My friend who makes this glowing substance lives in Mexico. He claims a long lineage of people have been making this glowing white 'mercury' because it's used to dissolve other metals, like gold, down into a very special form that is used for things I'd rather not even mention here because nobody would believe me.
I myself have achieved such miracles with gold and other metals, and turned them into medicines which cure every disease known to man, and far greater wonders. But the way in which I do my work is very long and not so easy. So my friend from Mexico who claims to be part of some "Order" or "secret society" has given me this riddle to figure out, and he assures me that if I'm able to produce this glowing white mercury, it will make the medicine from metals with extreme efficiency and do more than I ever thought possible.
Now once again, my friend has never lied to me, and figuring out his riddles has always proved to be greatly rewarding, but I think this time he is somewhat confused as to exactly what this is, and why it glows.
He has the theory that it is the allotropes of the nitre column on the periodic table which are so special. But I think either his theory is completely wrong, or maybe he is using the white allotrope of phosphor to make this sublimating mercury? He describes the process of making it so cryptically, I can't understand what he's referring to when he explains which metals must be used in the process. He talks about the son the of moon, and sister of saturn, and things like that. But I haven't been able to find any correlations with old Greek or Roman mythology on the planets.
All I know is that silver = moon, tin = Jupiter, lead = Saturn, antimony = Earth, gold = Sun, copper = Venus, and mercury = Mercury. Those are the 7 basic metals of mythological stories, because those are the only planets they knew existed.
So I assume when he says the "son" or "the daugheter" of a planet, he is reffering to the elements beside them on the periodic table, but that still gets me nowhere.
It's very hard to imagine modern science would not know about certain glowing compounds, but I myself am able to turn silver into a white glowing compound that is non-radioactive, and gold into an orange glowing compound that is non-radioactive.
So this photo of his glowing white 'mercury' does not surprise me one bit. I know very well such things exist in science which modern chemists are oblivious to.
But I can't stand not knowing what he did to make his glowing white mercury which sublimes at such low temperature in the sun. And I don't think white phosphorus even dissolves gold, does it?