"The incorporation and effective containment of gold nanostructures on a substrate electrode applied to electrochemical sensors for detecting neurotransmitters is studied. Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) and gold nanorods (AuNRs) were synthesized, and these nanostructures were incorporated into a metal substrate mediated by self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of 4-mercaptopyridine (4MPy), which allows the effective confinement and communication of the nanostructure, in addition to evaluating the anisotropic effect for the oxidation of neurotransmitters."
"Additionally, a shift of the peak oxidation potential of the neurotransmitters used took place depending on the nanostructure observed. Therefore, the oxidation potential of the neurotransmitter depends on the anisotropy of the nanostructure."
OK. So I downloaded and read through the paper from the Annals of Chemistry. That one unfortunately is behind a paywall, so you can't easily get to it without a university account (or paying a ridiculous sum of money). The other paper you mention from Nature is freely available, so everyone can read that one. But they are actually similar in content.
As I understand what they are doing, the only point of the gold in these papers is to be able to use Surface plasmon resonance (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface_plasmon_resonance) in order to detect specific neurotransmitters in a blood, urine or tissue sample. You basically use either gold foil (in the first paper) or gold nano rods (in the second paper) and then the neurotransmitters interact with that. In the first paper, they create gold nanoparticles that are detected directly in the plasma atop the gold foil. In the second paper, the neurotransmitters deposit a silver shell on top of the nanorods, and it is the silver which is detected, indirectly indicating the presence of the neurotransmitter.
In either case, the presence of either gold nanoparticles or a silver shell on the gold nanorods is used to infer the presence of neurotransmitter at that location. Using this system, scientists can very quickly determine the presence, concentration and distribution of a neurotransmitter that they are looking for in a sample.
You don't ever create gold nanorods. You supply gold nanorods (or gold foil) as the matrix on which to detect the neurotransmitters under study through SPR. SPR is a much faster technique than the traditional methods used to quantify these agents.
So the TL;DR is that these papers are talking about a way to identify neurotransmitters in samples. In the process, they destroy delicate gold structures on the sensor, which must then be recycled and reprocessed. They don't create the gold rods/film. They destroy them.
"The growth of gold nanoparticles through the oxidation of catecholamine neurotransmitters, as active reducing agents, has been previously reported18. As a result of gold nanoparticle’s growth, the alteration of the absorption spectra as well as the color change in gold nanoparticle solution can be clearly observed." - https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-08704-5
Says right there, they are growing gold nanoparticles through the process.
You're right, they do destroy the rods/film but what is left is a complex structure that cannot be made otherwise.
True. You might be able to harvest gold nanoparticles. (Not gold rods though.) But if all you want is random gold nanoparticles from a gold foil, you can do it in much easier and cheaper ways than this, and on an industrial scale. This is an expensive scientific setup designed to detect the presence and concentration of neurotransmitters. The complex structure that is left is only useful for detecting the presence in the sample under study.
This is a scientific apparatus whose function is neurotransmitter detection.
Try as I might, I'm pretty sure I'm not gonna find a study that states "Adrenocrhome production using gold nanorods allows us to make gold nanostructures for use in life-extending serums and nanomachines."
This is the most relative study I've found that even hints at that being a possibility.
Of course it is a stretch. But it says right there that you can make complex gold structures by injecting gold nanorods into the adrenaline oxidation process. It doesn't elaborate what structures result, but that they do make distinct structures with different properties based on the neurotransmitter that was oxidized.
If it is true this has been possible since ancient times, this study is likely just rediscovering old, hidden knowledge that has always been known but they found it in a lab while pursuing a different goal. Basically, they found the old kept truth the long-way around and by accident.
Chemist here. They are definitely not talking about creating gold from other elements or compounds. This is existing gold being transformed into a different physical form, in this case rod shapes that function in some different way than another physical form. that is honestly all that is happening here
The golden goose meets full
Metal alchemist? Interesting and dark theory. I have heard gold and blood and how it congregates after you eat it is a popular thing for the demons. Adds to the plausibility of this theory, to me.
Sleepy,
That’s some thick science there. Explain it like I’m 5 please. So the thing that caught my attention was “oxidation of the neurotransmitters “, doesn’t that fuck up brain activity?
