NOVEL METHODS OF PASTEURIZATION ENABLING THE EFFECTIVE TOTAL INACTIVATION OF VIRAL AND BACTERIAL CONTAMINATION OF IN-SHELL CHICKEN EGGS THROUGH INACTIVATION LEVELS PREVIOUSLY UNACHIEVABLE WITHOUT LOSS OF RAW CHARACTERISTICS
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/104,374, filed Jan. 16, 2015. US Government official statistics confirm that chicken eggs for decades have been the leading cause of foodborne illnesses within the United States and consistently have referenced the frequency of In the late 1990's production of in-shell chicken eggs for consumer use approximated 3.0 billion dozen-table eggs and separately 1.0 billion dozen eggs were converted into various forms of liquid egg products. In a report produced by the United Egg Producers a statistic for the production of chicken eggs for the prior year was provided. That report stated that the combination of chicken eggs dedicated to liquid egg products together with chicken eggs dedicated for customary table egg uses in year 2014 totaled 7.260 billion dozen. In the late 1990's the Government reported that approximately 1.1 million illnesses stemmed from In or around 1990 the Government established that liquid egg product would require a 10-log level of inactivation of In 1997 the author of this patent approached the US-FDA to establish a As indicated approximately one-quarter of egg production in the late 1990's estimated to be 1.0 billion dozen was converted into liquid egg product and allowed to be pasteurized to a 4-log level of inactivation of Notably, the above-referenced US-FDA sponsored Rule specifically allowed known to be highly The above-referenced 5-log level of inactivation of liquid egg product as set by the US-FDA under the Rule of 2009 allows for co-mingling of so-identified to be highly Notably consumption of chicken eggs from 1990 through to the hereinbefore-referenced report from the United Egg Producers reciting production of chicken eggs for public consumption to be 7.260 billion dozen continues to be not only the single most cause of foodborne illnesses but also continues to use the source of illnesses to stem from 1 egg in 20,000 eggs as being Separate and apart from the reports for each year spanning over two decades that 1 egg in 20,000 eggs is Notably and significantly were only one of the two plus Grade B eggs allowed to be contained in each dozen so marked as Grade A or Grade AA of the statistical average of 20 dozen eggs consumed annually per person to cause an illness to each person in the United States consisting of 320.0 million persons at an average cost of $20,000. per illness as confirmed by Government reports on costs per illness for persons of ordinary health the resulting annual public costs would project to be in excess of $100.0 trillion separate and apart from the eggs otherwise actually of Grade A quality within the same dozens but otherwise containing Separate and apart from the statistics provided above regarding the undisclosed co-mingling of Grade B in-shell eggs with Grade A and Grade AA eggs this section addresses the use of a 5-log level of inactivation of Were the above-described potential savings to occur such would enable the funding of free health care for the total public. Since the National Debt and unfunded obligations would be retired within the equivalency of one year funding would be available not only to provide free healthcare to the total population but also public education programs, infrastructure of the country together with improvements and its maintenance, military preparedness together with improved veterans pensions and health programs along with research and development of other avoidable sources of contamination causing both human and wildlife health risks would become affordable at great benefits to all elements involved. In summary, the new art enables the total inactivation of contaminated chicken eggs containing either or both The background to the areas of new inventiveness claimed herein for the first time provides for the effective statistical inactivation of both viral strains and With regard to the current problems caused by For introduction purposes certain persistent issues involving failures in the oversight of chicken eggs produced which in the end can be traced back to having their root cause to be from overlapping jurisdictions between sub-agencies together with actual failures in the oversight performed by those agencies regarding their responsibilities to provide an end quality of safety of the subject in-shell chicken eggs together with an end quality of safety of liquid egg product which protects the public from avoidable illnesses. Separately, outside influences which include lobbyists contribute to the confusion already present between sub-agencies as to the authority each may have together with the results of overlapping jurisdictions and lack of clear and definitive identifications of areas of responsibility. As one illustration, in or around 1990 it was reported that approximately 1.1 million cases of illnesses caused by For clarity of understanding, the areas of responsibilities for oversight in 1997 the US-FDA had assumed jurisdiction of in-shell chicken egg pasteurization by virtue of the eggs through pasteurization becoming qualified to be a processed food. At that time the inventor of the claims provided herein approached the US-FDA with a request to establish a level of pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs which he believed could be accomplished through new methods invented by him. The US-FDA promptly advised that were That led to the filing of a patent by the inventor through counsel which was issued as the U.S. Pat. No. 5,843,505 on Dec. 1, 1998. The above-referenced 5-log level of inactivation of More recently two separate senior Government agencies commented upon both various questionable practices and misrepresentations publicized by subsidiary agencies of jurisdiction over in-shell chicken eggs and liquid egg products. Those agencies identified both misrepresentations in raw egg safety and misrepresentations in the quality of the end product provided by a 5-log level of pasteurization of both liquid egg products and in-shell eggs when such employed a 5-log inactivation protocol of Se. For clarity of understanding the scope of questionable activities by agencies of jurisdiction certain examples are recited: 1. In a report authored by the USDA Office of Inspector General reference is made to the US-FSIS Risk Assessment dated October 2005 within which the US-FSIS reported victory over Notably: The USDA Office of Inspector General in its report dated November 2012 discredited the mentioned statistic of the US-FSIS and reconfirmed the statistic of 1 egg in 20,000 in-shell chicken eggs as being The US-FSIS is an agency within the USDA. The USDA Office of Inspector General, subsequent to the US-FSIS report, discredited that report and ruled that 1 contaminated egg in 20,000 eggs remained to be the accurate determination of As one illustration, the USDA recites claims by liquid egg product producers that not one illness had been traced back to The inactivation of viruses automatically inactivates all bacteria that may be present. Under the new protocol contained within the new art for pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs, the achievement of 10 or more logs as measured by viruses is made available without damage to the raw characteristics of the subject in-shell chicken eggs. The new science contains protocols that are employed in a novel manner which when employed in the specific sequence as prescribed creates a unique art form for pasteurization resulting from the conversion of those original findings into protocols which preserve the raw characteristics of the subject chicken eggs while at the same time providing for the inactivation of the targeted pathogens which eliminate their risks to public health and allows for safe consumption even when the subject eggs are contained within all forms of preparation including less than hard-cooked or even raw. Notably, the new art substantially eliminates the threats to public health as found under all prior art on the subject of chicken egg pasteurization as currently employed in the United States. The current protocols employed for pasteurization of either in-shell chicken eggs or liquid products rely upon materially less than a 10-log level of inactivation of The protocol employed under the new art replaces a reliance upon less than clinically proven protocols claiming safety of chicken eggs pasteurized to levels as measured in logs which demonstratably are inadequate to provide permanent levels of As a separate area of new inventiveness contained herein, a secured environment is provided for the subject in-shell chicken eggs to receive pasteurization which enables their statistically total inactivation of targeted pathogens. The mentioned secured environment is provided by a medium whose unique features eliminate risk from residual contamination caused by the presence of contaminants residing within the pasteurization medium or within or upon the subject eggs surviving the pasteurization protocol employed as was and continues to be experienced under