[NewCandle] Physical Methods Of Water
Keith Nagel
NewCandleAdmin at ipdiscover.com
Mon Jan 15 14:45:57 EST 2007
On reflection, I am wondering about pure water and whether
it would have any net magnetic dipole. It's easy to see
how ions would be pushed around by the magnets with a flowing
stream of them, and also to some degree the ionized water.
But how about the neutral water molecules?
K.
-----Original Message-----
From: newcandle-bounces at ipdiscover.com
[mailto:newcandle-bounces at ipdiscover.com]On Behalf Of Keith Nagel
Sent: Sunday, January 14, 2007 12:25 PM
To: New energy for the new world.
Subject: Re: [NewCandle] Physical Methods Of Water
Hey Jones,
You write:
>This works for peroxide, where only a fractional volt is needed,
> but probably will not work for generating hydrogen, as you would
> need probably 4-5 times more potential (guess). In fact, we never
> see any evidence of even trace hydrogen this way, but even if you
> used stronger magnets and higher flow rates, I don't think you could
> get much (it would probably recombine first).
Absolutely, it would recombine, bear in mind the equivalent circuit
would be a pair of matched electrodes with AC across them.
>But I'm giving away too many secrets...
So what happens now? I thought your NDA's had a clause that
required you to put your head in an fNMR machine, so the
areas where this information is stored can be located, and
then surgically excised (grin).
But seriously, the paper was interesting and takes some of
the mystery of "magnetized water" away, which IMHO is a good
thing. Thanks.
K.
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