Chemistry 🧪for our Nuclear Spin Experiments ⚛️

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  • čas přidán 2. 02. 2023
  • Michael shows off his lab work at Falcon Space.
    We are trying to make a specific kind of salt mentioned and analyzed in the CD Jeffries book Dynamic Nuclear Orientation so we can use this as a baseline for analysis of our EPR system.
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Komentáře • 7

  • @burneye
    @burneye Před rokem +3

    awesome work guys

  • @SaveTheFuture
    @SaveTheFuture Před rokem +2

    Nice, looks like you’re on a good path with this. A little far off this experiment, but has there been any recent research on the Banduric type systems? I remember there being a video on the channel a while back of a system which seemed to work but no talk of it since then (as far as I can tell).

  • @Greg_Chase
    @Greg_Chase Před rokem

    Thought to mention - and you guys may know this already - that the signal Alzofon describes on page 78 of "Gravity Control and Present Technology" - is very similar to radar.
    You can see this by looking at the page "Radar signal characteristics" on wiki. *_"Most systems use pulse modulation, with or without other supplementary modulating signals. Note that with pulse modulation, the carrier is simply switched on and off in sync with the pulses"_*
    This could mean pulsed microwave radar sets provided the early signal hardware used in vehicles. The B-47 flying over the Gulf of Mexico in 1957 picked up brief pulses of very high frequency. A very short duty cycle wave that was front-loaded with a short burst of 3 Ghz then 'off' for the remainder of each cycle.
    On the wiki page, it mentions 3Ghz as a typical radar pulse frequency:
    "For example, a system with a 3 GHz carrier frequency and a pulse width of 1 µs will have a carrier period of approximately 333 ps [picoseconds]. Each transmitted pulse will contain about 3000 carrier cycles [ie. the carrier is turned ON long enough to generate 3000 cycles of 3Ghz then the carrier is turned OFF]"
    I've got a radio background and thought Alzofon's signal was a 600 Hz carrier wave that was using amplitude modulation (AM) to impose a short burst of 3Ghz on the 600hz carrier frequency. Now I'm not so sure.
    Instead, the radar set's carrier is 3 Ghz. They just turn it on for 1 microseconds' worth of 333 picoseconds pulses then turn it back off. There is no amplitude modulation at all.
    So if you're trying to duplicate the signal, I don't recommend concocting a 600Hz oscillator with an amplitude modulation section that modulates the carrier with 3Ghz.
    I suspect you guys figured out this connection to radar sets already and set up your system to switch "On/Off" a 3Ghz carrier wave but just thought to mention it. They have a good picture of the signal that Alzofon based his work on here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radar_signal_characteristics#Carrier
    I have a concern that Alzofon mis-read the signal data received by the B-47.
    My concern is that the vehicle being tracked by the B-47 was not using the on/off 3Ghz for EPR/DNO, but had their own radar set operating, and they were tracking the B-47 to keep an eye on how close it was to them, and their pulsed radar signal got picked up by the B-47.
    Since Alzofon based his entire "adiabatic demagnetization" gravity neutralizing idea on the signal received by the B-47 (see page 117 in GCWPT, the section "RATIONALE FOR THE EXPERIMENT"), I'm assuming he knew or could have found out it was a standard radar signature and it has no bearing on his idea.
    I don't have a way to contact David Alzofon but I suspect you guys do. One thing I would like to ask him: "Did your dad know that the signal from the B-47 is quite similar to pulsed microwave radar?" and then hope he would say "yes, he was aware of it, and he dismissed it for reasons A, B and C"
    EDIT: It's obvious I could be half-cocked about this and have missed something but I thought that you guys, with access to David, could get clarity on it. Somehow I doubt Fred Alzofon would fail to take into account a mis-read of a radar signature.
    .
    .

  • @danielfoster2788
    @danielfoster2788 Před rokem +1

    Are you fellas hip to a 5 colored map? That’s the best weave for shielding. A five color map is composed of bricks whose borders never share the same color with surrounding bricks. Not anyone has produced a 4 color map. Do you want proper Strange and other radiation shielding? Five color map weave my friends.

  • @danielfoster2788
    @danielfoster2788 Před rokem +1

    Plainly put. You have a square filled with 50 bricks ‘even Steven’ remove a brick and adjust all the other blocks lengthwise and you have a 49 brick five colored map.

  • @richardmuller867
    @richardmuller867 Před rokem

    A genius chemist. Don't mix the Nitric acid with glycerin or you will make nitroglycerin and blow up the lab!!

  • @spacecase0
    @spacecase0 Před rokem

    i just found out that alchemy is just chemistry with the idea of charge clusters...