prior arts for pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs. The new art eliminates the potential for residual contamination as well as recontamination through multiple features described in greater detail elsewhere herein under the section entitled ‘Detailed Description of the Invention’. The new art as reported and described herein consists of two primary areas of inventiveness, which when employed in tandem, provide for new and unique levels of pasteurization of targeted pathogens, which include either or both viruses and The first of the primary areas of inventiveness consists of a unique application of heat and its denial, which provides for an ability to apply heat through a predetermined formula customized to accommodate the specific egg characteristics of the targeted eggs to achieve total inactivation of pathogens, which may be present whether bacterial or viral without risk of consequential loss of aesthetics, functionality or the nutritional benefits characteristic to a raw chicken egg. This portion of the new protocol may be referred to from time to time within this document as ‘cyclical’ in its nature. The described first primary area of inventiveness referenced above consists of a unique method for the application and denial of heat adjusted to accommodate the specific characteristics of the in-shell chicken eggs subjected to pasteurization which is accomplished through novel uses of heat and induced chilling to provide pasteurization to in-shell chicken eggs at levels as measured in logs never before achievable without consequential loss of the raw characteristics of the subject eggs. For clarity of understanding, the protocol employed is preprogrammed to accommodate specific timeframes and temperatures to which the subject eggs are exposed. Those steps enable pasteurization to occur at log levels never previously achievable without damage to the subject eggs. All of which is performed within a uniquely secured environment within which pasteurization occurs from inception through conclusion according to the referenced preprogrammed protocol which is performed within an environment that uniquely is secured against contamination or recontamination throughout the duration of the pasteurization protocol being employed. Here follows a description of the pasteurization medium employed together with its purpose and features. The second of the primary areas of inventiveness consists of a unique pasteurization medium, hereinafter referred to as the ‘medium’, within which total inactivation of targeted pathogens is performed without loss of or damage to the aesthetic, functional or nutritional characteristics as found within a raw chicken egg. The described second primary area of inventiveness as referenced above consists of novel features contained within a new and unique medium within which pasteurization achieving the targeted and programmed inactivation of pathogens is performed to predetermined levels as measured in log levels peculiar to the inactivation level required for the pathogen to be inactivated without risk of recontamination as has plagued all prior art. The unique features of the pasteurization medium provide for pasteurization to occur free from risk of recontamination which is made available through added elements to the medium as detailed herein below which become both incorporated and included as integral elements to a formula which provides for an automated program for pasteurization resulting from a customized formula created from a base formula which arranges for the use of the mentioned elements within the medium to be continuously employed through adjustments which accommodate the flexibilities containing time and temperature requirements of the intermittent application of heat and its denial which in the end enables a new and unique ability to pasteurize chicken eggs containing different characteristics and different pathogens to higher levels that achieve total inactivation of the targeted pathogens as measured in logs while retaining characteristics found within a raw chicken egg which include aesthetics and functionality but contains the notable absence of targeted pathogens. In summary, the above-described protocol containing a new method of pasteurization performed within a unique medium when employed together represent a unique protocol for reliable and total inactivation of pathogens targeted whether bacterial or viral without the loss of either functional or nutritional benefits as commonly found within chicken eggs. The background for the need to provide the public with safety from contaminated chicken eggs includes their use in foods which contain by preference and usefulness raw or undercooked chicken eggs. The history of the efforts to eliminate The following represents a more complete history regarding pasteurization of chicken eggs than was provided at the beginning of this section under the title of “Introduction”: 1. An original log level of inactivation of 2. The log level established as 10 logs was to be applied to liquid egg product including co-mingled whole eggs. 3. Liquid egg processors in significant part processed the liquid egg product taken from co-mingled in-shell eggs and passed that product through heated tubes to achieve the targeted log reduction of A problem occurred for the processing in the above-described manner in that the heated tubes were cooking i.e. causing coagulation of the liquid egg product within the tubes during the process of achieving the targeted 10-log level of inactivation of 4. Without current availability of public records confirming such, no notice on record has been available to confirm that the USDA, as the Agency of jurisdiction, relaxed the log level from the needed 10 logs for inactivation of 5. Notably and mistakenly, the H3N1 virus as found within chicken eggs stemming back to the beginning of pasteurization of liquid egg product was treated as having the same level of heat inactivation as that of The above-mentioned practice of employing a 4-log inactivation level for all strains of 6. The continuation of the disposition of chickens and their eggs afflicted by the H3N1 virus continued to be provided with the same level of heat inactivation as Notably, shortly thereafter a contract was provided to an independent firm i.e. a subsidiary of Sanofi Pasteur for $150 million to produce a vaccine to protect the public against a pandemic forecasted by the World Health Organization (WHO) to be already within the making resulting from the ‘H’ series of viruses which were in the process of spreading across the Far East and into the Middle East as well as Europe causing illnesses which if mutated as forecasted to likely occur would provide for human-to-human transfer of illness resulting in a pandemic of greater proportion than the Pandemic of 1918 which killed between 50 and 70 million persons around the World including 15 million Americans. Notably, the World population in 1918 approximated one-third of the current population. WHO has continued to characterize its forecast for a pandemic to be one viral mutation away from allowing its transfer to be from human to human. However, although the speed of transfer would be increased by human-to-human transfer as caused by air or saliva and other forms of direct transfer the potential scope of the pandemic absent of human-to-human transfer excepting speed likely would remain constant. Still more notably, in 2009-2010 a pandemic here in the United States occurred from a viral source which according to WHO sickened 60 million persons and caused 12,000 deaths in a matter of 12 months. 7. Under current protocol as sponsored by the US-FDA, in-shell chicken eggs if pasteurized to a 5-log level using Se as the measure for Since 45% of the population of the United States is categorized to be within a high risk group which contracts illnesses with greater frequency and with greater severity, it is now evident that a 5-log level of inactivation of Se is at best a significant risk to that 45% of the population and remains to be a risk to the other 55% of the population. It is obvious that a significant health risk from contaminated chicken eggs exists and that risk is not being conveyed commensurately to the public at large. As one example of minimizing the continuing risk described above the US-FSIS, a division of the USDA, in 2005 claimed that only 1 egg in 277,000 eggs contained a risk of causing illness from In 2009 the US-FDA within its Egg Safety Rule raised the log level of pasteurization of liquid egg products from 4 to 5 as measured by Se and notably concurrently allowed known-to-be and so-marked to be highly-contaminated chicken eggs to be co-mingled into liquid egg product bearing the label as ‘PASTEURIZED’ when no statistical support existed that a 5-log level of inactivation of Se would succeed in providing reliable safety to the public at large including those risks to food safety as encountered by interrupted refrigeration frequently occurring between farm to table. 