did I tell you before about the periodic table 1 to 53 53 is iodine why the hell would nature use a group seven halogen because it's atomic mass is so big it needs its electrons but it brings protons closer together it allows us to proton tunnel and what are we we other mammal that has the most massive Ferrari engine in our head and it turns out iodine is really important I always tell people what the the thyroid is you make thyroid hormone in case you don't know T3
- Concept
- periodic table
- Score
- 5 · always · because
- Status
- candidate — not yet promoted to canon
Corpus evidence — top 10 passages
Most-relevant passages from the entire indexed corpus (67,286 paragraph chunks across YouTube transcripts, PubMed, arXiv, archive.org, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, OpenAlex, and more) ranked by semantic similarity (bge-small-en-v1.5).
- 01 · yt0.780
Anything that has a higher atomic atomic mass, tends not to stick around too long. Why? Because it has actually less energy per unit density in it. So when you think about hydrogen, which is the lightest element on the periodic table, H+ is is atomic mass number one or or the first element on the table. Well, dutyium um and what just so people understand, hydrogen is a proton with an electron. That's all it is. Okay, dutyium is a proton plus a neutron plus an electron. So what does that mean? It has double the atomic mass of regular hydrogen. So that means it's twice as heavy. Okay, that is a …
yt/MSJk1RDH7Aw-uc-327-water-light-and-magnetism-for-health-with-dr-jack-kru/transcript.txt
- 02 · _intake0.777
Hydrogen is a chemists conundrum, a biologists enigma, and physicists dream because it can lose or gain this single electron. I have always been of the belief that hydrogen did not really belong to any group in the periodic table based upon this ability. After many thoughts on this topic, I realized under some environments it can be placed into group 7 or group one in the periodic table. All known elements of group 7 are halogens. The group 1 elements compromise the alkali metals. Hydrogen is often placed in group one of the periodic table by convention due to its electron configuration, but i…
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/tensegrity-6-hydrogen-bonding-networks-water.md
- 03 · _intake0.776
Hydrogen is the **rogue element in the periodic table** that breaks all the rules we expect, and this is why life uses it in her designs. When a hydrogen bond forms between two water molecules, the redistribution of electrons changes the ability for further hydrogen bonding. In this sense, a hydrogen bond can be electrostatic. Hydrogen bonds, however, can become covalent as well. Iodine’s addition to hydrogen favors the formation of covalent bonding in water. This is a fancy way of saying hydrogen makes other atoms do things they normally might not want to do. **Hydrogen’s will is strong becau…
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/tensegrity-6-hydrogen-bonding-networks-water.md
- 04 · blog0.776
They chose to order elements by atomic number because of the growing recognition that electronic structure was the atomic feature responsible for governing how atoms combine and the number of electrons is governed by the requirement of overall electrical neutrality (Kragh 2000). 1.4 Complications for the Periodic System Mendeleev’s periodic system was briefly called into question with the discovery of the inert gas argon in 1894, which had to be placed outside the existing system after chlorine. But William Ramsay (1852–1916) suspected there might be a whole group of chemically inert substance…
blog/plato-stanford-edu/philosophy-of-chemistry.md
- 05 · yt0.773
I'm Luke Storey. For the past 22 years, I've been relentlessly committed to my deepest passion, designing the ultimate lifestyle based on the most powerful principles of spirituality, health, psychology, and personal development. The Lifestyle is podcast is a show dedicated to sharing my discoveries and the experts behind them with you. Here we go again, Robert Slovak deep dive. Deep dive. Oh man, I'm so glad we get to have this conversation. So let's just dive right in. For those that don't know, Robert was on a previous episode also recorded here at lovely quick small in Mexico where we talk…
yt/wCEztiKMXx0-badass-biohacks-deuterium-depleted-water-molecular-hydrogen-/transcript.txt
- 06 · _intake0.771
Iodine is loaded in seafood and found in the marine food chain, not the land based one. That does not sit well with the tribes current stance. You must know this and change your stance regardless of what they continue to tell you. Read the works of the researchers I am quoting in this series. These principles are well studied and well established. They are just ***not well known** *in our paleo tribe. Humans did not evolve from a land based food chain, as many still believe in blogospshere. This belief is why they are not aware of how critical iodine is to human biochemistry. That meme is big …
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/brain-gut-12-dare-to-disagree.md
- 07 · yt0.763
Every aromatic amino acid that's used in plants and us also has an absorption spectrum that goes below 250. Want to hear something even crazier? Plants and us use cholesterol. Do you know that cholesterol also has an absorption spectrum there? So what am I trying to tell you? I'm telling you because you and Joe look this way, not back. You don't realize that all the base chemicals that are based in plants and us have an evolutionary history that goes back before the ozone layer. So guess what happened to life? When the ozone layer comes up in the GOE, all of a sudden life's got a huge energy p…
yt/usB5IKPK04E-dr-jack-kruse-unfiltered-the-full-1-hour-interview-they-don-/transcript.txt
- 08 · yt0.763
And those variations we call isotopes. I think a lot of people have heard that. It's used in medicine and so on. But hydrogen happens to have three isotopes. One is the regular hydrogen we'll call it. That's just a proton and an and an electron. The simplest element that was created. And then another isotope the second isotope is heavier because it has taken on a neutron into its nucleus. So you have a proton, a neutron, and an electron. And that's called deuterium. And it was created at the very beginning also. The neutron really liked playing in the sandbox with the proton. And then there is…
yt/wCEztiKMXx0-badass-biohacks-deuterium-depleted-water-molecular-hydrogen-/transcript.txt
- 09 · yt0.755
But you know what you don't know about aromatic amino acids? They all absorb UV light. Did you know that? Well, I didn't 12 years ago. But the key thing is the eye is loaded with these amino acids specifically. So that raised a question. Why is this? Well, I found out from physics that a benzene ring, which is in every single aromatic amino acid, is a photon trap. And they absorb all frequencies of UV light. So, guess what that means? That 250 to 380 is absorbed by this. That's the reason why we don't see it because it's designed to do something different. Okay? And here's the key. every singl…
yt/zGAACx89jMU-dr-jack-kruse-nourish-vermont-2017-on-circadian-biology-and-/transcript.txt
- 10 · yt0.754
The atomic recycling is important because there's key nutrients that are important for chlorophyll for growth uh for plant life. And every plant has a different how shall we say atomic need. Okay. The bottom line is the energy source has always been present. It's always been the sun. Now the energy source for plants also changed just like it changed for life. When the ozone layer comes to be all of a sudden everything changes. Why? Because when ozone comes what does it do? It blocks a big part of the electromagnetic frequency comes in. Now you know today modern life it's visible spectrum 250 t…
yt/usB5IKPK04E-dr-jack-kruse-unfiltered-the-full-1-hour-interview-they-don-/transcript.txt
Curation checklist
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