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Learn More About
Our Super Structured
Mineralized Alkaline Water

SWITCH2o Story Video teaching you about our small water molecules, also called Structured Water. In addition to being Super Structured SWITCH2o also provide your cells with vital minerals and alkalines your body.

Dr. Adam Wexler

A very interesting video by Adam D. Wexler.

See with your own eyes how water has energy and how Adam makes water hang in the air in front of his audience as a magic trick. The water bridge is actually what is happening inside our bodies. There is a pathway, wherever you are, standing by the sea you are connected to all the water in the world. Our most abundant substance is connection.

We are meant to connect to each other as humans.
Water exists and behaves the way it does because of this connection that link water molecule to molecule.

Water shapes life.

Our bodies are borne of water. We are one with the material, all is connected to water.

In the future we will be able to program water to do what we want, the future is Nanotechnology water control that can share and prolong life.

 

Water is essential to life, to our health, and the stability of our world. Yet a complete scientific description of the material itself eludes us. Join physicist Dr. Adam D. Wexler in exploring how an unfamiliar phenomenon from the early industrial revolution is providing a new opportunity to understand water and life. Dr. Adam D. Wexler, originally from New York City, has been working in the field of water research since 2006 and began studying the floating water bridge in 2010. Originally trained as a botanist, and later working in healthcare he became curious about the physical link between water and life. Adam is currently the head of advanced microscopy and optical metrology as well as a member of the applied water physics group at Wetsus – European Center of Excellence for Sustainable Water Technology located in Leeuwarden, the Netherlands.

Dr. Gerald Pollack

Pollack received his PhD in biomedical engineering from the University of Pennsylvania in 1968. He then joined the University of Washington faculty and is now professor of Bioengineering. His interests have ranged broadly, from biological motion and cell biology to the interaction of biological surfaces with aqueous solutions. His 1990 book, Muscles and Molecules: Uncovering the Principles of Biological Motion, won an "Excellence Award" from the Society for Technical Communication; his more recent book, Cells, Gels and the Engines of Life, won that Society's "Distinguished Award." Pollack received an honorary doctorate in 2002 from Ural State University in Ekaterinburg, Russia, and was more recently named an Honorary Professor of the Russian Academy of Sciences. He received the Biomedical Engineering Society's Distinguished Lecturer Award in 2002. In 2008, he was the faculty member selected by the University of Washington faculty to receive their highest annual distinction: the Faculty Lecturer Award. Pollack is a Founding Fellow of the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering and a Fellow of both the American Heart Association and the Biomedical Engineering Society. He is also Founding Editor-in-Chief of the journal, WATER, and has recently received an NIH Transformative R01 Award. He was the 2012 recipient of the Prigogine Medal and in 2013 published his new book: The Fourth Phase of Water: Beyond Solid, Liquid, and Vapor.

Dr. Marcia Barbosa

Marcia Barbosa has a PhD in physics from Brazil’s Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, where she is now the director of its Physics Institute. She studies the complex structure of the water molecule, and has developed a series of models of its properties which may contribute to our understanding of how earthquakes occur, how proteins fold, and could play an important role in generating cleaner energy and treating diseases. She is actively involved in promoting Women in Physics and was named the 2013 L’Oreal-UNESCO for Women in Science Awards Laureate for Latin America.

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