dave_a_mbs
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central california
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Hio Marilyn-
The numbers come from an experiment in which 8 people were weighed as they died, and they lost an inexplicable 2.8 oz weight (my memory is a bit off, and I forget who did it and I might be off a tad on the precise weight).
The amount of change is interesting. Let's assume I'm close. The fraction of a hydrogen atom that is due to electrons is roughly 1/1860 of the proton weight. A body is about 90% water, of which hydrogen is roughly 2/3 of the volume and 1/8 of the mass. For a 200 lb person that gives 25 lb hydrogen and 175 lb oxygen (very roughly).
This is all helld together by ionic gels, the same ones as make mucous and slime. These gels are influcenced by what we do etc, as they also hold us in shape, operate our muscles, assure muscular tension is maintained, and generally circulate their influences dynamically so that we have a perpetual electrical field (actually ions) flowing through us. (For example, Ca++ ions carry axonal charges through the nervous system, and have 2e- compensatory electronic charges sucked out of their medium.)
Let's assume that they operate by shared-electron bonding (hydrogen bonding) with the water molecules. Then we have 1 extra electrons per hydrogen, and 2 extra electrons per oxygen. The electrons due to hydrogen would then weigh 1x25x(1/1860)x16 oz, or 0.2150 oz. And the electrons due to oxygen would weigh 2x175x(1/1860)x16 oz, or 3.01 oz. That gives 3.23 ounces of electrons involved in bonding in dynamic flux of ions and stuff like that. ("Stuff like that" is a technical term for things of which I know very little, and saves me from admitting that I'm becoming very speculative.)
Now let's sacrifice the test subject (that's what they call it when it's a rat or a dog, why should we people be different?) and we find that at the time of death, when ionic circulation ceases, we have a looss of roughly the same weight as the weight of electrons in circulation would suggest.
I find this Fascinating! Actually, I'd like DocM's input here to see if my crude figures might be improved.
Back to work - dave
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