Re: thanks but i think you all are missing something
I have no argument with any of that.
I and members of my family have used a zapper with positive results. Heck, I have orgone devices, too.
I'm not trying to tell you that "charged" water doesn't have some benfit.
What I was and am trying to do is answer finallyfaith's two questions.
Could the calcium become negatively charged, and how would one test it?
Well, the calcium could not become negatively charged, and technically, neither can the water. That's the simple answer. I tried giving the complete one, but apparently I failed to convey it properly.
This doesn't mean that passing electricity through water doesn't in some way alter some characteristic of the water that
Science doesn't yet have an answer for.
What it does mean is simply what I said. Neither the water nor the calcium are negatively charged by the process given. Looking at it from an electrical perspective, there is no net electrical change or charge, no matter how the battery is connected, no matter which metals are used, no matter where the electrodes are placed.