had to be there to be a superconductor,
but it was a "many-atom system". And each atom contains many of these electron pairs on it, so, you know, it
takes a certain minimum number, several hundreds of atoms, before you have a superconductivity. The word
"superconductivity" is like the word "army", you can't have a one man army. It's a contradiction in terms. By
definition the word superconductor is a many atom system. Just like the word metal, you can't have an atom be a
metal. The word metal has certain characteristics, the word superconductivity has certain characteristics and
so you can't have a single atom be a superconductor. It can have all the properties of a superconductor but it
takes a certain number of atoms resonance coupled to become a superconductor. I hope I'm not losing people here
in this, you know, I'm trying to make it as understandable as I can. Right there they're saying what it's all
about. This is what this.... all this interest of all these national laboratories in this form of matter is.
Because theoretical they should be a superconductor and they know it. This is the high-spin state of matter.
Next paper. Let's go to the one, the other one you stuck off down there. (audience question) Yes ma'am. Any
patent on superconductivity has to be cleared for worldwide issuance by the Department of Defense. (Question -
Do you think that's what started the research in these papers that suddenly came out after you filed your
patent?) No, I just think it's time. I just think there's all this information coming, if you haven't figured
it out yet, this is the explanation for cold fusion. Ha-ha. It all of a sudden begins to dawn -- palladium,
high-spin state, inter nuclear energy, golly, you know. Ah, Pons and Fleischmann just haven't been doing their
physics, they've been doing too much chemistry.
[45:18] This is a paper that is, it's Physical Review Letters, Volume 62, Number 10, March 1989,
March 6, 1989 [Direct Mapping of Adatom-Adatom Interactions, pp. 1146-1149], and if you raise it up just a
little bit, 1776 vaporizations of iridium atoms onto a super-cooled tungsten plate. And, you know, people study
the darndest things, these scientists study the most esoteric things. But they're putting, 1776 times they
vaporized atoms onto this tungsten plate and they measured where the atoms arranged themselves. Now they didn't
realize the importance of what they were doing. But they find here, and my copying job isn't real good so I'm
going to walk over again. All of these lines that run up are the light colored lines and all these that run
down are the dark colored lines. These are the three dimensions, one, two and three. This is the way the graph
reads. Now what they found is that the iridium atoms were arranging themselves at about two of these quadrants
from each other. This big long black line. That basically the atoms attract from a long ways away up to that
point and then they're repulsed, the lines go, they're not ever found in those locations. So what they found is
that the iridium atoms, you see these quadrants are 3.17 angstroms in dimension, so there's 1, 2 quadrants
here. So they found that the atoms were arranging themselves at about 6.3 angstroms apart. Okay? They weren't
arranging themselves hardly at all in this dimension, they weren't arranging themselves hardly at all in this
dimension, they were arranging themselves basically in this dimension, but at specific distances
apart.
And their conclusion was that it's like there's a Coulomb wave that comes off of the atom. This atom
is in a high-spin state, they didn't know that, but it's actually out of balance and instead of resonating in 3
dimensions it's only resonating in 2 dimensions, and it's got a Coulomb wave, a wave that it produces. The next
atom gets into that wave and cannot get closer than that last wave coming off the atom and so it's repulsed.
But in the bottom of the wave it's attracted and so at about 6.3 angstroms, the next iridium atom will nestle
in that wave and perpetuates the wave, and the next iridium atom will nestle in that wave and perpetuate the
wave. Now what they did is they heated and cooled the sample. They let it go to room temperature and then they
re-cooled it and let it go to room temperature and what happens is that the atoms will arrange themselves in
this perfect, about 6.3 angstrom spacing, in two dimensions. Not in 3 dimensions. In two dimensions, like a
long chain. Now in a metal the atoms bind at about 1.8 angstroms, that's when they're sharing electrons. This
is out at 6.3 angstroms, so there's no electrons being shared, there's no crystalline energy, there's no
chemical energy, but the atom is way the heck and gone out there at about 6.3 angstroms, but it's bound in the
resonance wave. And so these atoms literally, by repeated heating and cooling, will arrange themselves at
precisely 6.3 angstroms in two dimensions, like a chain. And this atom makes a wave, this atom next nestles in
the wave and perpetuates the wave, the next atom nestles in the wave and perpetuates the wave, the next atom
nestles in the wave and perpetuates the wave, and literally you get a resonance coupled system of quantum
oscillators resonating in two dimensions. These are bound atoms, resonance coupled, oscillating in two
dimensions. And it's a bosonic phenomena, it has Cooper pairs.
