New research suggests water remembers what has been dissolved in it, even
after dilution beyond the point where no molecule of the original substances
could remain. Dr. Mae-Wan Ho reports.
For more than a century, practitioners of homeopathy have used highly diluted
solutions of medicinal substances to treat diseases. Some substances are
diluted way beyond the point at which no trace of the original substances could
remain. It is as though the water has retained memory of the departed
molecules. This has aroused a great deal of scepticism within the conventional
medical and scientific community. To this day, ‘homeopathic’ is used as a term
of derision, to indicate something imagined that has no reality.
But a series of recent discoveries in the conventional scientific community
is making people think again.
First, there were the South Korean chemists who discovered two years ago
that molecules dissolved in water clump together as they get more diluted (see SiS 15), which was
totally unexpected; and further more, the size of the clumps depends on the
history of dilution, making a mockery of the ‘laws of chemistry’.
Now, physicist Louis Rey in
In this technique, the material is ‘activated’ by irradiation at low
temperature, with UV, X-rays, electron beams, or other high-energy sub-atomic
particles. This causes electrons to come loose from the atoms and molecules,
creating ‘electron-hole pairs’ that become separated and trapped at different
energy levels.
Then, when the irradiated material is warmed up, it releases the absorbed
energy and the trapped electrons and holes come together and recombine. This
causes the release of a characteristic glow of light, peaking at different
temperatures depending on the magnitude of the separation between electron and
hole.
As a general rule, the phenomenon is observed in crystals with an ordered
arrangement of atoms and molecules, but it is also seen in disordered materials
such as glasses. In this mechanism, imperfections in the atomic/molecular
lattice are considered to be the sites at which luminescence appears.
Rey decided to use the technique to investigate water, starting with heavy
water or deuterium oxide that’s been frozen into ice at a temperature of 77K.
The absolute temperature scale (degree K, after Lord Kelvin) is used in
science. (The zero degree K is equivalent to –273 C, and deuterium is an
isotope of hydrogen which is twice as heavy as hydrogen).
As the ice warms up, a first peak of luminescence appears near 120K, and a
second peak near 166 K. Heavy water gives a much stronger signal than water. In
both cases, samples that were not irradiated gave no signals at all.
For both water and heavy water, the relative intensity of the thermoluminescence
depends on the irradiation dose. There has been a suggestion that peak 2 comes
from the hydrogen-bonded network within ice, whereas peak 1 comes from the
individual molecules. This was confirmed by looking at a totally different
material that is known to present strong hydrogen bonds, which showed a similar
glow in the peak 2 region, but nothing in peak 1.
Rey then investigated what would happen when he dissolved some chemicals in
the water and diluted it in steps of one hundred fold with vigorous stirring
(as in the preparation of homeopathic remedies), until he reached a
concentration of 10 to the power -30 g per centilitre, and compare that to the
control that has not had any chemical dissolved in it and diluted in the same
way.
The samples were frozen and activated with irradiation as usual.
Much to his surprise, when lithium chloride, LiCl, a chemical that would be
expected to break hydrogen bonds between water molecules was added, and then
diluted away, the thermoluminescent glow became reduced, but the reduction of
peak 2 was greater relative to peak 1. Sodium chloride, NaCl, had the same
effect albeit to a lesser degree.
It appears, therefore, that substances like LiCl and NaCl can modify the
hydrogen-bonded network of water, and that this modification remains even when
the molecules have been diluted away.
The fact that this ‘memory’ remains, in spite of, or because of vigorous
stirring or shaking at successive dilutions, indicates that the ‘memory’ is by
no means static, but depends on a dynamic process, perhaps a collective quantum
excitation of water molecules that has a high degree of stability (see
"The strangeness of water and homeopathic memory", SiS 15).