Isn't white gold just an ORME?
Was posted a while ago in a thread, although I wouldn't buy anything commercially (who knows what your getting!!) but I believe it has some
astounding implications.
ORME (Orbitally Rearranged Monoatomic Element)
"Monoatomic elements are nothing more than elements which are chemically isolated, i.e. instead of 60 atoms of Carbon are 34 atoms of Silicon being
bound together in something called a Buckministerfullerene or a knobbier version of the same. The significance lies in the fact that when a single
element metal progresses from a normal metallic state to a monoatomic state, it passes through a series of chemically different states. These
include:
An alloy of numerous atoms of the same element, which exhibit all the characteristics normally associated with the metal: electrical conductivity,
color, specific gravity, density, and so forth. The atom’s intrinsic temperature might be room temperature.
A combination of significantly fewer atoms of the same element, which no longer exhibit all of the characteristics normally associated with the metal.
For example, the electrical conductivity or color might change. The atom’s intrinsic temperature drops, for example, to 50 to 100 oK (or about two
hundred degrees below zero oC).
A Microcluster of far few atoms -- typically on the order of less than one hundred atoms, and as few as a dozen or so atoms. The metal
characteristics begin to fall off one by one until the so-called metal is hardly recognized. The intrinsic temperature has now fallen to the range of
10 to 20 oK, only slightly above Absolute Zero.
A Monoatomic form of the element -- in which each single atom is chemically inert and no longer possesses normal metallic characteristics; and in
fact, may exhibit extraordinary properties. The atom’s intrinsic temperature is now about 1 oK, or close enough to Absolute Zero that
Superconductivity is a virtually automatic condition.
A case in point is Gold. Normally a yellow metal with a precise electrical conductivity and other metallic characteristics, the metallic nature of
gold begins to change as the individual gold atoms form chemical combinations of increasingly small numbers. At a microcluster stage, there might be
13 atoms of gold in a single combination. Then, dramatically, at the monoatomic state, gold becomes a forest green color, with a distinctly different
chemistry. It’s electrical conductivity goes to zero even as its potential for Superconductivity becomes maximized. Monoatomic gold can exhibit
substantial variations in weight, as if it were no longer fully extant in space-time."
I'll post the link so you can look over it yourself, but it has some intersting possibilities. As I say, I doubt the 'white powder gold' ,as it's
being marketed, contains this and if it does, it'll be highly diluted.
www.halexandria.org...