Neurotransmitters include Epinephrine(Adrenaline), Norepinephrine, and Dopamine.
When Adrenaline is oxidized, it becomes Adrenochrome.
These articles suggest not only does gold (nanorods) INCREASE the efficacy of oxidation, but creates special gold nanosctructures!
So, simply put, gold in people's systems increases adrenochrome output and creates monoatomic gold structures for use in a life-extending serum with the potential to unlock NANOMACHINES, son!
How might you control such a thing? How easy would it be to program them to deconstruct all organic life?
Sure, they might be the cure for cancer or maybe even allow immortality, but if they also fall in to the wrong hands they could wreak untold havoc on life as we know it.
In this case, we definitely don't want nanomachines to fall into the wrong hands, so it is scary they might be as close as they are to getting them fired up. Who knows, 5G might be what is necessary to interface and signal nanomachines we already have inside us. Not saying that is true, but it isn't outside the realm of possibility which is scary as hell.
Thanks Papa Sleepy!
So, bear with me, the people who drink colloidal silver.... will people start ingesting gold? Is it forced into children for a higher adrenochrome output to harvest?
Sounds crazy, but that’s where we’re at. Thoughts?
Also, you answered my internal question of the Haitian children....they aren’t the most beautiful physically, but rich in A....and easier to make disappear without too much fuss. I can’t wait for this to blow wide open! Thanks Sleepy!
Watched a gold searching documentary, they find the particulates in the leaves of the eucalyptus trees in Australia. Not enough to harvest, but then they mine the area below and around.
I wonder if it helps against autism? There are individual cases from the 70s if I remember correctly, where a doctor tried colloidal gold on an older patient with arthritis and autism with pretty good results. I cannot find now the article, but it should be looked into.
Maybe this is farfetched, but whatever they have in vaccines (mercury, fetus tissue cells, heavy metals etc) that might cause neurological disorders like autism/asperger is getting reversed with colloidal gold? I hope a cure is out there.
Ok....far fetched here...but I’ve followed a guy on you tube who claims that mountains and such are fossils of giants, and gold can be found where their blood was. Especially inside caves and caverns. He always says if you’re looking for gold search out the fossilized giants. The blood turns into gold.
Reactions imply a molecular change. And that is true, gold doesn't like to react with much. It does like tickling sulfur, but has a hard time doing much else.
Instead, it makes alloys, amalgams, and bonds, which don't include a chemical reaction.
In this case, gold nanorods interface and act as a catalyst for the oxidation of adrenaline and the gold is restructured due to the reactions taking place around it.
I've been posting about this subject for about a month.
He may have grabbed my talking points or he could have gotten intel from others in the know.
Do you happen to have that podcast saved in your history? I'd like to figure out if he was going off my info or if there is another source I should be looking at.
i love your dedication to this topic sleepy
great work
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-08704-5
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ac048691v
More coming soon.
For some insight on the "vaccine" I found these articles:
https://www.nature.com/articles/micronano201784
https://febs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/j.1742-4658.2006.05605.x
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2905923/
They may be trying to manipulate DNA to turn people into gold-nanowire factories.
Edit: Another Big one
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S157266571730468X
"The incorporation and effective containment of gold nanostructures on a substrate electrode applied to electrochemical sensors for detecting neurotransmitters is studied. Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) and gold nanorods (AuNRs) were synthesized, and these nanostructures were incorporated into a metal substrate mediated by self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of 4-mercaptopyridine (4MPy), which allows the effective confinement and communication of the nanostructure, in addition to evaluating the anisotropic effect for the oxidation of neurotransmitters."
"Additionally, a shift of the peak oxidation potential of the neurotransmitters used took place depending on the nanostructure observed. Therefore, the oxidation potential of the neurotransmitter depends on the anisotropy of the nanostructure."
OK. So I downloaded and read through the paper from the Annals of Chemistry. That one unfortunately is behind a paywall, so you can't easily get to it without a university account (or paying a ridiculous sum of money). The other paper you mention from Nature is freely available, so everyone can read that one. But they are actually similar in content.
