History of the Quantum Pulse Technology
The history of this technology follows several paths, through the work of distinguished scientists, inventors and researchers across the globe, primarily in the first half of the 20th century.
They include Serbian-American physicist, inventor and electrical engineer, Nikola Tesla; Russian scientist, engineer, inventor and author Dr. Georges Lakhovsky; and American scientist Dr. Royal Raymond Rife. While there is a long list of names, these 3 remarkable scientists and engineers are the pillars for the development and evolution of energy medicine.
Nikola Tesla
Among the obvious applications for the wireless transmission of energy, such as broadcasting power or information, Tesla was interested in therapeutic applications in the field of human health as well. At the time Tesla was experimenting with his Tesla coils, physicians were exploring the usage of electrical devices in the treatment of various ailments. It was within this environment that Tesla published in 1898 “High Frequency Oscillators for Electro-Therapeutic and Other Purposes”, a paper that he submitted to the 8th annual meeting of the American Electro-Therapeutic Association [1]. In this paper, Tesla correctly concluded that “bodily tissues are condensers” or capacitors, and he felt that his coil treatment “was certainly beneficial.”
Violet Ray DevicesFor some studies, Tesla experimented with a disruptive discharge coil he designed which was not quite the same as his classic Tesla coil design. Tesla coils have:
- Higher frequencies
- Even higher voltages
- The primary and secondary inducting coils are reversed
- The coils are also wound quite differently.
However, this design was co-opted by many manufacturers who incorporated it as a power source for glass electrodes containing various noble gases. It became popularly known as a ‘violet ray device,’ because of the brilliant purple glow that emanated from argon gas vacuum tubes wired in series to these coils. Dozens of different types of glass electrodes were manufactured for different uses, and built into violet ray device sets. These annealed glass tubes were constructed under low vacuum and filled with different noble gasses that became excited by the electrical output, to glow in different colors depending upon the gas used. For example, neon gas vacuum tubes glowed red. Electrified noble gases when pulsed become ionized or excited. This pulsing causes the electrons to move initially from lower energy orbital states to higher energy orbital states. Cycling back to the lower state causes the electrons to emit light at various frequencies as well as photons, including spectral emissions within the ultraviolet (UV) and infrared (IR) ranges. Many researchers have stated that a wide variety of conditions or illnesses can be improved or cured by the use of these devices. In the past these small devices became very popular for home use, while large units were utilized by physicians to treat many ailments.
Alexander Gurwitsch
Alexander Gurwitsch, a Russian biophysicist, discovered a truly remarkable optical phenomenon associated with living cells. Gurwitsch showed that adjacent cells could be stimulated to divide optically by endogenous UV radiation generated by cells in optical contact with them. He called this mitogenetic radiation. These emissions, which are today called biophotons, have the property of stimulating growth and cellular activity.
We are indeed made of more than just chemical elements, we are also energy and light based beings.
It is possible that some of the beneficial effect of excited noble gases may be due to [ultra-]violet rays resembling mitogenetic radiation. Based on his own work Dr. Tom Bearden (Phd. Nuclear Engineer,) stated that infrared (IR) Gurwitsch radiation stimulated cellular mitochondria as the subcellular target responsible for the subsequent growth phenomena.
The therapeutic value of light and color therapy has been investigated since before the turn of the last century. Notable researchers of the period who influenced development of the BioCharger NG include Alexander Gurwitsch, among others.
Papers available online by Gurwitsch include the following:
Dr. Georges Lakhovsky
Dr Georges Lakhovsky is consider the inventor of the Quantum Pulse or MWO, though it could be argued that Nikola Tesla was integral in helping him and perhaps even inspired the design. But regardless, Lakhovsky work is paramount in the research and evolution of electrotherapy and energy medicine.
Through his research from 1920-1940, Dr. Georges Lakhovsky outlined the concept that living cells emit and receive electromagnetic oscillations at their own high resonant frequencies. Furthermore, he described how living cells could be corrupted by pathogens, thereby causing interference with the normal oscillations of cells.
