mom® devices are scalar wave generators that transform harmful emissions into beneficial waves. What technology are they based on?

In this article, the Espace mom team will explain the principle of the Faraday cage, which is at the heart of our devices.

1. What exactly is a Faraday cage?

The Faraday cage is used in cars, aeroplanes and in the manufacturing process of many household appliances, such as microwaves, and even in computers. This metal structure is impervious to electric or electromagnetic fields, and is used in many areas of everyday life. How does it work exactly? It prevents waves from leaving and re-entering the cage, thus protecting what is inside and outside. In the case of a microwave, it retains the waves within the structure, thus avoiding disruption of electrical signals and reducing exposure to these waves. For cars and planes, it protects against lightning. In a computer, it repels external fields to keep internal components from short-circuiting. When you have an MRI scan, the Faraday cage ensures the accuracy of the readings by isolating the room in which the machine is located, blocking external waves so they do not interfere with those emitted by the machine. It therefore makes sense that people with electromagnetic hypersensitivity (EHS) often live in a home equipped with a Faraday cage to protect themselves from electromagnetic waves. However they might not suspect that this solution can also turn against them…

2. A double-edged sword

Michael Faraday, a British physicist and chemist working on conductors, discovered the Faraday cage and gave it his name. Here’s the idea: a conductive metal, usually aluminium, maintains a fixed potential when connected to earth. The electrons in the metal then cancel out the external electrical charges. To put it simply: when an electric charge hits a grounded metal enclosure, it cannot pass through it. For electromagnetic waves, the principle is different: they are blocked even if the cage is not connected to the ground. This makes the Faraday cage an amazing invention for protecting against harmful waves. But its effectiveness can also be turned against it… and consequently against us. A room or a house equipped with a Faraday cage does indeed protect its occupants from harmful external waves, but it also prevents the waves generated inside from escaping. And this is not without health implications. For instance when you use electrical appliances inside the cage, the waves they emit can’t escape and you end up being directly exposed to these negative fields.

Learn more about scalar waves

3. Scalar waves to counteract the negative effect of the Faraday cage

Scalar waves – discovered by Nikola Tesla, an American engineer and inventor of Serbian origin (1856-1943) – are similar to Faraday cages in the way they can be used to protect against electromagnetic fields. The big difference is that they not only neutralise negative waves by constraining them in a specific place, just like a Faraday cage, but they also transform them into beneficial waves, thanks to their penetrating properties and their ability to reverse polarity. By generating these quantum waves, mom® solutions not only behave as a protective shield against electric and electromagnetic fields in general, but also act against those fields held in Faraday cages that can turn against us. mom® pendants, such as the mom® environmental corrector, are among the most suitable solutions to protect against this double-sided effect of the Faraday cage.

To expand on this topic, see our articles on public transport and electric cars.

Your Espace mom® team