Jump to content

Water molecules exposed to electric stuff


CrazyGilbert

Recommended Posts

I Have read a book about some japenese sientist who studied water molecules and them changing to exposure of certain things. like if it was on, or near a basket of oranges it would take on a beautiful crystaline looking colour and texture, and so on but when he had it exposed to electric items such as computers and tvs etc. it took on a horrible deformed, rounded thing because of exposure to electric things.

 

Now the reason im saying this is that us as humans we are like 90 % water so the effect on us from electric stuff could be great.

 

even though we arnt phyiscly touching the screen or zApping ourselves it doesnt matter because it still is in effect if the molecule was beside or around it.

 

this is a theory and may not be true but Id like to hear what you guys think about this whole thing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I can't imagine how can molecules change their form.

A water molecule consists of two H atoms and one O. If it changed its form or texture, it would become something else - it would consist of something else, other atoms. Can oranges do that?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I can see this possibly happening with ICE, but not water. However, if (liquid) water is exposed to an electric (or magnetic, I think) field, it will align to the field. For pure ice crystals to have a color would likely require a polarizing filter.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The scientist did have a name but I couldnt remember it. The molecules themselves look diffrent but consist of the same things Hydrogen and oxygen.

 

But when removed from the thing it was being exposed to the water would go back to normal, or of what its surrounding consisted of.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Was, perhaps, your scientist sticking the orange in the water and marveling that the wondrous symmetrical waves formed were so beautiful?

 

(^^Joking, if you couldn't tell)

 

I doubt that an orange has that effect on water. For it to look different the light rays would have to be bent or changed (or the object itself would have to change). and unless this is some high-tech orange with magic gadgetry that can manipulate light rays, sense when water is near, and then make the water look crystalline, the idea is either bogus or a misunderstanding.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

Thank you.

 

Looks like a complete steaming pile of pseudo-scientific BS that's been lapped up by the gullible.

 

It seems to be adored by certain alternative new-agey sites, but any site I could find that had even a remote scientific background - because a google search on the author didn't bring up any links to respectable physics or chemistry sites, leading me to the conclusion that Mr Emoto's theories have not been subject to scientific evaluation, verification and peer review - concludes that Mr Emoto's claims lack scientific validity, and that his methodology is questionable.

 

 

The funny thing is according to Emoto's theory water molecules seem to be able to read, since they apparently respond to labels taped on to the jars.... :laugh2:

 

 

I wonder when we'll see the first bottles of 'happy water' on supermarket shelves? :rolleyes:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...