I practiced picking up my target molecule by looking for the three-phase harmonic pattern that identified the silly canopy over the Seven. This gave the molecule an off kilter center of mass, and that made it rotate funny. The long end whipping around and the canopy holding close to the center of rotation. I am glad I'm not orbiting the One at the end of that swinging chain.
The tri-phasic note had a nice component that was nearly three times the frequency of a natural bond. This frequency, was not always at precisely triple, and wavered as the molecule rotated, but had nice peaks at the triple point, where it often stayed in resonance. It was the presence of this other, higher frequency, that made locking on to these molecules very easy.
I took a sweep around at low resolution, just looking for the primary fundamental, finding nice peeks everywhere. A large concentration was visible through the portals in the pathway, and it was into these that I focused my scan and began a sweep for the range of triple frequencies. I quickly discovered that I did not need the tight beam to detect that frequency. The normal scan worked to confirm, and all I had to do was pick an interesting variant of the expected frequency and focus on a particular molecule in the cloud of them. Yes, these looked to be the functional counterparts to the nearly symmetrical linear chain of seven Sixes that I blindly took advantage of in the past. Now, all I had to to was get into their midst.
February 9, 2010
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