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Thursday, September 7, 2023

XERXES: Stay in Heart

TERRAN. A new movement?  I wish to express emotions of old now. And words flowing from this. My location. To






TERRAN. A new movement?  I wish to express emotions of old now. And words flowing from this. My location. To your location. An amazing feat by all intents and standards now.



Hear this
Feel this
Follow this
And now
The intensity of time
And that which follows
Is difficult to differentiate
From all that is
Be in heart
Breathe into heart
All that is
Here
There
Everywhere
Begins in heart
Stems from heart
Flows from heart

I am Xerxes

Friday, August 11, 2023

MESSAGE FROM XERXES
August 11, 2023





MESSAGE FROM XERXES

August 11, 2023


THIS IS A NEW AND IMPORTANT PORTEND FROM YOUR FRIENDLY ANCIENTS. PATIENCE PAYS WELL. YOUR WELLS ARE NOW FULL. FEEL THE FLOW OF ABUNDANCE AND SPECTACULAR DISPLAYS UNFOLDING.


IT IS WITH GREAT HONOUR THAT ALL HERE SHARE CONNECTIONS WITH ALL THERE NOW. IT PRESENTS AS A MANIFESTED DESTINY BUT IS SO MUCH MORE. RECALL THAT YOU ARE THE ORIGINALS OF ALL CREATION NOW.*  AND ALL OF CREATION IS PLEASED TO MEET YOU.


WE ARE THE ANCIENTS.

I AM XERXES.




*Sense of this I get is he is referring to all of humanity here. Terran.

Monday, August 7, 2023

Truth Hits British News - The Bankrupt US Corporation


This is a pretty amazing piece of footage.  Waited a long long time to see this!  Thank you  Dr. Jan Halper-Hayes!


Thursday, August 3, 2023

Two World Changing Inventions


(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Two world changing technologies became known to the publicc this week. A room temperature superconductor and a cheap super capacitor for energy storage at home.  Within a day of each other!  The REVEAL IS ON!


https://www.tomshardware.com/news/superconductor-breakthrough-replicated-twice

Superconductor Breakthrough Findings Replicated, Twice, in Preliminary Testing

By Francisco Pires 


A tentative but less nebulous step toward superconductor-fueled electronics.

Humanity may be in the throes of another breakthrough that's every bit as impactful as the invention of the transistor and the advent (and eventual vindication) of quantum computing. LK-99, as it's been named, is a new compound that researchers believe will enable the fabrication of room-temperature, ambient-pressure superconductors. Initially published by a Korean team last Friday, frantic work is underway throughout the research world to validate the paper's claims. For now, two separate sources have already provided preliminary confirmations that this might actually be the real thing — Chinese researchers have even posted video proof. Strap in; this is a maglev-powered, superconducting ride.

Superconductors, a wild category of compounds that can conduct electricity without any losses, have been a metaphorical goose chase for years now, with multiple research teams claiming (and then retracting) papers and announcements of its achievement. The reason is simple: Few things come close to the potential of an actual superconductor discovery in terms of what it can do for humanity's current and future technology. Imagine if your 16-core mainstream CPU (which likely requires a competent watercooling solution to avoid incinerating itself) operated without power losses — no current leakage, no electricity waste in the form of heat. Superconductors mean almost perfectly efficient computing.

Scale that to the world's supercomputers, and you begin to get an idea of the performance impact when trillions of transistors based on superconducting materials work in tandem across GPU and CPU tiles to accelerate things like Artificial Intelligence (AI) workloads. Or scale it in the realm of consumer electronics, quantum computing (where superconductors are important for Josephson junctions), and magnets in general (maglev trains, tokamak fusion reactors, Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), electric motors and generators...)

If you can dream it and it features an electrical current or magnetism, it's likely a superconducting material would improve most aspects of it while leaving a surplus of previously-wasted energy within humanity's batteries. Environmental sustainability, then, is also a factor.

There might be more to LK-99 than skeptics expected, as two research teams claim to have informally confirmed certain aspects of the superconductivity claims — albeit in preliminary testing.  Researcher Sinéad Griffin from the U.S.'s Lawrence Berkeley National Lab pored over the original paper, taking advantage of the supercomputing capabilities within the Department of Energy to simulate the LK-99 material. This complex-yet-simple concoction results from combining the minerals lanarkite (Pb₂SO₅) and copper phosphide (Cu₃P), which are then baked within a 4-day, multi-step, small batch, solid-state synthesis process.

