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Thursday, January 25, 2007

Water through a digital microscope camera

Water is capable to acquire new qualities when recording the information. At the same time its chemical structure stays unchanged. When we say water's structure, we mean the way its molecules are organized. With the help of a regular laboratory microscope we'll be able to see how these molecules gather in groups - clusters. These clusters become the so called memory cells, which are being used by the water to record information on them. It seems that this liquid is like a computer with unlimited memory. There is one researcher, who analyzes water's changers after different influences. He has already tried the radiation of a cell phone and a TV, words of love and rock music. This scientist puts drops of water in special test-tubes and freezes it in the freezer. Then he looks at the snowflakes that were formed through a digital microscope camera. For the past several years he's took more than 10 thousand unique pictures.

1 Comments:

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