Now what happens is the individual atoms, when it goes to the high-spin state, and this is going to
be a little technical, bear with me. In a normal atom, around the nucleus, there is what's called a positive
screening potential that exists around the nucleus and this positive screening potential screens all of the
inner electrons and only the valence electrons, the ones on the outside, are available for chemical bonding,
these are not screened, they're called valence electrons. When the nucleus goes to the high-spin state that
positive screening potential expands out and overlies all of the electron orbitals and all of the electrons
become screened.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>end of
quote<<<<<<<<<<<<<
In this long quote Hudson basically proposes that the ORMUS elements form resonance coupled quantum oscillators
which produce waves that peak at certain distances from the ORMEs they are centered on and that they interact with
each other by "nestling" in these waves at a specific distance from each ORMUS unit. He also propose that the "high
spin state" is necessary for this quantum coherent wave nestling activity. Elsewhere in his lectures he suggests
that the ORMUS elements are the key to instantaneous communication but he does not tie this directly to the Coulomb
wave idea.
Since Hudson was making his presentations there have been many new discoveries in physics and chemistry. Some of
these new discoveries suggest that spin coherence may be the quantum coherent communication system that allows
thought and facilitates our connection to everything else. I have written about this at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/spincoherence.htm
The best way to visualize this is to imagine that each ORMUS unit is a spinning resonator and that the rate of spin
can change. This change in the rate of spin, in turn, will change the frequency of the waves emitting from that
resonator. You can see a Cymatics video that illustrates this idea at:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7438443816712424769&q=cymatics&total=222&start=0&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=3
This video shows how one ORMUS unit might influence another ORMUS unit but I think it might also show how one ORMUS
unit might influence non ORMUS atoms and molecules; because this is what we need to have a mechanism for biological
effects.
In the long quote above, Hudson says that you can't have a single unit superconductor. However, in his experiments
with the superconducting ORMUS elements he claims that he observed the Meissner effect where the ORMUS particles
were repelled by energy fields as weak as those generated by his hands. In his first Dallas lecture Hudson
said:
"A superconductor's Meissner field excludes all external magnetic fields including
gravity."
What would happen if you had a single atom or diatom which exhibited this Meissner effect? That ORMUS unit would
retreat from all external electromagnetic fields. You would not be able to see it or catch it unless you figured
out a way to provide some sort of Faraday cage around it that would shield it from these external electromagnetic
field.
My friend Jim knew this and figured out that the ORMEs he was working with must be "hiding out" inside of whatever
structure gave them the greatest shielding from external electromagnetic fields. You can read more about this
at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/resonance.htm
Jim and I postulated that these "hiding out" structures might include molecules that were not ORMEs such as water
molecules, organic compounds like gasoline and larger structures like desiccant beads.
If the ORMUS units are "hiding out" inside of molecular structures they might, in turn, influence the shapes of
those molecular structures through the Coulomb wave/Cymatics interaction that Hudson proposed. This hypothesis
would explain the crystalline structures that have been associated with ORMEs by several researchers and would
raise some very interesting new questions.
Were David Hudson's S-ORMEs composed of ORMUS units hanging out inside of other molecular compounds? If they were
this would beg the question: what is the true weight change as metal becomes ORMUS? Do ORMEs hanging out inside of
water molecules trigger changes in the structure of these water molecules that allow the quantum coherent
frequencies of thought to interact with the molecular systems of the body? Are the crystalline shapes associated
with ORME products formed by the molecular structure induced by the ORMEs hanging out inside of those molecules? Do
outside crystalline structures like magnetite influence the structure of the water molecules that ORMUS hides out
in making that water capable of facilitating the growth of a nine foot geranium like the one you can see at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/magnetite.htm
Does anyone have a better idea about how an ORMUS unit that is incapable of valence bonding might influence
biological chemistry?
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