"The invisible space octaves beyond our range of present perception may be considered three and one half in number: if one considers 1) the last half of the ninth octave to be part of the first, invisible, space octaves, and 2) all of the third octave elements to be unknown, though only four elements are yet undiscovered. The last half of the ninth octave includes the elements tomion, alberton, blacton, and boston. The four yet keynote inert gas alphanon. See page 272. [The Secret of Light, page 292]
"The question has long been asked by research scientists why it is that the inert gases will not mix, or unite with "any of the other elements." The first answer is that the inert gases are not electrically divided and conditioned elements, as all of the others in the nine octaves are. The inert gases begin in the first octave as invisible white fluorescent light of zero motion. They end at the 9th cathode in the 9th octave, as visible white fluorescent light, which has reached a speed of nearly 186,400 miles per second. Fluorescent light is that light which begins in the undivided electric spectrum. It is the beginning and end of motion. All motion is either red or blue, according to its sex. The end of motion at the amplitude of the 9th octave means that the divided spectrum has been united as one colorless, sexless light which has been under such high compression that it has reached its limit of conditioning by motion and must be transformed from the white light of visible motion to the invisible white Light of Magnetic stillness. The fluorescent light is that ending of electric power to divide motion into pairs, and to condition the pairs with the opposing sex tensions of electrically divided spectrum opposites. The inert gases are not pairs. They are not divided. Division takes place by light projected from them, but that projected light of spectrum pairs is the basis of the electrochemical elements, which have great volume and density in comparison." [Atomic Suicide, page 261-262]
"The reverse condition takes place in the very short strings of the 8th and 9th octaves. These are so tightly tensed by maximum compression that they too cannot reach one common amplitude." [Atomic Suicide, page 264]
"In the 8th there are thirteen pairs, but in the 9th the number is unknown, and at least twenty-one on the red side. The blue side fails to provide balanced mates for the six of the transuranium series, so all motion disappears into zero at that 9th octave position." [Atomic Suicide, page 264]
See Also
1st octave
2nd octave
3rd octave
4th octave
5th octave
6th octave
7th octave
8th octave
9th octave
Figure 7B.10 - Russells Periodic Chart of the first four octaves of proto-matter
First Four Octaves - page 89
nine octave harp
nine octaves of tones
octaves of elements
Scale of the Forces in Octaves
The Russell Nine Octave Chart of the Elements
12.01 - Scale of Locked Potentials