
Ormus, Monatomic Gold - The Science
ORMUS Alchemy: The marriage of science and spirit
As you are no doubt aware, scientific knowledge increases particularly with advances in quantum physics and understanding grows and paradigms change. But
this simplified explanation of atomic structure and function will serve our purposes well enough for now.
All physical matter is made up of one or more of 92 known elements, as can be seen on a Periodic Table of Elements in any biology or chemistry textbook.
Many of these elements are well known to most people: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, gold, silver, etc., while other elements, such as iridium and rhodium,
are not so well known. Elements are made up of atoms that have unique properties to that element, so that the atoms of carbon are physically and
chemically different from the atoms of gold.
Simple Atom
Atoms can be thought of as miniature solar systems: atoms have a core or nucleus composed of positively charged subatomic particles called protons and
neutral subatomic particles called neutrons. Orbiting the nucleus are negatively charged electrons. The electrons are held in orbitals around the nucleus
due to the attraction between the positive charge of the protons and the negative charge of the electrons. Atoms bond to each other by either sharing or
donating/accepting electrons in their outermost orbital, also known as the valence shell. All atoms of every element have these basic components: protons and
neutrons in a nucleus with electrons orbiting around them. Elements differ, however, in the number of protons, neutrons, and electrons. For example, an atom
of the element carbon always has 6 protons. If an atom has 8 protons, then it is not a carbon atom, it is an oxygen atom.
Most elements are composed of many atoms bonded to each other, which confers stability to the whole. Very rarely will you find just one lone atom hanging
out by itself. When you do, these atoms are called monatomic (two atoms bonded to each other are called diatomic). In an atom, the protons and neutrons
are found in harmonic sequences with differing amounts of energy within the nucleus, and at least for the transition elements in the centre of the
periodic table, if an atom is by itself, the protons and neutrons will try to pull apart from each other, distorting the nucleus of the atom (this does
not happen when the atoms are in stable bonds with other atoms).
In the 1990's, a man named David Hudson discovered that when the Noble Metals and Platinum Group Elements are in a monatomic state, they have amazing
properties that they do not have in their traditional metallic state. These elements include Gold, Silver, Copper, Iridium, Rhodium, Palladium, Ruthenium,
Osmium, and Platinum. The gold that people are most familiar with are composed of many thousands of gold atoms bonded to each other, giving that gold
necklace or gold nugget its metallic properties. When the gold (or any other of the Noble Metals or Platinum Group elements) are coaxed into breaking
their atomic bonds to become monatomic, the gold then no longer has metallic properties. It is no longer a metal, but something else entirely with
fascinating properties. David Hudson named these elements ORMEs, Orbitally Rearranged Monatomic Elements. An even more accurate term may be M-state,
referring to the metaphysical state of these elements.
These monatomic elements are now considered to be in a high spin state and no longer act as particles but as light. These atoms are now held together
not by chemical bonds but by resonance wave activity. The electrons ride this wave in harmonic pairs called Cooper Pairs as energy is transferred in
the form of resonance vibrations from one high-energy nucleus to another high-energy nucleus without any loss of energy, making this material
superconductive.
It is now believed by many in the scientific community that cells in an organism communicate by light, using a superconducting system of the
microtubules of every cell. Since monatomic Rhodium and Iridium have been isolated from brain tissue at a fairly high level (5% by dry matter weight),
some believe that they may play a crucial role in consciousness. In fact, the Noble Metals and Platinum Group Elements are found quite abundantly
throughout the natural world in the monatomic state.
So, yes, we do have a light body as well as a physical body and our light body needs to be fed just as our physical body does.
Remember when I said that the electrons of ORMEs ride a resonance wave in Cooper Pairs? Well, zero point energy (ether or Source) exists
equidistant between the electron and the positron, this is where time intersects the spectrum. At a wavelength level, the two waves coming at each other
(the Cooper Pairs) will bend and combine and shoot out to a point: zero point. At zero point, the energy is no longer wave energy but packets of quanta
energy, of light. Superconducting elements "disappear" into zero point energy to refuel and so they are able to be in perpetual motion, transferring
energy without any energy loss, thus defying the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics.
Zero Point is the Creation Point or Source. Our light bodies are our individual portion of the Source and are in constant contact
with the Source, receiving energy from the Source. And the workhorses of our light bodies that enable all of this are ORMEs. But modern living with all
of its toxins and pollutants and excesses either decrease the amount of ORMEs available to do work or makes the job of the light body to help heal the
physical body that much harder.
We need to supplement our light body just as we would our physical body - and as we build up the health of our light body by strengthening our connection
to the Source, so are we healing the physical body.
More science
The centre of the periodic chart of elements consists of what are known as the "transition elements," meaning that they can transit from metallic to monatomic or diatomic
via chemical treatment or through other means (what some would refer to as "shadow chemistry" or "arcane chemistry" or even "alchemy"). Take gold for example. When you have
two or more gold atoms in a microcluster, it will have metallic properties, but if you have only one atom, it will then have ceramic properties, which means that it becomes
chemically inert but at the same time will have superconductive capabilities even at room temperature. The weight of these amazing materials can also change by heating,
becoming lighter, even to the point of levitation. Because it is chemically inert, it can be ingested for health, wellbeing and super-energizing at the cellular level.
