Jiggling water - what do you think?
Please watch this short video and take a moment to give me your explanation of what is happening in this bucket of water.?We filled a 5-gallon bucket of water using a hose attached to our SpiroFlo nozzle. Nothing was added – no pump, no gases or chemicals and no electrical charge.???
After several minutes, the water in the bucket starts to jiggle – with the action most noticeable at the bottom of the container.?It is not wind (you can see the bucket is not completely full) or vibration and we have not used anything other than water in the bucket.
We are of course generating micro and nanobubbles within the vortical flow induced by our SpiroFlo tool.?We also know from our research that each water droplet and bubble within the flow is spinning and if discharged to atmosphere, the typical droplet size is much smaller.?
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However – in this case, we just filled the bucket with water.?As you watch this 42 second video, you will see a jiggling motion in the bottom of the water bucket.?This started 20-30 minutes after the bucket was filled with water.??From our analysis, the motion seems to follow a wave pattern which lasts several seconds.?The motion activity is also concentrated at the bottom of the bucket.
Theories that have been shared range from either very iron rich water which is agitated by the increased oxygenation (one bucket was from Florida) to excess chlorine gas in the water.?One person even suggested it is the sine wave of the earth resonating through the bucket.
Another thought discussed is the vortical action created by the tool may be changing the size of the water clusters (hydrogen atoms bond with each other in small groups called a molecular cluster) – and the motion we are seeing reflects the clusters recombining.?Since there are a reported 1.5 sextillion molecules in a single drop of water, that would be quite a change.
Most water engineers I have discussed this with are ambivalent but can offer nothing other than “Bernoulli”.?A famous water scientist from the UK has the most interesting theory – that we might be separating light and heavy water (which fits with the water cluster conjecture).
I would love to hear your explanation.?