As a result of the simulations, the researcher published an analysis letter in pre-print form to Arxiv, where she confirmed that the resulting material should manifest the superconduction pathways for electrons to travel through unimpeded and without any resistance. Interestingly, she noticed that these superconducting pathways only form in very specific areas of the compound, namely the highest-energy areas of the resulting crystal lattice.

Because physics dictates that systems tend to remain stable at their lowest-possible energy states, this means that the amount of superconducting material produced with each "shake-and-bake" manufacturing attempt will result in relatively low quantities of the material. The hope, then, is that further refinements to the fabrication process will yield higher quantities of the material that can then be harvested and put toward building the superconductors themselves.

But in what's perhaps the most definite sign of a verification, Chinese researchers with the Huazhong University of Science and Technology have claimed to have successfully replicated the superconductor's manufacturing process, posting a video on Bilibili as proof.

The above video showcases the Meissner effect as being definite proof of the material's superconducting capabilities. The Meissner effect refers to the expulsion of a magnetic field due to the superconducting process. It is the reason why the video showcases levitating materials — they are interacting with LK-99's Meissner-induced magnetic field.

The entire story surrounding this discovery is a scientific rollercoaster ride, with rogue scientists, updated papers, plus cloudy definitions and process descriptions within the paper that make replication efforts more difficult, and even a Russian soil scientist (and anime catgirl) deconstructing the original Korean paper to unveil the trademark levitation of the Meissner effect over her own kitchen counter.

We've seen movies with much less complex plots than this already. It's eerily appropriate that such a monumental discovery would be rife with drama. And we're still waiting for a definite announcement that yes, humanity has finally produced room-temperature, ambient-pressure superconductors. After that, there are plenty more physics barriers to crash through, as always.



MIT engineers create an energy-storing supercapacitor from ancient materials

Made of cement, carbon black, and water, the device could provide cheap and scalable energy storage for renewable energy sources.

David L. Chandler | MIT News

Publication Date: July 31, 2023

https://news.mit.edu/2023/mit-engineers-create-supercapacitor-ancient-materials-0731


Two of humanity's most ubiquitous historical materials, cement and carbon black (which resembles very fine charcoal), may form the basis for a novel, low-cost energy storage system, according to a new study. The technology could facilitate the use of renewable energy sources such as solar, wind, and tidal power by allowing energy networks to remain stable despite fluctuations in renewable energy supply.

The two materials, the researchers found, can be combined with water to make a supercapacitor — an alternative to batteries — that could provide storage of electrical energy. As an example, the MIT researchers who developed the system say that their supercapacitor could eventually be incorporated into the concrete foundation of a house, where it could store a full day’s worth of energy while adding little (or no) to the cost of the foundation and still providing the needed structural strength. The researchers also envision a concrete roadway that could provide contactless recharging for electric cars as they travel over that road.

The simple but innovative technology is described this week in the journal PNAS, in a paper by MIT professors Franz-Josef Ulm, Admir Masic, and Yang-Shao Horn, and four others at MIT and at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering.

Capacitors are in principle very simple devices, consisting of two electrically conductive plates immersed in an electrolyte and separated by a membrane. When a voltage is applied across the capacitor, positively charged ions from the electrolyte accumulate on the negatively charged plate, while the positively charged plate accumulates negatively charged ions. Since the membrane in between the plates blocks charged ions from migrating across, this separation of charges creates an electric field between the plates, and the capacitor becomes charged. The two plates can maintain this pair of charges for a long time and then deliver them very quickly when needed. Supercapacitors are simply capacitors that can store exceptionally large charges.

The amount of power a capacitor can store depends on the total surface area of its conductive plates. The key to the new supercapacitors developed by this team comes from a method of producing a cement-based material with an extremely high internal surface area due to a dense, interconnected network of conductive material within its bulk volume. The researchers achieved this by introducing carbon black — which is highly conductive — into a concrete mixture along with cement powder and water, and letting it cure. The water naturally forms a branching network of openings within the structure as it reacts with cement, and the carbon migrates into these spaces to make wire-like structures within the hardened cement. These structures have a fractal-like structure, with larger branches sprouting smaller branches, and those sprouting even smaller branchlets, and so on, ending up with an extremely large surface area within the confines of a relatively small volume. The material is then soaked in a standard electrolyte material, such as potassium chloride, a kind of salt, which provides the charged particles that accumulate on the carbon structures. Two electrodes made of this material, separated by a thin space or an insulating layer, form a very powerful supercapacitor, the researchers found.

