Linear polarized light
Sir David Brewster
(11 December 1781 – 10 February 1868) was a British scientist, inventor, author, and academic administrator. In science he is principally remembered for his experimental work in physical optics, mostly concerned with the study of the polarization of light and including the discovery of Brewster's angle.
He studied the birefringence of crystals under compression and discovered photoelasticity, thereby creating the field of optical mineralogy. For this work, William Whewell dubbed him the "father of modern experimental optics" and "the Johannes Kepler of optics."
When diffuse light (emitted by a halogen bulb), collides/ interacts with the Brewster's optical unit, it reflects and becomes a Vertically Linearly Polarized Light (VLPL).
When such VLPL passes through the Hyperlight Optics®, it interacts with C60 (integrated in the optics), which twists at a near-inconceivable 18 billion times per second. C60 reflects from each other without friction (paramagnetic and diamagnetic properties). As a result of VLPL interactions with twisting C60, VLPL photons change their orientation: a. the 20 hexagons in C60 obtain the Faraday’s effect (the plane of photon polarization rotate in hexagons), and b. the 12 pentagons in C60 obtain the Fibonacci-sequential effect (the plane of photon polarization rotates and twists in all directions in pentagons). Thus, the photons’ electrical plane of polarization changes position step-by-step, from Vertically Linearly Polarized Light (VLPL) into Hyperpolarized Light that has circular left and right polarization and Linearly Vertical and Horizontal polarization (“sunflower photons pattern”). This unprecedented, perfectly-ordered Hyperpolarized Light, called Quantum Hyperlight, with its unique photon pattern, arranged by the Fibonacci Law, is the ideal energy-structure/symmetry that is fully compatible with our biostructures.
Shallow penetration through the skin - up to 3 mm.
Each wavelength contained in BIOPTRON® Hyperlight is absorbed by different biomolecules, cells and living tissues improving cell metabolism and triggering specific biological and cellular reactions. The induced biological response is called photo-biostimulation.
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