Study on Hair Follicle Electromagnetism as Proposed Mechanism for the Presence of Bipolar Electrical Charges Inherent in the Human Hair Shaft | Chapter 14 | Innovations in Science and Technology Vol. 7
A follicle implanted in the skin and a protruding shaft comprise human hair. It's been described as a miniorgan with its own cell divisions, metabolism, and ageing stages, eventually losing old hair and regrowing new hair from the same follicular tissue. Using improved magnetometers, the magnetic field formed by direct current (DC) in human hair follicles was discovered and introduced in 1980. A tabletop optical microscopy approach was created in 2015 and published in 2016, allowing the detection of hair follicles and shaft biolectromagnetic fields. A fresh human blood smear was also shown to reject many foreign elements, including a hair follicle, keratin flakes, and tiny iron filings. The bipolar electrical feature of the shaft is documented in qualitative photographs. This conclusion was drawn because blood tissue has a negative charge and is hence repellent to an equal charge; investigations confirm a positive (+) field as inducing coagulation. Experiments have regularly established that the shaft expresses a contralateral positive side that induces clots. Images of complicated networks indicative of blood coagulation are also used to demonstrate fibrin production. Finally, the genesis of hair shaft bipolarity is demonstrated as a result of a "gap" in the follicle biolectromagnetic fields that prevents energy from entirely engulfing the shaft.
Author(S) Details
Abrahám Embí Sorondo
13442 SW 102 Lane, Miami, Florida 33186, United States.
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