As I understand what they are doing, the only point of the gold in these papers is to be able to use Surface plasmon resonance (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface_plasmon_resonance) in order to detect specific neurotransmitters in a blood, urine or tissue sample. You basically use either gold foil (in the first paper) or gold nano rods (in the second paper) and then the neurotransmitters interact with that. In the first paper, they create gold nanoparticles that are detected directly in the plasma atop the gold foil. In the second paper, the neurotransmitters deposit a silver shell on top of the nanorods, and it is the silver which is detected, indirectly indicating the presence of the neurotransmitter.
In either case, the presence of either gold nanoparticles or a silver shell on the gold nanorods is used to infer the presence of neurotransmitter at that location. Using this system, scientists can very quickly determine the presence, concentration and distribution of a neurotransmitter that they are looking for in a sample.
You don't ever create gold nanorods. You supply gold nanorods (or gold foil) as the matrix on which to detect the neurotransmitters under study through SPR. SPR is a much faster technique than the traditional methods used to quantify these agents.
So the TL;DR is that these papers are talking about a way to identify neurotransmitters in samples. In the process, they destroy delicate gold structures on the sensor, which must then be recycled and reprocessed. They don't create the gold rods/film. They destroy them.
"The growth of gold nanoparticles through the oxidation of catecholamine neurotransmitters, as active reducing agents, has been previously reported18. As a result of gold nanoparticle’s growth, the alteration of the absorption spectra as well as the color change in gold nanoparticle solution can be clearly observed." - https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-08704-5
Says right there, they are growing gold nanoparticles through the process.
You're right, they do destroy the rods/film but what is left is a complex structure that cannot be made otherwise.
That's probably a stretch.
True. You might be able to harvest gold nanoparticles. (Not gold rods though.) But if all you want is random gold nanoparticles from a gold foil, you can do it in much easier and cheaper ways than this, and on an industrial scale. This is an expensive scientific setup designed to detect the presence and concentration of neurotransmitters. The complex structure that is left is only useful for detecting the presence in the sample under study.
This is a scientific apparatus whose function is neurotransmitter detection.
Try as I might, I'm pretty sure I'm not gonna find a study that states "Adrenocrhome production using gold nanorods allows us to make gold nanostructures for use in life-extending serums and nanomachines."
This is the most relative study I've found that even hints at that being a possibility.
Of course it is a stretch. But it says right there that you can make complex gold structures by injecting gold nanorods into the adrenaline oxidation process. It doesn't elaborate what structures result, but that they do make distinct structures with different properties based on the neurotransmitter that was oxidized.
If it is true this has been possible since ancient times, this study is likely just rediscovering old, hidden knowledge that has always been known but they found it in a lab while pursuing a different goal. Basically, they found the old kept truth the long-way around and by accident.
Chemist here. They are definitely not talking about creating gold from other elements or compounds. This is existing gold being transformed into a different physical form, in this case rod shapes that function in some different way than another physical form. that is honestly all that is happening here
Yes, I'm not saying they are making gold from lead or anything.
They are refining it for other purposes, into new structures to act as scaffolding for more sinister projects.
The golden goose meets full Metal alchemist? Interesting and dark theory. I have heard gold and blood and how it congregates after you eat it is a popular thing for the demons. Adds to the plausibility of this theory, to me.
Golden kids https://archive.vn/uCelK
Wow. :oI
:::Dr. Who music::: great research and findings
Sleepy, That’s some thick science there. Explain it like I’m 5 please. So the thing that caught my attention was “oxidation of the neurotransmitters “, doesn’t that fuck up brain activity?
Neurotransmitters include Epinephrine(Adrenaline), Norepinephrine, and Dopamine.
When Adrenaline is oxidized, it becomes Adrenochrome.
These articles suggest not only does gold (nanorods) INCREASE the efficacy of oxidation, but creates special gold nanosctructures!
So, simply put, gold in people's systems increases adrenochrome output and creates monoatomic gold structures for use in a life-extending serum with the potential to unlock NANOMACHINES, son!
great thread,
are nanomachines a positive thing?
Yes and no.