It's truly amazing stuff, reports have indicated huge boosts in mental and physical energy, aches and pains vanishing, increased mental clarity and focus, increased strength,
stamina and sex drive, and looking and feeling younger, and huge boosts in strengthening the immune system.
Superhealth begins at the level of our cells. The reactions required to make these astonishing materials cause boosts in the presence of, and reaction with, hydrogen. When more
hydrogen is present, the surface tension of water (or any other liquid) is reduced. When ingesting any liquid with a reduced surface tension of the water molecule itself, the
result is a reduction in the surface tension of our cell walls. That allows a greater influx of oxygen which displaces carbon dioxide trapped in the cells, and also increases
the uptake of any other nutrients present.
Not only do our cells communicate via chemicals and electricity in our nervous system and intercellularly throughout other processes, but also through the exchange of photons,
or light particles. The human body is a marvelous bioelectric machine, and all of its processes depend on the clear and (ideally) unimpeded conduction of electrical "messages"
required to carry out those processes. Light, as proven by fiber optics, can carry more and actually "purer" information. As mentioned above, these materials are
superconductive, and therefore change our bodies at the cellular level, from our organs, muscles and tissues to our brain and nervous system, into superconductors of a
greatly increased flow of photons, greatly increased because the materials themselves are in a sense "liquid (or powdered) light." It's like installing 'gold tipped' wires
on your brain synapse. Put another way, you could say that monatomics transform the body's "wiring" from being simple copper cable to being wired with fiber-optics, where
the same "width" of wiring is able to carry 1,000 times as much 'processing' information.
Instituto de Fisiologia Celular
Since neurons form a network of electrical activities, they somehow have to be interconnected. This connection is not a simple continuity of cytoplasm, so that every neuron has
electrical continuity with all others, as happens with simple wiring, but is carried out by very specialized and complex structures called synapses. A synapse is the place
where two neurons join in such a way that a signal can be transmitted from one to the other. The typical and overwhelmingly most abundant type of synapse is the one in which
the axon of one neuron activates a second neuron, usually making a synapse with one of its dendrites or with the cell body. There are two ways in which this can happen, one is
by the coupling of ion channels at the synapse, creating a passage way for the traveling ionic flux of the action and membrane potentials, which is called an electrical
synapse, and the other is by a much more complicated way called a chemical synapse. In the case of the chemical synapse, the two neurons are not in strict contact, but have a
small gap between them called the synaptic cleft. The signal is transmitted when one neuron releases a chemical (called neurotransmitter) into the synaptic cleft which is
detected by the second neuron thru activation of receptors placed exactly opposite to the release site. The binding of the neurotransmitter to the receptors causes a series
of physiological changes in the second neuron which constitutes the signal. Usually the release from the first neuron (called presynaptic) is caused by a series of
intracellular events evoked by a depolarization of its membrane, and almost invariably when an action potential takes place. The signal that is evoked in the second
(postsynaptic) neuron is in the form of a depolarization of its membrane.
Although very subtile, this is an energy that you can unmistakably feel, even to the point of almost being overwhelmed if too large a dose is taken. Where most "energy drinks,"
or in industry trade language, "functional beverages," use sugar and caffeine and in some cases herbs and vitamins that boost energy at a metabolic level, the materials we're
using cause energy at the cellular level that is far more akin to electrical output than it is to a temporary burst at the metabolic level or at the level of chemical
conversion in the muscles. As you can see by our Kirlian photography, the "electrical" output tells an astonishing story. This electrical output also increases the electrical,
or electromagnetic, field of the user.
THE PHYSICS OF MONATOMIC ELEMENTS
Excerpted from an Article Originally Written by Everett Karels
Classical science teaches us that the three phases of matter are gasses, liquids, and solids (and the newer plasmas, Bose-Einstein condensates and liquid crystals). Some solids
crystallize into a lattice structure called metals. What classical science does not teach us is that there is, in fact, another phase of matter called monatomic. These
monatomic materials have ceramic-like properties.
Microclusters
Nuclear physicists discovered in 1989 that the atoms of some elements exist in microclusters. These are tiny groups of between two and several hundred atoms. Most of the
transition group precious metals in the center of the periodic chart exhibit a monoatomic state. If you have more than a specific number of these atoms in a microcluster,
the atoms will aggregate into a lattice structure with metallic properties. If you have fewer than that critical number of atoms, that microcluster will disaggregate into
monatomic atoms with ceramic properties. Monatomic atoms are not held in position by electron sharing with their neighboring atoms as are atoms in a classical lattice structure. The critical number of atoms for rhodium is 9 and the critical number of atoms for gold is 2.
