The Science Of Auras & Energy
Kirlian photography is an amazing technique for creating print photographs that essentially show an objects aura! The discoverer of this technique, Seymond Kirlian was a Russian electrician and maintenance man at his local hospital. In 1939 he constructed an unusual device that places a sheet photographic film on top of a metal discharge plate that uses high voltage to create an exposure of an image. The first thing he photographed was his own hand! When he developed the picture, he saw a glow emanating from his finger tips.
Remarkable New Theory Says There's No Gravity, No Dark Matter, and Einstein Was Wrong
Gravity is something all of us are familiar with from our first childhood experiences. You drop something - it falls. And the way physicists have described gravity has also been pretty consistent - it’s considered one of the four main forces or “interactions” of nature and how it works has been described by Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity all the way back in 1915. But Professor Erik Verlinde, an expert in string theory from the University of Amsterdam and the Delta Institute of Theoretical Physics, thinks that gravity is not a fundamental force of nature because it's not always there. Instead it’s “emergent” - coming into existence from changes in microscopic bits of information in the structure of spacetime.
100 Excellent Art Therapy Exercises for Your Mind, Body, and Soul
January 9th, 2011 Pablo Picasso once said, "Art washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life." It's no surprise, then, that many people around the world use art as a means to deal with stress, trauma and unhappiness – or to just find greater peace and meaning in their lives.
After centuries, scientists have finally figured out how water conducts electricity
It's a textbook moment centuries in the making: more than 200 years after scientists started investigating how water molecules conduct electricity, a team has finally witnessed it happening first-hand. It's no surprise that most naturally ocurring water conducts electricity incredibly well - that's a fact most of us have been taught since primary school. But despite how fundamental the process is, no one had been able to figure out how it actually happens on the atomic level. "This fundamental process in chemistry and biology has eluded a firm explanation," said one of the team, Anne McCoy from the University of Washington.
Higher Density Blog
In5D.com. By now, pretty much all of us know and accept that meditation provides a plethora of benefits, including reduced tension and stress and improved focus and concentration. However, how and why meditation does this has long remained unknown—until now! Harvard University scientists have published the results of an 8-week study that used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to examine the effects of meditation on the brain.
This genius map explains how everything in physics is connected
Physics is a huge, complex field. It also happens to be one of the most fascinating, dealing with everything from black holes and wormholes to quantum teleportation and gravitational waves. But unless you have an innate knowledge of the field, it's pretty hard to figure out how all these concepts actually fit together - and how they tie in with the stuff like the physics of inertia and circuits that we learnt in high school. After all, everyone is constantly trying to prove Einstein wrong, and Stephen Hawking has famously struggled to come up with a 'theory of everything', so it's easy to get confused about how things do actually fit together in physics (if at all). If just the thought of a physics map breaks you out in an anxious sweat, but we promise it's a lot less scary when you see it: Dominic Walliman/YouTube
Emotional Energetic Healing: The Future of Medicine is Here
5th June 2015 By Carolanne Wright Contributing Writer for Wake Up World “Everything is energy.” ~ Albert Einstein
We just got the first real evidence of a strange quantum distortion in empty space
For the first time, astronomers have observed a strange quantum phenomenon in action, where a neutron star is surrounded by a magnetic field so intense, it’s given rise to a region in empty space where matter spontaneously pops in and out of existence. Called vacuum birefringence, this bizarre phenomenon was first predicted back in the 1930s, but had only ever been observed on the atomic scale. Now scientists have finally seen it occur in nature, and it goes against everything that Newton and Einstein had mapped out.
How Our Thoughts Control Our DNA
By Bruce H. Lipton Ph.D Guest Writer for Wake Up World
High-speed electrons have been spotted outside Earth's magnetic field, and NASA can't explain it
In the region of space just outside Earth’s magnetic field, NASA has detected electrons that are being accelerated to almost the speed of light - and no one can explain why. In fact, our current understanding of particle physics says this kind of acceleration should be impossible so far out from the magnetosphere, and now physicists are trying to figure out what kind of force can be pushing them to such speeds. "This is a puzzling case because we're seeing energetic electrons where we don't think they should be, and no model fits them," says one of the researchers, David Sibeck from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Centre.
Scientific Proof Thoughts & Intentions Create Physical Reality and How Advertisers Exploit This
Gregg Prescott, M.S., In5D Guest Waking Times Any reputable scientific experiment should be replicable under similar conditions. When Dr. Masaru Emoto proved that thoughts and intentions create reality, the experiment has been replicated numerous times with similar results. The bottom line is that the words we use, in conjunction with the intent behind them and the emotion we are feeling while saying these words, will conclusively shape the reality around us. Water Crystal Proof
A Galah to help capture millions of rainbows to map the history of the Milky Way
Our galaxy, the Milky Way, contains at least 100 billion stars. Over the centuries, astronomers have scoured the skies, developing a thorough understanding of the lives of those stars, from their formation in vast nebulae to their fiery and spectacular deaths. But how has our galaxy changed over time? Where did the stars we see today form, and which of them are siblings, formed together from the same cloud of material? To answer these questions we need to perform Galactic archaeology. To do this, an ambitious Australian-led observing survey, called Galah, is undertaking the immense task of capturing millions of rainbows to disentangle our galaxy’s story.