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monoatomic gold for dimensional travel and time travel
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<blockquote data-quote="NaturalPhilosopher" data-source="post: 166933" data-attributes="member: 9562"><p>Yes of course the frog doesn't become a magnet but simply makes the weak diamagnetism visible.</p><p></p><p>However there are ways to temporarily magnetize diamagnetic and paramagnetic materials(non-magnetic stuff) like aluminum, copper, lead, silver and gold. They will stick to a permanent ferrite magnet after all electromagnetic fields have been removed. Doesn't last though.</p><p></p><p>Question is, can you make it permanent? Perhaps.</p><p></p><p>Remember, the energy in ormus vastly increases the diamagnetic properties of gold. Becomes even more diamagnetic than bismuth. If it can do that while simultaneously altering it's electron orbits, atomic radii, electronegativity, mass, phase transition temperatures, hardness, tensile strength, electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity, thermal expansion co-efficients, optical absorption spectral lines, then I'm sure some materials before converting to an ormus state might actually change it's magnetic qualities.</p><p></p><p>So what element could become ferromagnetic when converted into it's ormus state? So far there's 14 that have ormus states, but possibly all the transition metals.</p><p></p><p>Ormus is a huge opportunity in the material sciences to make new stuff that couldn't exist otherwise.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="NaturalPhilosopher, post: 166933, member: 9562"] Yes of course the frog doesn't become a magnet but simply makes the weak diamagnetism visible. However there are ways to temporarily magnetize diamagnetic and paramagnetic materials(non-magnetic stuff) like aluminum, copper, lead, silver and gold. They will stick to a permanent ferrite magnet after all electromagnetic fields have been removed. Doesn't last though. Question is, can you make it permanent? Perhaps. Remember, the energy in ormus vastly increases the diamagnetic properties of gold. Becomes even more diamagnetic than bismuth. If it can do that while simultaneously altering it's electron orbits, atomic radii, electronegativity, mass, phase transition temperatures, hardness, tensile strength, electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity, thermal expansion co-efficients, optical absorption spectral lines, then I'm sure some materials before converting to an ormus state might actually change it's magnetic qualities. So what element could become ferromagnetic when converted into it's ormus state? So far there's 14 that have ormus states, but possibly all the transition metals. Ormus is a huge opportunity in the material sciences to make new stuff that couldn't exist otherwise. [/QUOTE]
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monoatomic gold for dimensional travel and time travel
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