8. The USDA Office of Inspector General in a Report dated November 2012 reconfirmed the statistic originally generated by the USDA that one in-shell chicken egg in 20,000 carries with it 8. For further emphasis to the public risks described above the frequency of illnesses caused by Grade B eggs co-mingled with Grade A and Grade AA eggs, so labeled, as provided to the public at large which includes 45% of the population as being members of high risk groups is a separate and distinct source of illnesses caused by 9. Notably and significantly, were only one of the two plus Grade B eggs contained in each dozen of the estimated 20 dozen consumed annually per person to cause an illness three times annually to each person in the United States consisting of 320.0 million persons at an average cost of $20,000. per illness as per Government reports on costs per illness the resulting potential annual cost savings would be $19.2 trillion. Also 10. Although no exact figure has been published, it reasonably would be assumed that that specific high risk group of 150.0 million persons consuming under pasteurized liquid egg product at an equivalency of six one-egg servings annually taken from an annual per person average of 20 dozen eggs consumed would create an avoidable cost of illness per annum for the 150.0 million persons in that group equating to $18.0 trillion. 11. The total of the avoidable cost referenced in numbers 10 and 11 above equates to $37.2 trillion annually. 12. According to the United Egg Producer's report on the quantity of chicken eggs produced for market, 7.260 billion dozen were produced for year 2014. The public cost for providing 100% pasteurization benefits to 100% of the quantity of the eggs recited at full retail is projected to be $2.614 billion. 13. Not only did the 5-log level of inactivation of known to be highly The current and reliable standard for The above recitation provides for an understanding of the current inadequacies of both Government oversight of chicken eggs from processing to consumption as particularly noted in detail within the USDA Office of Inspector General report of 2012 as complemented by a group of experts known as the National Egg Regulatory Officials (NERO) which in a report more fully discussed herein below confirmed numerous abuses within the egg industry placing the public in harm's way that most particularly impacts upon the 45% of the public that are members of risk groups which gives cause for greater severity and frequency of illnesses from a contamination source which is typical of that found within chicken eggs through Significantly, within the referenced NERO report the practices of repackaging eggs with stale dates altered to reflect a more current date as well as the practice of including within a dozen Grade A or Grade AA eggs to include Grade B eggs of up to 18% is confirmed to exist and more notably is undisclosed to the consuming public at large. Notably, the NERO report further states that Grade B eggs are older and may contain materially higher levels of contamination. More generally NERO reports that the inclusion of Grade B eggs co-mingled with Grade A or Grade AA eggs should be discontinued for reasons of their low quality and high health risks to the public. No information researched as of 2015 confirms a change in the policies recommended by NERO as having been performed by either the USDA and its associated agencies or the US-FDA Were such Grade B eggs to carry a pathogen consisting of either Some reliance upon processing or pasteurization occurring within four days of lay has been discussed as an off-set to the need for pasteurization to protect against illnesses. Unfortunately, that nature of reliance upon an industry that is so diverse in its nature of handling eggs from farm to table together with its demonstrated track record of delivering over a span of decades substandard product makes moot any reliance upon the industry being self-governing and equally makes moot reliance upon Government agencies to provide reliable oversight. Notably and materially under the new inventiveness the effective inactivation of new and deadly virus strains as may be found or come to be found within chicken eggs is enabled. Such inactivation includes but is not limited to current viral strains identified as the H5N1, H7N9 and the H7N7 along with additional strains which in part find their genesis from the mentioned H5N1 or are the result of independent virus strains not yet fully identified. Successor virus strains evolving independently or through mutations according to science are expected to give cause for even greater risks to public health through their new abilities to spread from one living thing to another. Potential successor strains may be the result of new strains stemming from two separate viral groupings. One grouping is highly pathogenic while the other grouping is of lower pathogenic risk. Said referenced strains and their groupings individually and historically may co-mingle to form strains which are not identical to prior strains but may flourish independently or post co-mingling as currently reported by the scientific community through its publications. Accordingly the nature of the characteristics of the subject viral strains confirm the continuing evolution of viruses. As examples of what either is occurring or has been determined to likely occur along with described countermeasures to protect against chicken eggs contributing to a forecasted pandemic caused by the evolution of the virus strains reported to either already exist and to contaminate chicken eggs resulting from on-going evolutions such is expected to enable human-to-human transfer of an Avian Influenza strain through continued evolutions or independent creations of new strains. The common denominator for both viral and bacterial inactivations when present within or upon chicken eggs has been proven to be the application of heat to a level and duration which inactivates the targeted pathogen. Although water is the preferred heat transfer medium when employed within the art contained herein which includes spray alternatives for heat generation and conduits are available to be employed in concert with the conveying medium to achieve log reductions necessary to inactivate targeted pathogens requiring log reductions greater than all current art enables without damage to the raw characteristics of the subject eggs together with maintaining their nutritional benefits. Those alternate sources of heat generation may include but are not limited to heated water in any form which may be supplemented by each or all of microwave applications, reverse osmosis, ultraviolet light beams including other beamed energy sources passing through air but will usually include purified water as the preferred base-conveying medium of energy sources as known within the scientific community to be effective in creating and transferring heat through an evenly applied source of energy without damage to the subject food being processed while maintaining the aesthetic and functional characteristics of the subject eggs being pasteurized. The targeted pathogenic microorganisms may differ in their heat tolerance. However, the new technology as devised and described herein contains a unique feature which provides for an increase to the range of inactivation or destruction of the targeted contaminants through a unique protocol involving both the application of and the denial of heat in a manner which employs both levels of heat application and levels of heat denial in a unique manner which enables total inactivation of the targeted pathogens with minimal impact upon the nutritional, aesthetic and functional qualities of the treated chicken eggs as compared to those of raw chicken eggs. The application of heat and its denial is performed on a gradual basis initially but may be accelerated for improved results. The initial gradual heating and cooling before acceleration provides protection against certain eggshells which are more fragile in their composition from cracking as may be caused by temperature changes of the eggs including their composition which both expands and contracts to a greater extent when temperatures provided to it are abrupt. Notably and significantly the application of heat to contaminated chicken eggs is not inventive unto itself. It has long been known that hard cooking chicken eggs eliminates risk of illness stemming from either or both bacterial and viral contamination. More recently the art of utilizing heat through a medium including but not limited to water has been employed to perform pasteurization of both liquid egg product and in-shell chicken eggs. Those attempts were successful in performing a level of pasteurization targeting bacteria as found within chicken eggs but failed to achieve total inactivation of all strains of What is novel in the instant case of this Application is that the level of pasteurization required to inactivate all strains of both viruses that may come to be found within chicken eggs together with In a current report NERO confirmed that eggs passing through the current system from date of lay through date of consumption frequently achieved a 60-day age which included an allowed repackaging of stale eggs which when practiced allowed for an additional 60 days as discussed by NERO in its report concerning the need for new regulations to eliminate that