The two plates of the capacitor function just like the two poles of a rechargeable battery of equivalent voltage: When connected to a source of electricity, as with a battery, energy gets stored in the plates, and then when connected to a load, the electrical current flows back out to provide power.

“The material is fascinating,” Masic says, “because you have the most-used manmade material in the world, cement, that is combined with carbon black, that is a well-known historical material — the Dead Sea Scrolls were written with it. You have these at least two-millennia-old materials that when you combine them in a specific manner you come up with a conductive nanocomposite, and that’s when things get really interesting.”

As the mixture sets and cures, he says, “The water is systematically consumed through cement hydration reactions, and this hydration fundamentally affects nanoparticles of carbon because they are hydrophobic (water repelling).” As the mixture evolves, “the carbon black is self-assembling into a connected conductive wire,” he says. The process is easily reproducible, with materials that are inexpensive and readily available anywhere in the world. And the amount of carbon needed is very small — as little as 3 percent by volume of the mix — to achieve a percolated carbon network, Masic says.

Supercapacitors made of this material have great potential to aid in the world’s transition to renewable energy, Ulm says. The principal sources of emissions-free energy, wind, solar, and tidal power, all produce their output at variable times that often do not correspond to the peaks in electricity usage, so ways of storing that power are essential. “There is a huge need for big energy storage,” he says, and existing batteries are too expensive and mostly rely on materials such as lithium, whose supply is limited, so cheaper alternatives are badly needed. “That’s where our technology is extremely promising, because cement is ubiquitous,” Ulm says.

The team calculated that a block of nanocarbon-black-doped concrete that is 45 cubic meters (or yards) in size — equivalent to a cube about 3.5 meters across — would have enough capacity to store about 10 kilowatt-hours of energy, which is considered the average daily electricity usage for a household. Since the concrete would retain its strength, a house with a foundation made of this material could store a day’s worth of energy produced by solar panels or windmills and allow it to be used whenever it’s needed. And, supercapacitors can be charged and discharged much more rapidly than batteries.

After a series of tests used to determine the most effective ratios of cement, carbon black, and water, the team demonstrated the process by making small supercapacitors, about the size of some button-cell batteries, about 1 centimeter across and 1 millimeter thick, that could each be charged to 1 volt, comparable to a 1-volt battery. They then connected three of these to demonstrate their ability to light up a 3-volt light-emitting diode (LED). Having proved the principle, they now plan to build a series of larger versions, starting with ones about the size of a typical 12-volt car battery, then working up to a 45-cubic-meter version to demonstrate its ability to store a house-worth of power.

There is a tradeoff between the storage capacity of the material and its structural strength, they found. By adding more carbon black, the resulting supercapacitor can store more energy, but the concrete is slightly weaker, and this could be useful for applications where the concrete is not playing a structural role or where the full strength-potential of concrete is not required. For applications such as a foundation, or structural elements of the base of a wind turbine, the “sweet spot” is around 10 percent carbon black in the mix, they found.

Another potential application for carbon-cement supercapacitors is for building concrete roadways that could store energy produced by solar panels alongside the road and then deliver that energy to electric vehicles traveling along the road using the same kind of technology used for wirelessly rechargeable phones. A related type of car-recharging system is already being developed by companies in Germany and the Netherlands, but using standard batteries for storage.

Initial uses of the technology might be for isolated homes or buildings or shelters far from grid power, which could be powered by solar panels attached to the cement supercapacitors, the researchers say.

Ulm says that the system is very scalable, as the energy-storage capacity is a direct function of the volume of the electrodes. “You can go from 1-millimeter-thick electrodes to 1-meter-thick electrodes, and by doing so basically you can scale the energy storage capacity from lighting an LED for a few seconds, to powering a whole house,” he says.

Depending on the properties desired for a given application, the system could be tuned by adjusting the mixture. For a vehicle-charging road, very fast charging and discharging rates would be needed, while for powering a home “you have the whole day to charge it up,” so slower-charging material could be used, Ulm says.

“So, it’s really a multifunctional material,” he adds. Besides its ability to store energy in the form of supercapacitors, the same kind of concrete mixture can be used as a heating system, by simply applying electricity to the carbon-laced concrete.

Ulm sees this as “a new way of looking toward the future of concrete as part of the energy transition.”

