Hey, Spidey. I'm an engineer and my understan
Post# of 11802
I'm an engineer and my understanding from what I have seen in the data DECN has released is that the way the Genviro works is to apply a voltage that looks like the alternating current in your wall socket 120V AC circuit except a lot faster and a lot lower voltage and measure the response. See the plots in this press release:
GenViro! response plots
The plot on the right is the magnitude of the voltage (the 120 part of the voltage). The units are not given but I'd guess it is something like volts/meter across the nano gap in the strip. Note that it doesn't change very much (flat) for the input frequencies from 50,000 Hz (cycles per second) to 200,000 Hz.
The AC (alternating current) part of the measurement shown on the left side is the impedance which is the amount of delay the voltage experiences due to the presence of the CV19. As you can see, there is a big change (hump) at 150,000 Hz. Previous press releases have pointed out that each virus has its own unique weight and electrical characteristics so if the hump occurs somewhere else or not at all it tells you that you don't have CV19. If your hump matches then, congratulations, you will now be shunned until the hump goes away. Thus the importance of being able to test repeatedly and at your convenience without waiting hours or days or weeks for the result.
The big data dump we got a while back I think was an investigation of which metal and gap size produced the same results whether it was new blood or lysed (damaged, like frozen) blood. From what I could tell a larger gap with platinum contacts produced essentially the same curve with or without fresh blood. The great innovation since then is the discovery that this works even better with saliva because the little corpuscles don't interfere.
The importance of what KB, Dr. Musho and DECN (but I repeat myself) have invented can't be overstated. This is a spectacular new capability that (with small changes to voltage, frequency, and software) will allow any new pathogen to be detected quickly by amateurs in the field to stop contagions before they can even get a foot hold.
Every second that the FDA delays this technology is costing lives out there. I hope this resolves soon.