Settlement Gradient

by Barry Carter <bcarter@igc.org>

Created: June 20, 2011

Modified: November 29, 2014

 

On June 20, 2011, I cleaned under my dining room table for the first time in more than a year. (There is no room on the table to dine as it is covered with stuff.) When I looked under the table, with a flashlight, I noticed that an old bottle of precipitate was sitting between the kitchen cabinets and a large, red, steel can:

 

http://www.subtleenergies.com/ormus/tw/Dscn0332.jpg

 

Notice how the precipitate is sloped in the plastic milk bottle.

 

I did not do the Wet Method in this bottle. I probably did it in a wide-mouth, glass gallon bottle. I precipitated this at least a year ago and maybe four or five years ago.

 

I don't know whether I washed the precipitate or not. The most likely scenario is that it was precipitate that I had put in a graduated cylinder to measure the amount after it settled for a while. Here is a picture of the graduated cylinder:

 

http://www.subtleenergies.com/ormus/tw/Dscn0337.jpg

 

Notice that the glass is clear between about 950 ml and 1600 ml. The white below 950 ml is probably due to the fact that this is where the precipitate settled to. The white above 1600 ml is probably the result of residue left as the water evaporated from the top of the uncovered graduated cylinder. If this was the source of the sloping precipitate in the gallon milk jug, it would match well with the amount, as it looks like the milk jug is about a quarter full.

 

If the sloping precipitate in the milk jug is what I poured out of the graduated cylinder then it is probably four or five years old and was open to the air for a couple of those years.

 

My favorite hypothesis is that the precipitate has moved away from the electromagnetic fields generated by my small counter-top oven and is cozying up to the red steel can which gives it shielding from the computers that are on the other side of the steel can.

 

I continue to check the slope of the precipitate in the milk jug and it is still sloped away from my counter-top oven. I don't take new pictures because they look exactly the same as the picture linked above (except the date stamp on the picture would be different).

 

I think that this may be some of the best evidence we have of superconductive magnetic levitation behavior with sea water precipitate.