The Mysterious Journey of Souls After Death
The aura of individuals who took their own lives or died from excessive drinking grows stronger each night, as if their souls continue to suffer even after the body's demise.
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What exactly happens with the souls of the deceased? It's not completely clear. Perhaps that's why the esteemed Russian professor, Gennady Doltsov, decided to explore the subject scientifically. It's a study on the border of mysticism — that's how the project, now underway at the Institute of Precision Mechanics in St. Petersburg under the professor's guidance, can be described.
"Initially, we had no mystical aspirations, of course," says one of the team members, Dr. of Physics Konstantin Korotkov. "Our task was to develop equipment for early diagnosis of diseases using the human energy information field. But during the experiments, we stumbled upon staggering discoveries. The scientists decided to leverage a known physical phenomenon called the 'Kirlian effect'.
This involves an electromagnetic aura emitted by the human body. With special devices, this aura can reveal several components that describe the health of the body's organs. The scientists developed software to diagnose a person's health condition based on the quality, intensity, and external shape of the aura.
During the work, Professor Doltsov proposed checking how long this 'energy information field' takes to disappear after a person dies. The first experiment shocked the scientists: it turned out that it doesn't disappear completely. In the next phase, the scientists identified three different types of aura. The aura of elderly people who died naturally and painlessly weakened gradually over two days and then stabilized. Bodies of young people who died suddenly from accidents or murder exhibited a flickering glow: in the first hour after death, the aura strengthened and weakened in steep jumps, and after about 6 hours of 'fluttering', it stabilized.
The third group was comprised of bodies of people who died in severe physical or mental torment (including suicides). Here, the aura didn’t stabilize at all — at least for the first nine days after death — and it continuously changed, alternating in strength. Professor Doltsov also learned to differentiate the 'fluttering' of a suicide from that of someone killed by others.
This discovery allows criminologists to determine if a person committed suicide or was murdered, with the murderer staging the circumstances as a suicide. The research team also found that the aura of bodies grows stronger at night, but in different patterns. On the first night, the glow around all the bodies intensified, and on the second night — only for a few bodies from groups 1 and 2.
For suicides and those who died from excessive drinking, the aura grew stronger every night, as if the soul continued to torment even after the body's death. Now, scientists have begun researching each component of the aura of corpses. "The goal," says Dr. Konstantin Korotkov, "is to discover through physical and mathematical methods the essence of the human soul and investigate where exactly it disappears after death.