Air Gold
by August
Subject: airborne gold vapor
Date: Wed, 31 Jan 2007 10:42:29 -0500
Here's an
image that is interesting. I decided to do a little natural
evaporation of salted gold to grow crystals and got them, but also if
you look at the rim of the flask, purple gold hydroxide is evident.
This is interesting because the theory that gold vapor is in the air,
seems to be evident in that the first law of thermodynamics (hot seeks
cold) may be producing the condensation on the rim. Gold vapor
evaporating at ambient temperature is affixing itself to the cooler
temperature rim in the salts.
It could not have gotten there except by first evaporating in to the
air and collecting on the side of the flask as it tried to exit into
the atmosphere.
Subject: took 6 months but here it is
Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2007 12:39:13 -0400
Good indications that your theory of airborne gold atoms is correct.
The 125 ml
flask was set in a sunny location for the last 6 months, in it was a
solution of acid-salt reduced gold, maybe 10ml. as you can see
clearly, there is a diatomic residue in the lip of the flask indicating
that gold in the solution was evaporating and collecting on a cold wall
as it tried to leave the flask, meaning that some of the atoms likely
did leave the flask and are airborne. (glad I sleep in the same room!)
The crystals
in the flask look like coral heads, and are likely gold salts (Na/AuCl)
and show that the residue at the bottom of the flask is a yellow gold
color indicating metallic gold (Au).
The diatomic
(purple of cassius) gold salts deposited at the lip show a different
crystalline structure likely distorded by the diatoms of gold,
(Au2/NaCl) as the surface of the crystals grew and gold on the surface
attracted an oppositely spinning gold ion to form the diatom before
locked in the crystal by chlorine and sodium atoms; also evaporating.
My theory of gas atoms like H2 is that they are so strong and hard to
disassociate except in solution by chemical suspension, because they
are locked in a stable opposite but interlocking spin
arrangement. It is likely that all diatomic configurations are
formed in this way. Airborne atoms of gold may be either diatoms like
deuterium, or monatoms (depending on several factors, but not part of
this message).
I thought you might like to share it with the ormus groups.
August