practice which has not occurred. On those occasions the age of the eggs prior to packaging frequently would equate to 60 days or greater. The quantity of As the report from NERO confirms, the current practice employed allows for Grade B eggs to be co-mingled with Grade A and Grade AA unpasteurized shell eggs. Not only is the described practice of blending Grade B eggs with Grade A or Grade AA eggs on its face inconsistent with the purpose of grading but also that practice creates a vehicle for providing the public with false representation as to the quality of the eggs together with their potential level of dangerous contamination based upon their preconditions at origin and age. Further and equally notably stale eggs are allowed to be repackaged and re-dated without any notice to the consumer that such has occurred. Still more notably the NERO report confirms that food service eggs are not subject to any date requirement whatsoever as such relates to either date of lay or ‘Best By’ as guidelines to the enterprise serving an unsuspecting public which on its face includes nearly one-half the population categorized as being part of a high risk group having reduced immune systems giving cause for greater risk of illness from consumption of pathogenic foods. Significantly, it is common knowledge throughout Government and the egg industry that each year chicken eggs are acknowledged to be the leading source of illness among all food groups. That common knowledge as NERO points out in its report is flaunted by practices performed by agencies of jurisdiction. The above-described shortcomings regarding a 5-log level of inactivation of Se as being ineffective in inactivating The statistical confusions over the frequency of In summary to the above, the following applies to inadequately-pasteurized liquid egg product containing co-mingled eggs carrying In a report authored by the legal department of the USDA dated November 2012, the frequency of The genesis of the 5-log reduction of Se for in-shell eggs occurred in 1997 when Davidson approached the US-FDA seeking a level of pasteurization for in-shell chicken eggs. The US-FDA promptly and officially advised Davidson that a 5-log inactivation of Se would qualify the eggs to be labeled ‘PASTEURIZED’ and would not be required to display a public safety statement referred to as ‘Safe Handling Instructions’ on each pasteurized egg carton which otherwise advised the public on raw egg cartons that eggs should be hard-cooked to avoid illness. The US-FDA in concert with the US-FSIS made a public statement in the late 1990's stating that their target was to eliminate Through the new art to be employed, which includes new protocol that provides for the total inactivation of both viral and bacterial contaminants while at the same time preserving the raw characteristics of the subject eggs, a new art form for public safety without precedence has occurred. Notably, in its evolution the above-referenced current 5-log inactivation of Significantly, when either or both liquid egg product or in-shell chicken eggs are pasteurized to 5 logs they currently are qualified to be labeled as ‘PASTEURIZED’ but most notably are enabled by regulation not to display the ‘Safe Handling Instructions’ as required on raw egg cartons which provides those with compromised immune systems with appropriate and important notice that eggs must be hard-cooked to avoid illness. Upon further study results it has been determined that viral contamination requires greater heat inactivation for pasteurization than does To aid in clarity the sequence of events influencing the effectiveness of pasteurization caused by changes to the standards established which were impacted by failure of protocols employed is recited in part again to provide for both an understanding of what occurred and an understanding of the long term negative consequences to public health that have stemmed from those changes made for improved cost efficiencies of product as opposed to improved benefits to public health. In 1970, a standard for pasteurization of shell eggs converted into liquid egg product became needed for public safety for reason that various egg producers were converting substandard eggs either unsold or unsaleable into liquid egg product which was performed under crude and unsanitary conditions. As a result of those conditions and the need for farmers to appropriately convert selected eggs into liquid egg product to satisfy a market that existed the USDA created regulations and standards pertaining to the mentioned liquid egg product. Those initial USDA standards called for a 10-log reduction of Soon after the new standards were officiated, liquid egg product producers employing heated tubing to produce pasteurized liquid egg product on a commercial scale experienced significant difficulty in achieving a 10-log level of inactivation of Without public notice of any nature, the 10-log level of inactivation of It since has been learned that with a certain degree of uncertainty a 5-log level of pasteurization performed very promptly post-lay may inactivate all Se present but not all strains of To prevent raw in-shell chicken eggs containing The above recited policy and oversight failures together with providing the public with knowingly false information is compounded by the previously described practices of mislabeling product which makes obvious why no progress whatsoever has occurred to improve the continuing statistic that chicken eggs whether pasteurized or raw remain to be the leading cause of illness in the United States. Because of its size and nature of composition the approximate number of persons composing what is commonly referenced to be ‘high risk groups’ warrants benefit from further details. The number of persons belonging to the mentioned high-risk groups approximates 150.0 million persons or about 45% of the total population. Those people include all persons of 65 years or older, those with heart issues, persons that have contracted AIDS, diabetics, children, post-operative persons and a myriad of others afflicted with less common illnesses all of which in the end place the collective group at high risk and the need for costly and continuing care whether enabled from individual policies, employers or Government subsidies. Various studies and references within patents issued reconfirm the presence of Recent reports provided by Government agencies take the position that Se as found within the ovaries of a chicken is the significantly most predominate source of Notably, prior science has acknowledged the presence of viral contamination of chicken eggs by a strain identified as the H3N1 virus. When found it was treated similarly to that of Se in the protocol employed i.e. a 4-log inactivation as measured by Se. The US Government-authorized protocol employed included the destruction of the flock of producing hens together with the cleansing of equipment and the henhouses. The eggs laid by the subject chickens whether H3N1- or Se-contaminated were either destroyed or pasteurized to 4 logs as measured by Se. That changed under the new Rule of 2009 which altered the level of pasteurization of liquid egg product to become 5 logs as opposed to the mentioned 4 logs employing Se as the strain of bacteria as the base source of measure. No mention within the Rule of 2009 regarding the level of inactivation of the H3N1 virus was provided although all prior references to liquid egg product pasteurization treated the H3N1 virus in the same manner as Se i.e. destruction of chickens, eggs and cleansing of facilities or subjecting the produced chicken eggs to pasteurization to 4 logs as measured by Se. The USDA Research Facility in Athens, Ga., for years prior to the US-FDA Rule of 2009 performed studies on both the progress of the ‘H’ series of viruses which in particular included the H5N1. Notably the H5N1 as reported by the scientific community is more likely to carry with it the potential to enable human-to-human transfer than other virus strains being monitored. Currently the H5N1 has been the cause of concern by the scientific community that it is the strain which is most likely to gain the ability to spread disease between humans which also in the end would give cause to a pandemic. Notably the referenced studies regarding the public health threat from the ‘H’ series of viruses also confirm that their inactivation requires the equivalency of more or less 40% more inactivation than does Se as measured in logarithms (logs) for its inactivation. By interpretation the implication of the new studies would be that the prior acknowledged presence of the H3N1 as found within chicken eggs previous to the year 2000 was considered to be edible with safety were the eggs to be pasteurized to a 4-log level of inactivation of Se. That level of inactivation notably was measured by Se which was not the most heat-resistant strain of In summary, Se wrongfully was identified by Government agencies of jurisdiction as being representative of not only the most virulent strain but also by implication the most heat-resistant and most commonly occurring strain of The above-cited ineffectiveness of a 5-log level of inactivation of The USDA