Can our DNA shape the invisible world around us?
In the mid-1990s, Russian researchers Dr Vladimir Poponin and Dr Peter Gariaev conducted a ground breaking experiment, one that quietly challenged the very boundaries of conventional science. Their goal? To observe how DNA interacts with light, or more specifically, with photons, the smallest measurable units of light, the very building blocks of our visible universe. To begin, the scientists created a vacuum inside a specially designed tube, removing all air to form what is traditionally considered “empty space.” Yet, even in this engineered void, photons remained scattered randomly, just as expected. This served as their control: a baseline of disordered particles floating without form.
But what happened next stunned everyone involved.
When a sample of human DNA was introduced into the vacuum, the photons, previously chaotic, began to arrange themselves into ordered patterns, almost as if being guided by an invisible force. It appeared the DNA was exerting a direct influence over light, shaping the quantum field itself.
Even more astonishing? When the DNA was removed, the photons remained in formation, as if the energy of the DNA had somehow left an imprint behind. A ghost. A phantom.
This became known as the Phantom DNA Effect, a phenomenon that defies explanation within the limits of classical physics. It suggests that DNA does not merely reside within the body, but may interact with and influence the energy field around us.
For centuries, spiritual traditions have spoken of an unseen web of connection, an energetic field that links us to each other and to the universe. This experiment may well provide a scientific glimpse into that very mystery.
The implications are vast. If our very cells can influence the fabric of reality, what else might we be capable of? The Phantom DNA Effect invites us to consider: we are not separate from the world around us, we are active participants in shaping it.
Author: Izabela Strzelecka