Dr. Lakhovsky used technology originally invented by Tesla in 1898 (the Tesla Coil, a high-voltage, high-energy electromagnetic coil) and paired it with the MultiWave Oscillator (MWO). In 1925, Dr. Lakhovsky began using Argon gas in copper tubes for the antennae of his MultiWave Oscillator.
Lakhovsky’s MWO produced low frequency all the way to the gigahertz radiowaves with lots of short harmonics. He favored such a wide bandwidth device so that, “The cells with very weak vibrations, when palced in the field of multiple vibrations, finds its own frequency and starts to oscillate normally through the phenomenon of resonance”.
Lakhovsky believed that the remedy to human ailments was not to kill microbes in contact with human cells, but rather to strengthen the natural oscillation of the cell.
Lakhovsky is most famous for his thesis that DNA acts as a self-inducting coil allowing cells to function like tuned resonant circuits, capable of resonating to its resonant frequency when exposed to the range of frequencies output by the MWO, which he called a radio-cellular oscillator (RCO) early on.
This Russian engineer became known after he published his book The Secret of Life in French in 1929, in which he expressed that cells possess resistance, capacitance, and inductance, attributes which when properly configured, will cause the recurrent oscillation of high frequency sine waves when sustained by a small, steady supply of energy at this electrical circuit’s resonant frequency.
As a result of the research done by Lakhovsky and others interested in electrotherapeutic transformers using Tesla coils and alternating current at radio frequencies, some interesting and convincing cases were documented and reported. For example, by September 6, 1932, a Dr. Gustave Kolischer announced “Tesla’s high-frequency electrical currents are bringing about highly beneficial results in dealing with cancer, surpassing anything that could be accomplished with ordinary surgery” at a seminar presented by the American Congress of Physical Therapy, held in New York. References:
- Tesla, N (1898 ) “High Frequency Oscillators for Electro-Therapeutic and Other Purposes,” The Electrical Engineer, Vol. XXVI, No. 550, Nov. 17, p.477
- Bird, Christopher. “The Politics Of Science: A Background On Energy Medicine,” Energetic Processes: Interaction Between Matter, Energy & Consciousness, Volume I, Xlibris Press, Philadelphia, 2001, p. 226
- Lakhovsky, Georges. “Curing Cancer with Ultra Radio Frequencies,” Radio News, February, 1925, p. 1282-1283
Royal Raymond Rife
Dr. Royal R. Rife was a brilliant, passionate scientist who lived from 1888-1971. Dr. Rife discovered that every virus, bacterium, parasite and pathogen is sensitive to a specific frequency of sound and can be destroyed by intensifying that frequency until it literally explodes, much like an intense musical note that can shatter a wine glass. He called this the Mortal Oscillatory Rate (MOR).
“During the 1920’s and 30’s, Rife reportedly achieved astounding accomplishments in medicine and biology. He first invented and built five novel optical microscopes that allowed him to observe viruses in live cells and tissue cultures. Rife’s second major accomplishment was to invent numerous variable frequency flashing light ultrasound transmitters that could devitalize pathogens, bacteria, viruses, protozoa, and fungi.
Rife developed three versions of this technology:
- The first version used a single specific pulsed frequency to produce a single set of associated harmonics to achieve selected Mortal Oscillatory Rates [MORs] to devitalize targets;
- The second model expanded upon this concept by offering a sweeping mechanism that narrowly “rings” the upper and lower sides of a selected frequency. From a scientific standpoint, each new frequency selected offers a completely unique set of corresponding harmonics. Potential variations can be [pre-]calculated using classically defined Fourier Transform equations [link to FT site?].
- The third and final Rife Machine version employed this sweep-mechanism over a much wider range of frequencies, from a minimum of approx 500 hertz to a maximum of about 50 kilohertz [50,000 hertz]. This 3rd version was Rife’s most effective model. The sweeping component eliminated the need to pre-select or know in advance every single frequency required. From a scientific standpoint this feature allows for many more harmonics to be generated.
- Rife’s life and research accomplishments have been covered extensively elsewhere, including: http://rifevideos.com/ and http://www.rife.org/.