Abstract

Water can acquire a kinetic activity, which is attributed to the absorption of an environmental force termed KELEA (kinetic energy limiting electrostatic attraction). This activity can lead to increased volatility of the water that can be measured as the progressive weight loss in closed but not completely sealed containers. It has been proposed that KELEA is a natural force required to prevent the fusion and possible annihilation of electrostatically attracted opposite electrical charges. As such, it may be especially available where there is a convergence of force fields of opposing electrical charges. At least conceptually, this may arise with facing light sources with centrally directed light beams. An oscillating attraction and release of KELEA may be facilitated by repetitively disrupting the light paths using an overhead flashing light source. This paper reports on preliminary studies that are based on this premise. Although not proving the premise, the reported experiments do indicate a simple method for activating water. Moreover, the described procedure should allow for further exploration of the underlying mechanism of water activation. The procedure involves the use of four, diagonally placed regular LED traffic lights, with an overhead strobe light. The volatility of water samples in closed but not completely sealed glass vials placed within the lighted area significantly increases in a manner that persists well beyond the periods of light exposure. The paper further shows that activated water can indirectly lead to the activation of nearby water. The reported observations are of both practical and theoretical importance.

Highlights

  • Progress in complementary alternative medicine has been hampered by the lack of a unifying hypothesis that can explain the many observed health benefits

  • The three basic findings of this paper are: 1) That capped vials of distilled water placed in the vicinity of converging and opposing light paths provided by a set of 4 green LED traffic lights, with an overhead flickering strobe light, will lose weight when compared to control vials of the same water not exposed to the light paths; 2) That the weight loss of the traffic light exposed test vials, which is viewed as a measure of kinetic activation of the water, continues well beyond the two periods of time that the vials were exposed to the lights; 3) That control vials begin to lose weight several hours into the experiment

  • The modification is attributed to a loosening of the intermolecular hydrogen bonding between water molecules due to the absorption of an environmental force termed KELEA (Kinetic Energy Limiting Electrostatic Attraction)

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Summary

Introduction

Progress in complementary alternative medicine has been hampered by the lack of a unifying hypothesis that can explain the many observed health benefits. It is generally assumed that apart from photosynthesis in plants and in certain bacteria, cellular energy is obtained solely through food metabolism [1]. This view has been challenged with the description of a third or alternative cellular energy (ACE) pathway [2]. It has been proposed that this pathway is expressed as a dynamic (kinetic) quality of the body’s fluids that results from the absorption of an external force termed KELEA (kinetic energy limiting electrostatic attraction) [2]. A fundamental role of this force may be to prevent the fusion and possible annihilation of opposite electrical charges when they are being increasing electrostatically attracted to one another [2]. Experimental studies indicate that KELEA can reduce the strength of intermolecular hydrogen bonding in water [3], enabling the water molecules to better support metabolic and other cellular functions [4]

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