Gerald H. Pollack: Weather & EZ Water | EU2017

The re-release of Jerry Pollack’s EU2017 Conference presentation. Weather is a phenomenon centered on water and influenced by electrical charge.

Among atmospheric scientists, two central features of weather dynamics remain mechanistically uncertain—evaporation and cloud formation. Absent proper understanding, predicting weather patterns remains challenging.

Why can clouds suspend themselves above the earth? From the weight of the constituent water droplets, the force of gravitation should pull clouds downward, but commonly it doesn’t—clouds float. And why do dark clouds sometimes release their contents as rain, and other times not?

Dr. Pollack’s research on EZ Water (EZ=Exclusion Zone as a fourth-phase of water) is unique from the three classical phases of water: Solid, Liquid, Vapor. He offers a fresh overview of possible mechanisms of weather, including hurricanes and tornadoes, that observe electrical charge playing a central role.

Professor of Bioengineering at the University of Washington, Gerald H. Pollack, PhD, is an international leader in the field of water research. He received his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania in 1968.

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