1. Luminescent beads are mainly made of minerals containing rare luminescent substances such as calcium difluoride and arsenic sulfide.
2. Night beads, known in ancient times as suizhu, hanging beads, hanging thorns, moon beads, etc., are formed from certain luminous substances in nature that have been accumulated in ores for dozens thousands of years. years. Stones containing these rare and luminous elements are processed and carved into what people call night beads, usually colored yellow-green, light blue, orange-red and other colors.
3. The luminous properties of luminous beads are generally weak during the day and strong at night. They are divided into animal and vegetable luminous pearls, mineral and precious luminous pearls, permanent luminous pearls, phosphorescent with long afterglownce. luminous beads, etc. Usually distributed among erupting volcanoes.
4. Geologists generally consider luminous beads to be fluorite. The reason is that fluorite is the only mineral that ancient people could mine that can emit light on its own after absorbing sunlight. Scientists have also discovered ores that can be made from diamond, each with their own characteristics but similar properties.
In nature, there are luminous substances and radioactive substances. If the fine particles of these substances enter the shell body and the shell body is stimulated by these foreign bodies, the nacre will collapse and settle to form a pearl. Wrap these foreign bodies and multiply them and grow layer by layer. Mother-of-pearl is a semi-transparent aragonite. Therefore, the luminescence phenomenonnce of the incoming substance can be dialyzed. This type of pearl is called night pearl.
In nature, there are many minerals and rocks capable of emitting light. For example, fluorite glows because arsenic sulfide is mixed with fluorite; diamonds shine because hydrocarbons are mixed with diamonds; apatite or phosphorite shines due to its components. They are "intensified" when exposed to sunlight during the day and release energy at night, transforming into beautiful blue flowers or blue light.
Radioactive substances are ubiquitous in nature, particularly in many minerals, which contain high levels of radioactive substances. If radioactive mineral particles enter the clam's body with the flow of water, they can form a luminous bead that emits new cold light.
The chances that luminous beadsnatural are produced in nature are extremely rare. Because the risk of these small particles with luminescent properties entering the clam body is very small, even if they enter, the night pearl cannot be formed in the clam body, and a small amount of pearls on the mantle must be secreted with the foreign bodies. the material entering the body of the clam. The cells have the basic conditions to form nighttime beads. The few luminous pearls that exist in the world have become priceless treasures and treasures of all things