Research Laboratory located in Athens, Ga., confirms that a 6- to 7-log inactivation of Se equates to a 5-log inactivation of viruses as contained within the ‘H’ series. That statistic only applies to the ratio of heat tolerance between bacteria and viruses as is or may become found within chicken eggs. That ratio has nothing to do with the count as measured in logarithms (logs) regarding levels needed for inactivation i.e. total inactivation. Therefore, for at least 25 years the H3N1 virus mistakenly has been treated as having the same 5-log level of inactivation through pasteurization as that of the strain of The above recitation concerning inadequate pasteurization and associated risks raise issues whose results clearly place the public health at risk from the consequences of consuming contaminated chicken eggs when less than hard-cooked. A restatement of selected points raised herein before is offered to make clear the inadequacies of current pasteurization as providing public safety for a variety of health risks which agency oversights have discounted or concluded not to be significant enough to either repair or to condemn from use for the public good. Such includes: 1. In the first instance the inadequacies of a 5-log Se level of pasteurization whether for in-shell chicken eggs or liquid egg product places the public at risk of consuming egg dishes which are contaminated as caused by inadequate pasteurization unless hard-cooked. 2. The Government has failed to protect egg consumers by allowing the discontinuation of the public warning entitled ‘Safe Handling Instructions’ on shell egg cartons if the subject eggs had been pasteurized to a 5-log level of Se inactivation. Notably the Government continuously has been aware since the inception of pasteurization as applied first to liquid egg product that a 5-log level of inactivation of all strains of 3. With the advent of Avian Influenza as found within chicken eggs together with its forecasted potential ability to transfer illness from human to human, which is reported to include a 40% mortality rate, the certainty of egg pasteurization being effective becomes critical to the consuming public. 4. In the absence of total inactivation of targeted pathogens through pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs, the use of protocols to improve public safety have been employed to reduce the quantity of illnesses as caused by 5. The inadequacies of a 5-log inactivation of Notably no known science exists which supports a claim that known to be highly The described inadequacy of a 5-log level of inactivation of a In summary to the above, the reduction by Government agencies from employing the original 10-log inactivation for 6. Notably, all shell egg cartons carrying pasteurized shell eggs are allowed not to carry ‘Safe Handling Instructions’ which cautioned the public when displayed on raw egg cartons that eggs when consumed less than hard-cooked may cause illnesses. Although the ‘Safe Handling Instructions’ have been displayed on in-shell egg cartons for more than approximately 15 years excepting egg cartons containing in-shell eggs pasteurized to a 5-log level of inactivation for Further to the above, in a recent report dated November 2012, the USDA through its Inspector General, reconfirmed that the rate of In contradiction to the confirmed recitations provided above concerning the questionable practices recited within the egg industry and their knowledge to agencies of jurisdiction, certain agencies continue to claim dramatic progress has been made in the reduction of illnesses caused from contaminated chicken eggs. Those announced reductions coincide with the self-imposed deadlines for material improvements in the reduction of illnesses from chicken eggs which traditionally have been and continue to be the highest source of illnesses as found within the food group. New reports based upon old studies reconfirmed the frequency of contaminations was altered to support new conclusions to satisfy a self-imposed deadline to reduce the inordinate quantity of illnesses as caused by Risk groups have come to rely upon the clearly implied safety provided by pasteurization enabling consumption of eggs when less than hard-cooked and presumed to carry no risk of illness as is enabled through thorough pasteurization. Such reliance upon pasteurization has been further enhanced by egg cartons, whether liquid or in-shell, qualifying the product to display the term ‘PASTEURIZED’ and not to display the ‘Safe Handling Instructions’ as required to be displayed on all unpasteurized egg cartons. Those Instructions warn the public that unless eggs are hard cooked they may cause illness particularly to the more susceptible members of the mentioned risk groups. Through 2015 those Instructions have been continued to be carried although it has long since been known that reliance upon prompt, continuous and un-interrupted deep refrigeration from farm to table is not only impossible in practice but potentially lethal to the consumer who has no reason to be aware of the inadequacies and the limitations of the pasteurization protocol employed. Notably deep refrigeration never has provided any form of inactivation of the strains of Notably, as discussed, the inventiveness contained within the new art developed enables total inactivation of all strains of New discoveries described herein now protect against new and far more serious threats provided by viral contamination over those of The above-described protocol was and continues to be impossible to perform for a variety of reasons. It misleads the public into believing that the eggs are fresh when that assumption is based upon misinformation. As USDA Research Laboratory studies confirm the level of Further to the inadequacies recited above, the USDA official Shield is employed by the industry to provide the public with a false sense of security which is not the intended purpose of the Shield's presence. All of the above recited risks to the public health and its wellbeing are resolvable under the new art through its areas of inventiveness which provide for total and permanent inactivation of bacterial contaminants as well as viral contaminants now known to be contaminating chicken eggs through the environment of the henhouse itself, through the water the chicken drinks along with the food it eats and through the water in which the egg is rinsed during processing together with the contamination invading the eggs externally from its compromised cleanliness as created from the pollution from and within the henhouse including the air within and ending with the frequency of employing contaminated rinse water prior to grading and packaging. The new art described and disclosed herein contains new and unique protocols which result in the ability to materially expand when needed the pasteurization protocol employed to achieve higher log levels of destruction of targeted pathogens which include not only bacteria but also viral contaminants both existing currently and as forecasted by agencies of responsibility to give cause for a pandemic resulting from viral sources. The described level of inactivation of targeted pathogens to be achieved is complete. In order to accommodate the inactivation of higher levels of viruses as forecasted to become present within chicken eggs, the new art as described in greater detail elsewhere herein employs both redundancy of the intermittent application of heat along with an intermittent application of induced chilling which when programmed in their applications cumulatively provide for levels of pasteurization of all particles of an egg that satisfy the need to inactivate viruses which require greater heat inactivation as measured in applicable logs than prior art was able to accomplish through a 5-log level of inactivation of Of notable and significant discovery, the benefits from the increased heat sensitivity of the outer albumen are enhanced by the location of the outer albumen being nearest to the heat source. The transfer of heat from external sources through the outer albumen into the inner body of the subject egg in order to avoid heat damage through coagulation of the outer albumen requires separate treatment. Under the new inventiveness described herein the separate treatment of the outer albumen for protection against coagulation is achieved by controlling the heat source through intermittent cooling whether induced or through natural ambient cooling only after equilibrium has been reached between the initial pasteurization medium temperature setting and the internal temperature of the egg in all of its separate elements has occurred. The described intermittent cooling is performed in a manner that takes advantage of the more rapid rate of heat gain and heat loss of the outer albumen. Through that described outer albumen temperature control, a similar protocol using the same principles discovered can be varied to accommodate necessary modifications for the other elements of the eggs which through their varying densities require different exposures to heat or its absence as related to the outer albumen from which the variables of heat exposures and denials as contained within the differing