How might you control such a thing? How easy would it be to program them to deconstruct all organic life?
Sure, they might be the cure for cancer or maybe even allow immortality, but if they also fall in to the wrong hands they could wreak untold havoc on life as we know it.
In this case, we definitely don't want nanomachines to fall into the wrong hands, so it is scary they might be as close as they are to getting them fired up. Who knows, 5G might be what is necessary to interface and signal nanomachines we already have inside us. Not saying that is true, but it isn't outside the realm of possibility which is scary as hell.
thanks for the reply:) and this comment says it all----
-'we already have inside us'-
scary, but fits right in this messed up world, and explains their obsession with gold.
Reminds me of the plot of a tv show “rEvolution.”
Thanks Papa Sleepy! So, bear with me, the people who drink colloidal silver.... will people start ingesting gold? Is it forced into children for a higher adrenochrome output to harvest? Sounds crazy, but that’s where we’re at. Thoughts?
Why are Haitian children in high demand?
https://qanon.pub/?q=%5B%20#866
https://globalriskinsights.com/2016/01/haitis-gold-problem-gri/#:~:text=Haiti%20is%20the%20poorest%20country,the%20North%20of%20the%20country.
Tons of gold particulate in the soil?
Why do we have so much gold in our poo?
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-32026636
Who put it there? Why so much in developed countries?
Also, you answered my internal question of the Haitian children....they aren’t the most beautiful physically, but rich in A....and easier to make disappear without too much fuss. I can’t wait for this to blow wide open! Thanks Sleepy!
Watched a gold searching documentary, they find the particulates in the leaves of the eucalyptus trees in Australia. Not enough to harvest, but then they mine the area below and around.
They sell colloidal gold (and copper) as well. I’ve bought it in the past. The colloidal gold is good for the brain and neurons.
I wonder if it helps against autism? There are individual cases from the 70s if I remember correctly, where a doctor tried colloidal gold on an older patient with arthritis and autism with pretty good results. I cannot find now the article, but it should be looked into.
Yes I read it helps with the “connectors”. Like the neurons.
Maybe this is farfetched, but whatever they have in vaccines (mercury, fetus tissue cells, heavy metals etc) that might cause neurological disorders like autism/asperger is getting reversed with colloidal gold? I hope a cure is out there.
Ok....far fetched here...but I’ve followed a guy on you tube who claims that mountains and such are fossils of giants, and gold can be found where their blood was. Especially inside caves and caverns. He always says if you’re looking for gold search out the fossilized giants. The blood turns into gold.
veins of gold
To add to this theory, what if people having severe reactions to the vaccine are alergic to gold?!?!?
I don't think you can be allergic to gold. Our Anunaki creators made sure of that, can't have us golddigger slaves getting sick. ;D
People can get gold allergies. It mostly appears as rashes.
I thought gold doesn't react with anything. That's why there are gold teeth. I could be wrong, but I never heard of it before.
Reactions imply a molecular change. And that is true, gold doesn't like to react with much. It does like tickling sulfur, but has a hard time doing much else.
Instead, it makes alloys, amalgams, and bonds, which don't include a chemical reaction.
In this case, gold nanorods interface and act as a catalyst for the oxidation of adrenaline and the gold is restructured due to the reactions taking place around it.
Thanks for the update Sleepy, I'm watching and learning with great interest. Keep up the great research!
Interesting. Would this be akin to monoatomic gold
Yes, it is all connected.
ORMUS is a red-herring. Ignore the sources of it.
The Satanists may believe what ORMUS can do, but they know where the real stuff actually comes from, and it is not from distilled sea water.
No I was not.
I've been posting about this subject for about a month.
He may have grabbed my talking points or he could have gotten intel from others in the know.
Do you happen to have that podcast saved in your history? I'd like to figure out if he was going off my info or if there is another source I should be looking at.
If you haven't cleared your browser history, it will be in there unless you were surfing in a private window.
Cern makes gold/platinum as a "bye product".....
How would this fit in, if at all?
https://patentscope.wipo.int/search/en/detail.jsf?docId=WO2020060606&tab=PCTBIBLIO
I can't help but think we are going to be mined eventually.