Naked Science Forum

Non Life Sciences => Technology => Topic started by: rooster50 on 04/10/2009 03:51:43

Title: Why does this ash jump when a magnet is brought close?
Post by: rooster50 on 04/10/2009 03:51:43
How would I make a purer jumping grain of ash. Ash of what ? [:o]
Well I take granulated lime (36% Calcium,91% Calcium Carbonate,.5% Magnesium Carbonate) and grind it down in a pepper mill put that into a stainless pot and heat on a red hot burner until the powder turns black I let it cool regrind it.

Then I take a super magnet two the powder it pick up something [:o], I put that in a pile by it's self this is what jumps, it's like it some of it charge's up with the magnet then jump away. So how would I get this pile of ash into a purer state.
Title: Re: Why does this ash jump when a magnet is brought close?
Post by: RD on 05/10/2009 04:47:54
A Nobel prize for Rooster ? ...

Quote
A room-temperature superconductor is a material yet to be discovered which would be capable of exhibiting superconducting properties at temperatures above 0° C (273.15 K).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room-temperature_superconductor


Maybe Rooster is making ferrite (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrite_%28magnet%29#Production) (with iron from the steel pot).

Title: Re: Why does this ash jump when a magnet is brought close?
Post by: Bored chemist on 05/10/2009 19:49:13
Seems like a good bet. Another candidate would be the pepper mill shedding steel.
In partticular, since heating a mix of Ca and Mg carbonates should give the oxides (which are white) there's something odd about the stuff going black.
"91% Calcium Carbonate,.5% Magnesium Carbonate"
and about 8.5% God knows what.
Title: Re: Why does this ash jump when a magnet is brought close?
Post by: rooster50 on 08/10/2009 03:48:59
I was thinking it was a faster way two get 'Ormus' .
www.subtleenergies.com/ormus/index.htm
Title: Re: Why does this ash jump when a magnet is brought close?
Post by: rooster50 on 08/10/2009 04:11:06
I was getting something like lime out of sea water and when I burned two a ash it two would jump away from a super magnet. So when i was thinking it was near the same thing. But the question was how two make it purer , if I just keep on re-burning it, what is this lime turning into. I was just repeating what others have done.

Out of sea water at a ph of 8.5 two 8.7 comes a gel looking dust in the water.
why poke at me, if this is room temp superconductor in sea water, it seems like others would.   
Title: Re: Why does this ash jump when a magnet is brought close?
Post by: RD on 08/10/2009 05:15:17
Are people still trying to turn base metal into gold (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysopoeia) ?.

It can be done, but you need a nuclear reactor ...

Quote
Soviet physicists at a nuclear research facility near Lake Baikal in Siberia accidentally discovered a reaction for turning lead into gold when they found the lead shielding of an experimental reactor had changed to gold.
http://chemistry.about.com/cs/generalchemistry/a/aa050601a.htm
Title: Re: Why does this ash jump when a magnet is brought close?
Post by: rooster50 on 08/10/2009 06:32:10
I am not trying two make gold, what is it before it got two gold. 
Title: Re: Why does this ash jump when a magnet is brought close?
Post by: Bored chemist on 08/10/2009 07:08:51
I was thinking it was a faster way two get 'Ormus' .
www.subtleenergies.com/ormus/index.htm
How do you have a "fatser way to get to" something that doesn't exist?

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