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The Absorption Exchanger: Planetary-Scale Environmental Restoration Through Frequency-Matched Molecular Conversion
Summary
This paper proposes a theoretical planetary-scale environmental restoration system called the Absorption Exchanger, which would use frequency-matched electromagnetic radiation to convert harmful substances into benign products. Among the proposed applications is the destruction of oceanic microplastics through resonant bond dissociation, though the system remains a conceptual engineering framework rather than a demonstrated technology.
This paper presents the applied engineering framework for the Absorption Exchanger — a proposed planetary-scale environmental restoration system based on the G/rho absorption engine. The system uses frequency-matched electromagnetic radiation to drive targeted molecular conversion, transforming harmful substances into benign or useful products. Specific applications include the conversion of atmospheric carbon dioxide into solid carbon and oxygen, the destruction of oceanic microplastics through resonant bond dissociation, the neutralization of PFAS forever chemicals by targeting their carbon-fluorine bonds at precise frequencies, and the remediation of contaminated soil and water systems. Each application derives its target frequencies directly from the molecular bond energies predicted by the Unified Light framework, making the Absorption Exchanger a direct technological consequence of the theoretical series. The paper includes engineering specifications, energy requirements, scaling calculations, and a phased deployment roadmap for global implementation. This is the practical purpose behind the theory — a gift to the planet, derived from the music of the engine. Companion paper in the Unified Light series. A gift to humanity.