elements of the subject eggs are converted into the formula to be employed. Notably under the new art those elements never are allowed to reduce their respective temperatures to be below the minimum temperature for pasteurization of 128° F. excepting for the outer albumen which benefits from avoiding coagulation by intermittent temperature reductions below 128° F., as per the protocol employed within the new art. For better understanding, such is accomplished by the recognition of the proximity of the outer and thinner albumen being closest to the external heat source being applied which includes the denial of heat to the outer albumen from that same source. The preferred management of the denial of heat includes induced chilling of the subject eggs through reducing the temperature of the water employed in any form which may include just air containing either a normal range of water content or an increased water content contacting the eggshells which provides for both more exact log management and lower overall processing time which converts into lower cost of product. The heat application source preferred is the use of a water shower which within its embodiment provides flexibility which can be altered into a mist or even a fine spray of water containing in all options a food-grade antibacterial agent or even air similarly purified and containing minimal moisture all of which aid in the inactivation of pathogens, the speedier and improved precision of temperature control and the more thorough exposure of all elements of the eggshells to the temperatures programmed. The water itself whether in the form of a mist or a denser spray or even to the extent as found within air for health safety concerns is warmer than the internal temperature of the subject eggs which are subjected to continuous purification through applications of heat which carry a food-grade antibacterial agent that is continuously monitored and supplied. That protocol provides for expansion of the internal eggs through the controlled intermittent application of heat which blocks the intrusion of pathogens attempting entry through the exposed eggshell pores while at the same time the application of the heat inactivates pathogens previously residing within the contents of the eggshell. Survivors to the heat being applied to the internal egg are forced to exit through the eggshell pores due to the expansion of the internal egg. As the pathogens escape through the eggshell pores as caused by the expansion of the internal egg contents reacting to the heat being applied the pathogens become exposed to the external application of heat through the selected medium being employed carrying with it a food-grade antibacterial agent which enables the total inactivation of the targeted pathogens to occur. Under the new protocol employed the outer albumen uniquely is allowed to fluctuate in its temperature to prevent against heat damage as enabled by programmed changes of the temperatures employed through intermittent applications of heat or its denial which in the end may be provided in the form of spray or even air whether moisturized or otherwise applied to the exposed eggshells. All of the above is performed while the subject eggs are within an environment which is safe from residual contamination from the pasteurization protocol being employed and safe from environmental contamination which has been the plague of prior art. The protocol ingredients are formulated in a manner which never allows for the pasteurization of the inner albumen, the vitelline membrane and the yolk to not receive the level of heat i.e. 128° F. or greater as applied intermittently to the eggshells from the selected source which includes sanitized water as the preferred source in the form of a spray or a mist along with an option to employ sanitized air together with support from such cleansers already included within the protocol described containing ultraviolet as one example of an additional agent supporting each of the mentioned options employed for heat transfer and its denial in accordance with the new time and temperature protocol parameters described as enabling total inactivation of the targeted pathogens. The formulated application of heat and its denial through the medium selected allows for both the absence of heat and induced chilling to occur at pre-selected intervals and equally allows for the application of heat also at pre-selected intervals. In principle the controlled application of heat and its denial throughout the uniquely secured environment of the medium employing the application selected to apply such to the exposed chicken eggshells enables the manipulation of the durations of exposure to the subject temperatures employed to each element whose properties contained in their composition dictate the rate of heat gain as well as the rate of heat loss. The outer albumen as being the first element to react to heat and its absence becomes the dominant element dictating the ingredients of a new formula which employs a unique program pre-prepared for each batch of eggs addressing their specific and individual characteristics that through adjustments enable the achievement of targeted logs to a unique level of inactivation. Through the mentioned adjustment to the referenced formula for pasteurization of the subject in-shell chicken eggs a total inactivation of targeted pathogens is available through the specific formula created to satisfy the targeted total inactivation of pathogens while preserving the raw characteristics of the subject eggs. Such is accomplished through the application of a formulated intermittent application of heat and its denial which in the end provides for not only total inactivation of targeted pathogens but also preserves the raw characteristics of the chicken egg by protecting the outer albumen from heat damage through the inclusion of pre-planned intervals of intermittent cooling that reduces only the temperature of the outer albumen to fall below 128° F. but allows for the continuation of pasteurization to progress for each of the other elements at varying rates reflective of their differing compositions enabling their temperatures to remain above 128° F. The resulting total inactivation of targeted pathogens is accomplished by providing heat and its denial intermittently to the subject eggs on a customized basis which is pre-formulated. The duration of those applications are egg specific as to their characteristics i.e. size, targeted logs, water content and other factors as known to the art. In the end the intermittent application of heat and its denial protects the outer albumen from coagulation and allows for each of the differing internal elements to achieve approximately the same log reduction of targeted pathogens at approximately the same time lengths of exposures to the temperatures applied while preserving the raw characteristics of each element as enabled by the flexibilities provided by each element as measured by their densities and rates of heat transfer which by nature have been arranged within the egg in an order of both location and densities of substance that enables the application of heat applied to or denied from the eggshell to be transferred to the differing elements within the egg in a manner which in the end provides for a level of inactivation of targeted pathogens that has flexibility enough between elements to enable total inactivation and to retain in each case the basic characteristics of a raw chicken egg. Hence, the outer albumen and its unique characteristics both dominate and enable the protocol employed under the new art discovered and formulated. These new discoveries when formulated into a pre-programmed protocol addressing specific characteristics of the subject eggs by groupings enables the ability to perform pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs absent of any risk of illness when consumed by the public within food servings of all recipes characteristic of chicken eggs being an ingredient. A sense of urgency exists to create a new and materially higher level of pasteurization without causing damage to the subject eggs over that achieved by prior art. The mentioned urgency is confirmed by a need for a level of pasteurization of chicken eggs to counteract the risks created as described within new reports published during 2014 confirming that still newer virus mutations involving birds have occurred in Germany, The Netherlands and Southeast Asia as well as China including but not limited to the H7N9 virus along with other strains of equal notability which in some cases stem from the H5N1 virus that may become able to successfully achieve human-to-human transfer and in still other cases that risk is potentially available from other viruses through separate generation or mutations. Of significant relevance to the above-described threat to public health in June 2013 the United States news reports confirmed that the H7N7 virus had been found within chickens marketed by Tyson Foods who is a leading supplier of edible chicken to the United States public. Further to the above on May 2, 2014, news releases within the United States reported that a death had occurred from a virus strain