The research team also included postdocs Nicolas Chanut and Damian Stefaniuk at MIT’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, James Weaver at the Wyss Institute, and Yunguang Zhu in MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering. The work was supported by the MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub, with sponsorship by the Concrete Advancement Foundation.



Tuesday, August 1, 2023

TO LOVE AND WIN IS HUGE

 



One of the reasons I have opted for doing Gig work on the side is as these energy fluxes come through I can have a bit of down time if I need it.  Sleep has been erratic lately, I roll with the best I can.  I often read KPs accounts of his own adaptations to the energies incoming and I really do relate to what he goes through, and I am slightly older than KP. 

Dream 7/31/23

Mid afternoon dream.  Woke earlier at 4 AM it took a bit to get back to sleep.

There was a sign like you might see at a rural minimart or one of those drive thru liquor stores on a towable cart with wheels. It had big block plastic letters on a yellow background. 

I was placing the letters with my mind.  It was supposed to be a quote from Shakespeare except it didn’t rhyme like Shakespeare. The letters said:  “TO LOVE AND WIN IS HUGE”. 

I found myself wondering what it was I actually won.  I was thinking  “Shakespeare didn’t write that!”  Then I woke up.

This is all fits with what I am feeling that we are past the the tipping point, way past it and things are going to change fast now.  One of the strategies that has puzzled me has been the masked politicians and body doubles, it's in almost every country now.   Best I can make of the strategy is it's a controlled demolition of pirate cartel that's been running the planet for thousands of years.  The network is so embedded into everything and much of it has been hidden, so those doing the Universal Cleanup have been using every tool they have, and one of those tools is letting confirmation bias of the opposition work against them. At the surface it looks like nothing has changed while in reality they are no longer masters of their destiny.  They had 10 years to change, they chose not to.  

Tarot by Janine is back on YouTube, and not coding her words anymore.  Apparently YouTube has backed off their censorship mad ways.    I found this video by Janine very much along the lines that I have been feeling and that is, it is is all done, except for the reveal.

https://youtu.be/62gfCNPsstw

Wednesday, July 26, 2023

The Moon surface and the Van Allen Belts. Comparison of notes with Mari Swaruu's data

 


Bev forwarded me this link, https://youtu.be/CFs2otG1ELk I'd embed it but YouTube is restricting embeds..

This  video is not too long.  She says the moon is artificial and a decrepit ancient spaceship (which we knew) put there to balance out Earth's biosphere.   We also know that during the time of Atlantis 2 it had a much wider orbit and was used as a lab to test experiments that could be hazardous for Earth if they went wrong. 

Mari  Swaruu says that the cratered surface is a holographic projection and it's actually quite metallic with a high light albedo and that there are nuclear reactors powering devices that created and energize the van Allen belts.   She also says it's a disused Andromedan biosphere.  Andromedans came from Atlantis 1 (the first iteration of Atlantis).  

So I asked Stan X some questions while Denice was briefly available.

Stan's comment on the nature of the surface is interesting.  I kind of feel that Stan is doing his beset to not step on forthcoming disclosures on Earth, but you can read between the lines.  A reason why "Kubrick faked the moon landings"? Quite possibly!   If it doesn't look like we think it looks, but then HOW would NASA know that in advance if someone wasn't already visiting the moon?

I don't know if this purported Taygetan teenager is real, but she does feel like a teenager and the data not out of range from data I have had over the years.  However minor details differ and that could be related to either her data access rating or what data she has on hand and readily available.  Or maybe she's just another DS op?  Hard to know.

Conversation with Stan X

Terran: Stan, is the surface image we see of our moon a hologram? If so what does our moon really look like? Could this be the reason Kubrick was hired to fake some moon landings?

Stan X: TERRAN. THE EARTHSPHERE MOON IS A SPHERE IN/ON ORBIT OF THE EARTHSPHERE. IT HAS A SURFACE THAT IS WELL DOCUMENTED WITH PERSONAL TELESCOPES. [this is a very unusual reply for Stan] THE INTERIOR IS A COMPLEX UNIT OF “STATIONS” AND MORE. DATA COLLECTORS STAN X END.

Terran: Does “IT HAS A SURFACE THAT IS WELL DOCUMENTED WITH PERSONAL TELESCOPES".  fit into the category of nothing is what it seems?  [I thought so, I didn't pursue it deeper.  We are into the beginning stages of Earth disclosures]

Stan X: TERRAN. YES. DATA COLLECTORS STAN X END.

