Author Topic: My Thoughts on how Meyer split water  (Read 7906 times)

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Re: My Thoughts on how Meyer split water
« Reply #5 on: July 13, 2011, 22:08:34 pm »
I made a quick drawing with power point.

The laser beam gets reflected many times in this pipe increasing the amount of photons colliding with elektrons.  The diameter of the pipe can be larger than the diameter of the hose to slow down the gas through the pipe and increasing the duration of the gas in the pipe -> more collisions -> more HH, H+.
 

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Re: My Thoughts on how Meyer split water
« Reply #6 on: July 14, 2011, 10:51:45 am »
I am going to attempt to explain how Stan split the water molecule with low currents. Ok first thing, basic electrolysis uses current to slit water by using electron collision. In Stan's system he only wanted to use voltage and no current, which we all know by now. Well I've been digging deep into what Stan says in his lectures and memos. This is what I've come up with and it all make sense with what Stan says. Stan talks about the molecule and its "Ground State". Theground state of a system is its lowest-energy state. The energy of the ground state is known as the zero-point energy of the system. Basically the ground state refers to the electrons being in their correct orbit making them stable. Well Stan's talks about taking the molecule from ground state to excited state. Excitation is an elevation in energy level above an arbitrary baseline energy state. In physics there is a specific technical definition for energy level which is often associated with an atom being excited to an excited state. This means to make the electrons go from their correct orbit up to the next orbit. Like in the water molecule you have 2 orbital shells and the 1st orbit is the "K" shell and the 2nd orbit is the "L" shell. So to make the molecule go from ground state to exited state, the "L" shell electrons will  be ejected to what is know in electronics as the conduction band, which is just an imaginary location outside the orbit of the molecule. Once you have less than 8 electrons occupying the "L", you will then have the 2 electrons from the "K" orbit jumping into the "L" orbit. This will continue till all electrons are in the conduction band and the "K" and "L" orbits are empty. Once the orbits are empty there is obviously no covalent bonding between the Hydrogen and Oxygen atoms at this point.

Now I will explain how this can be achieved. The key to Stan's system is Harmonic Oscillation. The LC circuit has to be made to give a specific Harmonic Oscillation Wave Function. This wave function will mimic a particle equal to that of the electrons. When the electrons are hit will this wave function signal, they will go from ground state into excitation state. If you stop the signal, after a short time period the electrons will emit photons and then return to ground state. This is why Stan say pulse for X amount of time and then gate and gas will be produces for another X time period. The gate will allow the photon energy to be released and this photon energy will continue to produce more gas and allow the water to go back to ground state.

The Harmonic Oscillation Wave Function is very similar to an AM signal. The signal has to be the correct band of frequencies in order to split the water molecule. Puharich gives these specific frequency bands ( 3.98kHz, 7.96kHz, 15.95kHz, and 31.84kHz, which these frequencies are all sub-harmonics of 63.68kHz ) need to split the molecule. I've noticed in Stan's setup he uses chokes in around 1H each and if you calculate the capacitance of a single tube it will be around 1.6nF, by using L= 1H and C= 1.6nF, the resonant frequency will be 3.98kHz....is this just coincidence? I think NOT. Research Meyer and Puharich's system and you will see that these two system are very much alike. Here are some references on what I've just explained, research it and you will see that this is the way it was done.

http://dev.physicslab.org/asp/applets/javaphysmath/java/atomphoton/default.asp

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmonic_oscillator

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matter_wave

http://www.brightstorm.com/science/physics/the-atom-and-quantum-physics/matter-wave-de-broglie-wavelength

http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/vibrat.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morse_potential

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_harmonic_oscillator

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molecular_vibration

http://butane.chem.uiuc.edu/pshapley/GenChem2/A7/1.html

http://www.thefullwiki.org/Nuclear_magnetic_resonance

http://gregegan.customer.netspace.net.au/ORTHOGONAL/07/QM.html

http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Quantum_LC_circuit

http://centros.edu.xunta.es/iesames/webantiga/webfq/EUSECTSUSO/chem_phys_bac/Chemistry_2/chemical_bonding.htm

http://universe-review.ca/F12-molecule.htm

Hope This info sheds some light on this process and how it works.

Thanks,
Tony Woodside


Tony,

If you take your theory futher towards the alternator, then there are two options.
Or we speed the alternator up to the level that the output on on phase is around 500 hz, or we pulse the rotor with 3.9khz.
Maybe even both?

Interesting....
There is a need for running tests with this.

Steve

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Re: My Thoughts on how Meyer split water
« Reply #7 on: July 14, 2011, 10:54:12 am »
I made a quick drawing with power point.

The laser beam gets reflected many times in this pipe increasing the amount of photons colliding with elektrons.  The diameter of the pipe can be larger than the diameter of the hose to slow down the gas through the pipe and increasing the duration of the gas in the pipe -> more collisions -> more HH, H+.
 



Thank you...

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Re: My Thoughts on how Meyer split water
« Reply #8 on: July 14, 2011, 20:09:54 pm »
@ Steve & Lektor.

Shouldn't a reply regarding ionizing hydrogen and like be placed with "Start here your topics on the water injector & ambient air-gas processor system" or a similar tread since this tread is in regards to what is happening within the electronics and water molecule??
[/size]I am glad to see Lektor is jumping on the process, I am, but felt I needed to make a remark on this.
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Re: My Thoughts on how Meyer split water
« Reply #9 on: July 14, 2011, 21:49:14 pm »
I was thinking along those same lines, only adding in a multi-refracting surface in the center to scatter the laser throughout the tube.
 
Robert