similar to the strain of the above-mentioned virus previously found to be present within chicken meat produced by Tyson Foods. Read together the foreign reports of virus strains and the same strains as reported in Europe together with a deviation of those mentioned strains now occurring within chicken meat in the United States reasonably give cause for concern that WHO correctly has forecasted a pandemic as derived from Avian Influenza in the near term as needing only time to blossom. Of even greater significance to the urgent need to provide the public with a safe egg as a needed food source clearly is illustrated and confirmed by a pandemic already reported to have occurred within the United States between April 2009 and April 2010. Although the specifics concerning the viral source never have been identified clearly the scope of the pandemic speaks for itself as does the lack of warning before its arrival. Within a span of 12 months the mentioned pandemic inflected upon the United States public 60 million illnesses and was reported to have caused 12,000 deaths. The new inventiveness claimed herein does not intend to be the sole solution to solve a pandemic. However, the new inventiveness if employed prior to the pandemic occurring will provide not only safety from eggs contributing to the quantity of people initially stricken but also will provide for the preservation of a basic and needed food source which is safe for consumption when safe food would be in short supply. The above-referenced H5N1 virus together with derivatives stemming from that virus or viruses which may not be directly related each to the other but already reported to exist and representing separate risks to the public on their own collectively create a recognized and scientifically-confirmed forecast that a real and present threat of a pandemic is in the making. The pandemic materially is enabled by the current viral strains referenced together with their direct or indirect derivatives having the ability to enable human-to-human transfer of illness. Notably and with consistency to the forecasts of a pandemic occurring in the near term the above-described events not only confirmed those forecast but also reinforced by the somewhat veiled newscast occurring in May 2015 which confirmed that 50 million laying chickens had been destroyed because the flocks were infected with Avian Influenza. According to scientists at the USDA Research Laboratory were Se to be inactivated through the application of heat by 2 logs greater than the targeted log reduction of the H5N1 virus that ratio can be employed in protocols targeting the destruction of the H5N1 virus as may require adjustment caused by mutations and defense mechanisms created by the virus which commonly occur in the evolution of viruses. In that regard the new art enabling higher and ultimate levels of inactivation of both viral and Further considerations to utilizing new protocols to destroy all threats from both viral or bacterial contamination as found within chicken eggs through employing one rigid formula for all circumstances creates a risk of failure along with a public health risk when such practice of employing a 5-log protocol of destruction of Notably and materially in addition to the above-described inadequacies of a 5-log inactivation of Notably and with materiality to the above recitation regarding violations of the public trust through faulty labeling of unsafe products such is further supported by the specific allowance and practice enabled by the US-FDA sponsored Rule of 2009 within which the inclusion of known to be highly The new inventiveness claimed herein is broad enough in its scope and abilities to be utilized in a protocol which enables the level of destruction to have the flexibility to accommodate the total inactivation of either the mentioned bacterial or viral contaminations concurrently or separately as they may exist or as they may evolve. The scientific community acknowledges that through the end of 2015 the virus anticipated to give cause for a pandemic still is evolving and in the end may carry with it Avian Influenza which could include a strain which provides for the spread of human-to-human illness which as so far experienced causes a death rate approximating up to 40 percent of those afflicted. Without certainty as to the end result of that evolution the H5N1 virus or its derivatives is considered to be the likely base source of the virus. Until the evolution is complete a countermeasure likened to Tamiflu or a vaccine is unavailable. Published reports indicate that both the US-FDA and the US Department of Health and Human Services separately are dealing with both Canadian and French firms to research and to develop a vaccine which addresses the level of inactivation required to inactivate the still evolving H5N1 virus. Under the new art described herein the ratio between bacteria and viruses for their relative inactivations uses the time and temperature formula created in the 1970's for Notably and significantly the mentioned elevated levels of cells as derived from both Those described illnesses and their frequency both are understated knowingly in order to retain the focus on the availability of the enormity of avoidable public costs created for decades primarily from either failures in Government oversight or misinformation passed through to the public at large. The new art described and claimed herein succeeds in providing effectively total inactivation of viruses through a 10-log level of inactivation which automatically inactivates the less heat-tolerant Notably, the average per capita consumption of chicken eggs in the United States actually exceeds 20 dozen per annum which is understated hereinabove for conservative purposes to be 20 dozen per annum. The statistical illustration provided for the public health cost stemming from contaminated liquid egg product using a minimal frequency of six (6) 1-egg liquid servings provided to risk group members annually currently pasteurized to a minimum of a 5-log level of Used only as one illustration new viral strains such as the H5N1 require materially greater log reduction for their inactivation than do strains of bacteria in order to provide the public with statistically complete safety which is a primary subject and accomplishment of the new inventiveness as identified, explained and claimed within this Application. Such is accomplished through a new ability to inactivate viruses which over time may further increase their heat tolerance and require still greater log reduction for inactivation which also is enabled under the mentioned new inventiveness. The above-referenced art uniquely performs the levels of pasteurization required as measured in logs well in excess of current art without damage to the chicken eggs in terms of loss of either their raw aesthetic characteristics or functional characteristics while at the same time providing total inactivation of the targeted viral contaminates. The inactivation of viruses as measured by log reductions carries with it a higher inactivation of bacteria due to the greater heat sensitivity of the bacteria as found within chicken eggs over that of viruses as found within chicken eggs as confirmed by USDA researchers. For clarity and emphasis the new art described and claimed herein elsewhere in greater detail provides for levels of heat inactivation of the targeted pathogens found within chicken eggs by sequentially increasing and decreasing the temperature of the heat transfer source to avoid cooking of any element found within the chicken eggs while achieving targeted log levels of inactivation of the mentioned pathogens which are complete. Concurrently to the described purposes being performed the controlled fluctuation of temperature as applied to each egg within its shell is adjusted in terms of temperature and duration of exposure of the contents of the subject egg. That adjustment provides for the cumulative but not continuous application of heat to protect against cooking of any of the four basic elements within the chicken egg by taking advantage primarily of the speed of heat transfer of the outer albumen and taking advantage of the level of heat tolerance found within the vitelline membrane and the yolk to not coagulate from modest overexposures to the heat being applied. Curiously but notably prior to the effective date of the US-FDA Rule of July, 2009, the US Department of Health and Human Services in September, 2005, executed a contract with the American branch of a French firm located in Swiftwater, Pa., which reportedly contained a deposit of $91 million to develop a vaccine to counteract the potential virus identified as the H5N1 which was considered to be the likely cause of a pandemic feared to be in the making. The total anticipated cost for that work was confirmed to be $150 million. More or less concurrently the US-FSIS in a communication to the US-FDA entitled Draft Risk Assessment dated October, 2005, recommended that a 6-log inactivation of Se through pasteurization should be included within the proposed US-FDA Rule which would represent the log level required to inactivate A significant feature of the new art contained