Unifying Theory of Energy Exchange
Originally presented for open evaluation by Reijo (Ray) Makela * Finlandia News, October 31,
1978.
Not to my surprise in one country a magnetocariograph has been developed, based on "the long known fact
that living cells develop a magnetic fields around them", in another country "a new cardiovascular risk factor has been found: decreased
intracellular potassium" etc.
For many years I have presented to the highest medical authorities that cardiovascular diseases are due to decreased electromagnetic energy
states in nerve and muscle cells in the myocardium. The a-v node is the main capacitor from where the excitation continues to contracting
cells -- following known quantum mechanical laws. In this system the main factors are potassium-capacity (=intracellular K+ and its ratio to
amino acids in cell membrane) and the wave length.
One of the easiest ways to test the mineral/amino acid rate in the body is to check the state of human hair: there is a direct correlation
between the amounts of minerals and amino acids in hair and in living cells and the amplitude of QRS-complex in the ECG. All these factors can be
affected by changes in the components of EEG-waves from different parts of the brain.
In studying these correlations one of the known methods is to use the Pointing vector - the radiated energy from a current element (=cell
group) varies as the square of the frequency, the "ohmic loss" varies depending on the skin depth.
The following hypothesis was put forward to other scientists prior to 1978 who are assumed to
understand my criterions:
The orbits of moving energy in Einstein's theory are straight paths through a curved space. To maintain a static universe with a finite number
of particles it was necessary to suppose that the space have an inherent curvature existing even when there were no massive bodies (-energy)
present.
According to Einstein the universe "started" with a radius of 1068 million lightyears and contained an amount of matter equal to that of 1.08
x 1022 suns, and the space is static, the universe a stable structure. Observations and calculations have shown that all known nebulae are
receding from the center of the galactic system with speeds proportional to their distances from us. (The speed of recession is about 105 miles a
second for each million lightyears of distance - Sir James Jeans, 1960).
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