Life truly is radiant, according to an experiment conducted by researchers from the University of Calgary and the National Research Council of Canada.
An extraordinary experiment on mice and leaves from two different plant species has uncovered direct physical evidence of an eerie 'biophoton' phenomenon ceasing on death, suggesting all living things – including humans – could literally glow with health, until we don't.
The findings might seem a little fringe at first glance. It's hard not to associate scientific investigations into biological electromagnetic emissions with debunked and paranormal claims of auras and discharges surrounding living organisms.
What's more, even in theory, visible wavelengths of light emitted by biological processes ought to be so faint that it's easily swamped by the intense shine of ambient electromagnetic waves in the environment and radiant heat generated by our metabolism, making it a challenge to accurately track across an entire body.
Still, University of Calgary physicist Vahid Salari and his team have claimed to observe just that – an ultraweak photon emission (UPE) produced by several living animals in strong contrast with their non-living bodies, as well as in a handful of plant leaves.
The movie is more of the same bullshit based on the study one retard did back in the early 20th century.
Anyone who has watched the film knows this.
The 21 grams isn't even consistent, some lose more, some lose less.
You were pushing pseudoscience on unsuspecting retards with that movie by stating the body loses 21 grams at death as fact when it isn't true. There is no consistency between subjects.
Her0n 0 points 5 hours ago
The movie is more of the same bullshit based on the study one retard did back in the early 20th century.
Anyone who has watched the film knows this.
The 21 grams isn't even consistent, some lose more, some lose less.
You were pushing pseudoscience on unsuspecting retards with that movie by stating the body loses 21 grams at death as fact when it isn't true. There is no consistency between subjects.