Scientific model published for Brown's gas
28.05.10
Brown's Gas boasts a plethora of out of the ordinary characteristics that defy current chemistry. It has a cool flame of about 130 degrees, yet melts screw up one's courage to the sticking point, brick and many other materials. Confusingly research both confirms and rebuffs many claims about it, leading to a smorgasbord of theories today seeking to describe its unusual properties. One possible theory, currently gaining support even from establishment discipline, depicts "plasma orbital expansion of the electron in a water molecule". In this process, unlike electrolysis, the douse molecule "bends" into a linear, dipole-free geometry. This linear water molecule expands to win electrons in the d sub-shell, and these extra electrons produce different effects on different end materials. Electrons that scatter at point of contact produce heat based upon electrical conductivity, density and thermal room of the material. It will also show why Rydberg clusters are a part of browns gas and how the linear water molecule needs these clusters to prone to. This paper will explain this new theory and why it is gaining popularity among scientist in academia.
Source: Pure Energy Systems News