Marcel Vogel

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Marcel Vogel

Born April 14, 1917(1917-04-14)
San Francisco, California
Died 1991
San Jose, California
Residence United States
Nationality American
Fields Chemistry
Physics
Institutions Vogel Luminescence
IBM
Known for Luminescence
Liquid crystal system
Magnetics
Religious stance New Age

Marcel Joseph Vogel (1917 - 1991) was a research scientist working at the IBM San Jose Almaden Research lab for some 27 years. He is sometimes referred to as Dr. Vogel, however he held an honorary doctoral degree, not an earned Ph.D. degree.

It is claimed that Vogel started his research into luminescence while he was still in teens. This research eventually led him to publish his thesis Luminescence in Liquids and Solids and Their Practical Application in collaboration with Chicago University's Dr. Peter Pringsheim in 1943.

Two years after the publication, Vogel incorporated his own company, called Vogel Luminescence, in San Francisco. For the next decade the firm developed a variety of new products: fluorescent crayons, tags for insecticides, a black light inspection kit to determine the secret trackways of rodents in cellars from their urine, and the psychedelic colors popular in "new age" posters. In 1957, Vogel Luminescence was sold to Ultra Violet Products and Vogel joined IBM as a full time research scientist.

He received numerous patents for his inventions. Among these was the magnetic coating for the 24” hard disc drive systems still in use. His areas of expertise, besides luminescence, were phosphor technology, magnetics and liquid crystal systems.

He also designed the vogel crystal which allegedly focuses "universal life force" by concentrating it to a higher level. Vogel crystals are cut to the exact angle of 51 degrees 51 minutes and 51 seconds or the exact angle of the Great Pyramid of Giza. The crystal is designed after the geometry of the Tree of Life symbol. Its design is said to have came to him in a dream.

It has been claimed that Vogel examined a metal triangle which was allegedly given to Billy Meier by extraterrestrials and marvelled at its unusual properties, however it is worthwhile to note that Vogel was a chemist rather than a metallurgist, and, according to the researcher Kal K. Korff, Vogel's analysis that the metal contained thulium turned out to be incorrect.

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Persondata
NAME Vogel, Marcel
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION American chemist, physicist
DATE OF BIRTH April 14, 1917
PLACE OF BIRTH San Francisco, California
DATE OF DEATH 1991
PLACE OF DEATH San Jose, California
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