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Underground Rivers - University of New Mexico

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Method 2. Water Pump<br />

Chapter 10 -- Geophysical, Pnuematic and Electromagnetic Engines<br />

The Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> Free Energy, a perpetualmotion<br />

reference, hypothesizes a like-comprised<br />

electromagnetic pump in which "there is no moving<br />

core except the motion <strong>of</strong> the liquid salty water,"<br />

failing to recognize that the "liquid salty water" must<br />

be magnetized, a quality not within water's capacity<br />

because its dipolarity is electrical, not magnetic.<br />

Water's polarity is due to the higher nuclear charge<br />

<strong>of</strong> oxygen displacing the shared bonding electrons<br />

towards the nucleus, leaving the oxygen with a<br />

partial negative charge and the hydrogen with a<br />

partial positive charge.<br />

For a molecule to become magnetized, it must not only contain an unpaired electron, but also<br />

must group with like-aligned molecule into local domains that amplify the effect and retain their<br />

orientation over time. The effect is known as "ferromagnetism," the most well known example, <strong>of</strong><br />

course, being metallic iron.<br />

To the Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> Free Energy's credit, there is the disclaimer attached to its plans involving<br />

PVC pipe and a windshield wiper motor: "Please remember this only an Experimental Idea."<br />

Electrical dipolarity gives water the ability dissolve, at least in small part, most geospheric<br />

inorganic solids, making water the "universal solvent," a quality <strong>of</strong> consequence in Chapter 39,<br />

Karstology.<br />

Method 3. Levitation<br />

Being electrically dipolar, a stream <strong>of</strong> water can be directed by<br />

an electromagnetic field, the static electricity a hair comb<br />

providing an easy experiment.<br />

A water molecule can in fact be levitated by an<br />

electromagnetic field roughly 300 times that <strong>of</strong> the earth's,<br />

doable with electromagnets, but not with permanent magnets.<br />

No one has pulled water up a well tube or even above a lab<br />

table.<br />

DRAFT 1122//66//22001122<br />

Uppddaatteess aatt hhttttpp::////www. .uunnm. .eedduu//~rrhheeggggeenn//UnnddeerrggrroouunnddRi ivveerrss. .hhttml l<br />

109

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