The significance of this is that if you have two or more gold atoms in a microcluster, it will exhibit metallic characteristics. However, if you have 9 or fewer atoms in a
microcluster of rhodium atoms, the microcluster will spontaneously disaggregate to become a group of monatomic rhodium atoms. You might wonder why there is one equilibrium
state at a certain deformation level and a different equilibrium state at a different level of deformation. This is a question for nuclear scientists to ponder.
It has been observed that the valence electrons of monatomic elements are unavailable for chemical reactions. This means that monatomic atoms are chemically inert and have
many of the physical properties of ceramic materials. Because the valence electrons are unavailable, it is impossible to use standard analytical chemistry techniques to
identify a monatomic element.
After reading the above statement, one observer commented that the statement is not altogether true. He says: "There is a sort of shadow chemistry which still works on
monoatomic elements. David Hudson speaks of the same color changes in monatomic chemistry as occur in metallic chemistry. From alchemical understanding, I suspect that
similar chemical reactions still occur but at a much reduced rate. In other words, a chemical process which takes a few days with metallic chemistry may take months or
years using this "shadow chemistry." For the sake of consistency, we might want to call this "shadow chemistry" "alchemy."
What the observer says may be true but he doesn't explain the physical mechanism at work here. Are the valence electrons unavailable for reactions in monatomic elements or not?
Also, simply assigning a name to a phenomena doesn't explain the phenomena.
These are very recent discoveries and the full implications have yet to be evaluated by the scientific community. You won't find this in textbooks yet.
In general, a metallic element is physically stable and is a relatively good conductor of both heat and electricity and is usually chemically active. (Metals typically rust
and/or corrode.) To the contrary, monatomic atoms of the same element behaves more like a ceramic in that they are generally poor conductors of both heat and electricity and
are chemically inert. In addition, according to Hudson, monatomic elements exhibit the characteristics of superconductors at room temperature.
Russian scientists at the Institute of Mineralogy, Geochemistry, and Crystal Chemistry of Rare Earth's in Kiev explicitly state in their literature that atoms in lattice
structures are metallic in nature and that these same atoms in the monatomic state are ceramic in nature. However, Dr. Kogan of the institute does not support all of Hudson's
findings as being scientifically valid. It would be worthwhile if we could obtain a detailed critique of Hudson's work from that institute.
Monatomic atoms have been observed to exist in all the heavy elements in the center of the periodic table. These are the elements which have "half-filled" bands of valence
electrons and include the following elements. Their atomic numbers are given in parenthesis (the atomic number represents the number of protons in the nucleus.) Ruthenium (44),
Rhodium (45), Palladium (46), Silver (47), Osmium (76), Iridium (77), Platinum (78), and Gold (79). Other metallic elements in the same part of the periodic table have also
been observed in microclusters. Because the atoms of monatomic elements are not held in a rigid lattice network, their physical characteristics are quite different from atoms
which are locked in the lattice. Thus, it is the grouping of atoms which defines the physical characteristics of the element; not just the number of neutrons and protons in
the nucleus as previously believed. If you don't have a lattice network, you don't have a metal even though the atoms of the two forms of matter are identical!
The implication here is that there is an entirely new phase of matter lurking about the universe. This form (phase) of matter is comprised of monatomic elements; a heretofore
unknown form (phase) of matter. They have remained unknown for so long because they are inert and undetectable by normal analytical techniques.
This might be nothing but a scientific curiosity except for the fact that Hudson now claims that a relatively large amount of this previously undiscovered monatomic matter
seems to exist in the earth's crust.
Limitations of Analytical Chemistry
How could it be that a small percentage of the earth's matter could be comprised of material which heretofore has been completely
undiscovered? It has to do with the theory of analytical chemistry. None of the detection techniques of analytical chemistry can detect monatomic elements. They can only
detect elements by interacting with their valence electrons. Because the valence electrons of monatomic atoms are unavailable, the atoms are unidentifiable. To detect a
monatomic element requires that you first convert it from its monatomic state to its normal state to allow the element to be detected with conventional instrumentation. As
a result, this phase of matter has existed as a stealth material right under the noses of scientists without detection until very recently.
Some observers claim that there should be reliable detection techniques for monatomic matter but you have to know what you are looking for to make use of the techniques. If
you do not suspect that monatomic matter exists, it is unlikely you will accidentally find it.
Peculiarities of Monatomic Elements
The monatomic form of an element exhibits physical characteristics which are entirely different from its metallic form. These differences
are currently being investigated by nuclear physicists so it isn't possible to make an exhaustive list of the differences. A few of the differences will be noted.
Classical literature states that the white powder has a fluorescent-like glow. Hudson says that this powder behaves as a superconductor at room temperature, giving it very
interesting properties. Because it is a superconductor, it tends to "ride" on the magnetic field of the earth, giving it the powers of levitation. It has been found to be
very difficult to determine the specific gravity of monatomic elements because the weight varies widely with temperature and the magnetic environment. Under some circumstances,
monatomic elements weigh less than zero! That is, a container full of monatomic matter could be observed to weigh less than the empty container.

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