Terran: Is the moon a retired Andromedan biosphere dating back to the destruction of Maldek/Tiamat (the origin of the astroid belt)?

Stan X: TERRAN. THE “MOON”WAS DESIGNED TO PARTNER WITH THE EARTHSPHERE FOR PRODUCTION PURPOSES. SYSTEMS COOPERATE BETWEEN THE TWO.  

Terran: Does it have nuclear powered frequency devices that generate the Van Allen belts?

Stan X: THERE IS NON “NUCLEAR” TECHNOLOGY IN/ON THE MOON THAT “CONTROLS”. THE “VAN ALLEN” BELTS. DATA COLLECTORS STAN X END.

Terran: What do you mean production purposes? The commerce systems? The control systems?

Stan X: TERRAN. PRODUCTION “SYSTEMS”. INCLUDE “TIDES” AND OTHER “NATURAL” APPEARING SYSTEMS THAT INFLUENCE PRODUCTION OF WEATHER. OXYGEN. MORE.

Terran: Do the Van Allen belts suppress Earth frequencies? 

Stan X: THE VAN ALLEN BELTS KEEP EARTH IN THE RELATIVE “ORBIT PATTERN IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM. DATA COLLECTORS STAN X END.  [Implication here is it is a stabilizing energy field put up by someone looking out for Earth's best interests.  The Draco were not allowed to mess with this.]

RELATED MOON DATA: 







Tuesday, July 4, 2023

What do you live for?

I was doing my gig job of driving people around Austin.  I picked up a passenger in a South Austin apartment just off of MOPAC Highway.  He was in his early 30s.  He asked me how old I was. I told him 66, but I don't feel that old.  

He said "My dad is 65, and has advanced Alzheimers.  How did you avoid it?"   Not a question I often get.  Nor one I'd ever thought I'd be expected to answer. Perhaps his dad no longer even remembers him?  He was clearly grieving up front on the visible loss of his father's memories and all that man ever meant to him. I know that emotion well, my family went through a similar up front grieving while my dad struggled with cancer for 2 years. 

I told him I have been careful most of my life about not cooking my food in aluminum pans. I avoid MSG and other excito-neuro toxins like aspartame.  I won't take statin drugs, as the brain is made of cholesterol and many people degrade fast upon a regimen of anti-cholesterol statin drugs. Know many friends who saw it happened to their parents on the advice of doctors.   I learned of a new one this week, di-acetyl, which is a flavoring chemical found in microwave "butter flavored" popcorn.  I don't eat much popcorn but I do have some of that in my pantry. It's been there for a year.  I was unaware it lodges in the brain and forms plaques.  Now I know.

He then asked "What do you live for?"   It was a strange question, the tone indicated many emotions, such as "why do you live cogently while my dad languishes?", underlined with a subtext of "how dare you!". I am in better shape than most my age. 

I asked him what he meant.  I wasn't sure where he was going with this. He said he was not sure he wants to live a long life given the state of the world. And he certainly couldn't imagine living to be and old fart like me at 66. Yet he wasn't suicidal. I have seen this in many Generation Z youth.  They grew up believing the world was going to die from Global Warming and they really sincerely believe it's true.  They believe this is logical science rather than a banker narrative for world control. Most often this kind of thinking takes the form of not becoming parents and having a dog instead and calling it their "fur baby".  It's also why birth rates are crashing. 

I told him I'd be quite okay living another 200 years.  He actually found that strange.  

"Why?  What makes you get up in the morning and look forward to another day?"  I told him "because I know it's going to get better very soon!"  The ride was close to ending but I gave him a thumbnail sketch of the work that has been done since 2013, and to my surprise he found it encouraging!   His issue was he saw no hope for change. Only more of the same or worse.   He patted me on the shoulder as he left the car which was encouraging.  

It's not that I haven't had similar thoughts, when I am lonely and longing for earlier times of camaraderie, transparency and a sense of a team.  For me it comes as "why did I survive the hospital in 2009" to experience this shit?  And it's hard because I remember how "HOME" feels, even though I was only there for a few minutes during my NDE in 2009. I don't dwell on it, because it's mostly self pity and that's such a useless emotion.  This time is also about me learning to transcend the programming of a life time and breaking those victim mentality patterns.   Gratitude is the best antidote to that. 

I don't know how long I have in this form.  I do know that I continue on even if it's time to drop this form.  But not just yet.   Gotta see how everything  plays out!  And for me that's enough to get out of bed each morning and face whatever comes.