The Great Pyramid, Electromagnetic Energy, and Why Shape Matters

The Great Pyramid, Electromagnetic Energy, and Why Shape Matters

What modern science is beginning to notice about ancient geometry

For thousands of years, pyramids have captured human imagination.

They have been seen as tombs, temples, monuments, power symbols, sacred structures, and geometric mysteries. Across the world, pyramid-shaped structures appear in different cultures, often connected with the sky, the earth, the stars, death, rebirth, and spiritual transformation.

But in recent years, a different question has begun to emerge:

Could the shape of a pyramid interact with electromagnetic energy in interesting ways?

This does not mean we should jump to wild claims or say that pyramids are magical machines. But it does mean the subject deserves careful attention, especially when modern physics begins exploring the relationship between geometry, resonance, and energy behaviour.

The Great Pyramid study

A study reported by Electro Optics explored how the Great Pyramid of Giza may interact with electromagnetic waves under certain resonance conditions.

According to the report, scientists from Laser Zentrum Hannover and ITMO University used numerical modelling and analytical physics methods to examine how the Great Pyramid could respond to electromagnetic waves of a proportional, resonant length.

Their calculations suggested that, under these specific resonance conditions, the pyramid could concentrate electromagnetic energy in its internal chambers and in the area beneath its base.

This is important because it gives us a scientific example of something many ancient-geometry researchers, pyramid enthusiasts, and energy workers have long suspected in different ways:

Shape matters.

Geometry matters.

Resonance matters.

What the study actually says

The study does not say that the Great Pyramid is "activated."

It does not prove that all pyramids around the world are connected.

It does not prove ancient power plants, hidden technology, or mystical energy systems.

What it does show is more grounded, but still fascinating.

The researchers modelled the Great Pyramid as a physical structure interacting with electromagnetic waves. They estimated that resonances could be induced by radio waves with wavelengths between 200 and 600 metres. They then calculated how the pyramid could scatter, absorb, and distribute electromagnetic energy under those conditions.

In simple terms, they asked:

What happens when electromagnetic waves interact with a pyramid shape under resonance?

The answer was that energy concentration appeared in specific areas of the model, including inside the pyramid and beneath its base.

That is not fantasy. That is physics modelling.

Why this matters for True Orgonite

At True Orgonite, we are interested in the meeting point between ancient wisdom, modern testing, handmade craftsmanship, and open-minded investigation.

Orgonite creators often work with shapes such as pyramids, cones, domes, spheres, towers, discs, and sacred geometry patterns. Many people are drawn to pyramid-shaped orgonite because of its symbolism, visual beauty, and long-standing association with energy focus.

This study does not prove orgonite claims directly.

But it does support a wider and very important idea:

Geometric form can influence how electromagnetic energy behaves under certain conditions.

That is a powerful starting point for discussion.

If a large limestone pyramid can be modelled as a resonant structure interacting with radio waves, it raises interesting questions about smaller handmade forms, material combinations, conductive particles, quartz, resin, metal shavings, coils, tensor tools, and other intentional designs.

Those questions should not be answered with blind belief.

They should be explored through observation, testing, documentation, and honest community discussion.

Pyramids, resonance, and material design

One of the most interesting parts of the research is that the scientists were not only studying the Great Pyramid for historical curiosity.

They were looking at how similar effects could be reproduced at the nanoscale.

The goal was to explore whether pyramid-shaped nanoparticles could be designed to interact with light and electromagnetic energy in useful ways, including possible applications in sensors and solar cells.

This is where ancient geometry and future technology begin to overlap.

The researchers were effectively saying:

If shape and material properties can influence electromagnetic behaviour at one scale, perhaps similar principles can be used at another scale.

This is a huge concept.

It means pyramid geometry is not only symbolic. It can also be studied as a functional form in physics, optics, photonics, and material science.

A careful bridge between science and energy work

For people in the orgonite community, this kind of research is exciting.

But it is important to handle it responsibly.

We should not claim that this study proves orgonite works.

We should not claim that all pyramids are energy generators.

We should not claim that ancient monuments have recently "switched on" unless there is real, measurable, independently verified evidence.

What we can say is this:

Modern science is showing that geometry can affect electromagnetic field behaviour under specific conditions.

That alone is worth paying attention to.

It gives us a grounded way to talk about why shape, structure, materials, and resonance may matter.

Knowledge over belief

True Orgonite was created around the idea of Knowledge Over Belief.

That means we can be open-minded without being careless.

We can respect ancient wisdom without exaggerating it.

We can explore energy concepts without pretending every claim is proven.

We can use modern tools, community testing, EMF meters, environmental observations, waveform analysis, blind trials, material documentation, and repeated experiments to build a clearer picture over time.

This is the road ahead.

Not blind belief.

Not instant dismissal.

Observation. Testing. Documentation. Collaboration.

What this means for the future

The Great Pyramid study gives us a useful reminder:

The world may still have much to learn from ancient forms.

Pyramids, sacred geometry, resonance, crystals, metals, and energy fields should not automatically be dismissed just because they are connected with ancient or alternative traditions.

At the same time, they should not be accepted without evidence.

The real work is in the middle.

That is where True Orgonite wants to stand.

Between ancient geometry and modern measurement.

Between handmade craftsmanship and scientific curiosity.

Between spiritual tradition and open investigation.

Between belief and knowledge.

Final thought

The Great Pyramid has stood for thousands of years, and we are still asking questions about it.

Perhaps that is the real lesson.

Some structures are not only monuments of the past. They are invitations to keep learning.

At True Orgonite, we believe the future of this subject lies in collaboration — creators, researchers, testers, customers, and curious minds working together to document, question, and understand more.

The pyramid shape has always pointed upward.

Maybe now it is pointing us toward better questions.

True Orgonite
Knowledge Over Belief

1 comentario

Scientists from the Laser Zentrum Hannover (LZH) and Russia’s ITMO University international research group have found that under resonance conditions, the Great Pyramid of Giza can concentrate electromagnetic energy both in its internal chambers and the area located under its base. The research group plans to apply these findings to design nanoparticles capable of reproducing similar effects in the optical range. Such nanoparticles may be used to develop sensors and highly efficient solar cells. The study has been published in the Journal of Applied Physics. https://www.electrooptics.com/news/great-pyramid-giza-can-focus-electromagnetic-energy-study-shows-which-could-enable-new-sensors?utm_source=chatgpt.com

Gordon

Dejar un comentario

Ten en cuenta que los comentarios deben aprobarse antes de que se publiquen.