within the herein claimed and described new inventiveness is that the elements of inventiveness employed do not target solely the strain of Importantly, prior art targets only Se and only employs a 5-log reduction to whatever level of Se contamination may exist. The one exception involved the H3N1 virus which for decades mistakenly was considered to have the same level of heat inactivation as that of Se. That error exposed millions of people to illnesses resulting from the mistake of treating the H3N1 virus as having the same level of inactivation as Se when co-mingled into liquid egg product. The new inventiveness provides for materially greater safety benefits over the mentioned prior 5-log level of destruction of Se as set by the US-FDA which does not specify the inclusion of substrains of Se requiring greater heat exposure for inactivation. However, under the new art a minimum of the doubling of the destruction of Se which fully inactivates all Notably and materially were either the viruses or the bacteria through further mutations to come to require higher levels of inactivation the new inventiveness provides for expansion of the protocol employed that is unique from all prior art and accommodates the need for greater capacity to perform the level of inactivation required. That described expansion of the destruction capabilities of the targeted contaminate as enabled under the new art provides for total protection against continued gains in heat resistance which occur within both bacteria and viruses as their protective measure for survival. The new art provides for a level of total safety to be maintained even were new and more heat-resilient strains of either or both viruses and In summary, the new inventiveness described and claimed herein for the first time enables the public to be provided with a safe egg suitable for consumption under all recipes and by all risk groups through the achievement of statistically total inactivation of both viruses and bacteria which currently exist or are forecasted to soon come to exist giving cause to illnesses inordinately magnified by their ability to succeed in human-to-human transfer. The new art not only inactivates levels of contamination as found within chicken eggs stemming from traditional levels of As further background to the above recitation concerning the current status of pathogenic development through continuing evolution together with countermeasures made available through the above-outlined protocol employed as contained within new inventiveness attention is drawn to the US-FSIS which provided input to the US-FDA for what became the Egg Safety Final Rule of 2009. Notably, the US-FSIS in part confirmed in its October, 2005, Risk Assessment that a deficiency exists within the US-FDA-sponsored Rule of 2009 which supported the need for more destructive levels of The US-FDA sponsored Rule as enacted in 2009 addresses only Materially and notably in pertinent part the US-FDA in its Rule rejected the US-FSIS recommendation that the log level of destruction for Se as found within liquid egg product be raised to a 6-log level of inactivation. Notably co-mingled liquid egg product had enjoyed for more than a 20-year span a The above-recited events and differing positions by agencies as pertaining to chicken egg product safety are found to be further confounding when considered together with the common knowledge throughout Government agencies as confirmed by published papers generated by USDA scientists more than four years earlier describing the threats from Avian Influenza as already existing together with a requirement that the subject influenza strains required two (2) extra logs over all Since the enactment of the US-FDA-sponsored Final Rule of 2009 no material modification to the pasteurization requirements or modifications of labeling of egg products and shell egg cartons has occurred. Notably not only have the inadequacies for pasteurization continued to mislead the public through either wrongful labeling or non-labeling of both pasteurized shell egg cartons and liquid egg product cartons but also no acknowledgement has been sponsored or discussed publicly concerning the now known to be serious threat of a pandemic as may be caused in material part by chickens and their eggs that may be contaminated by Avian Influenza strains requiring materially greater heat exposure for their inactivation than do As only one illustration of the public health risk enabled by delays in consumption of Se-contaminated chicken eggs from farm to table, a serving of the equivalent of 1.5 co-mingled eggs less than hard-cooked may contain approximately 570 Significantly through the employment of a new and unique protocol which preserves the raw characteristics of the subject eggs together with their nutritional benefits and performs such through doubling the existing 5-log level of destruction which provides for the total inactivation of not only the H5N1 virus but also other viral strains already reported to be evolving. The new art as herein disclosed enables successful protection through elevated pasteurization levels provided by the employment of the new inventiveness claimed herein. That inventiveness employs new art which contains protocols enabling the total inactivation of both highly contaminated chicken eggs containing To avoid confusion the current protocol continues the custom of the US-FDA to use Se as the baseline targeted pathogen together with references to logs resulting from pasteurization as applied to Se. The new protocol enabling materially improved levels of pasteurization abandons the 5-log level of inactivation of The following represents a brief summary of critical points regarding reported levels of contamination of chicken eggs together with commentaries on reports which demonstrate interagency errors and contradictions as to both the quantity and frequency of chicken egg contamination together with the quantity and frequency of illnesses stemming from those sources. One important purpose of the recitation below is to provide a sense of urgency based upon the mentioned prior history of Government agencies failing to find a common resolution of the topic surrounding illnesses stemming from chicken eggs contaminated by Secondarily, a solution to and in preparedness for reliable public protection from viral contamination resulting into expanded numbers of illnesses which may include pandemic proportions enabled by Avian Influenza in part can be avoided through the methodology now available and disclosed herein which eliminates chicken eggs as a contributing source of illnesses. Such warrants a sense of urgency for agencies of jurisdiction to initiate steps to protect the public not only from the inadequacies of current public policy concerning chicken eggs but also requires those same agencies to pay heed to experts within the field of public health including but not limited to WHO that a pandemic caused from Avian Influenza is either imminent or already through its beginnings is upon us and countermeasures to protect the public and the food supply require prompt attention in advance as such is available in part as applied to chicken eggs. The technology described herein below enables protection of one element of the food supply and denies that same element giving cause for increased numbers of illnesses. Even were that protection not to occur in the magnitude of a pandemic the inadequacies of current pasteurization requirements concerning Further to the above even were viral contamination of chicken eggs not to occur but were current levels of Were the pandemic as forecasted to occur as caused by viral contamination the cost in lives would be enormous. Through providing safety to the egg portion of the food supply chain a material reduction in human suffering and monetary costs would occur. As an additional benefit derived through the new inventiveness described herein the chicken eggs once pasteurized under the new protocol change from being a source cause of illness to a needed source for safe and nutritious food. Here follows a list of issues and facts which aid in understanding the historical inadequacies of responsible agencies to provide adequate information for protection against 1. The US-FDA-sponsored Rule of 2009 provided for the co-mingling of known-to-be highly Se-contaminated chicken eggs with other eggs and their conversion into liquid egg products if pasteurized to a 5-log level of inactivation of Se before being provided to the public with a clearly implied representation of safety which made the subject eggs more attractive to be consumed by all risk groups within all recipes absent of hard cooking. 2. The authorized label of ‘PASTEURIZED’ without Safe Handling Instructions of any nature concerning limitations to preparation regarding health risks unless hard-cooked has continued to be found on egg cartons containing in-shell pasteurized eggs which require a 5-log level of pasteurization of 3. The US-FSIS has gone on record as stating that a minimum of 6 logs is required to inactivate Se as a threat to public health when found within chicken eggs. As noted above the US-FDA subsequent to the US-FSIS recommendation allowed the lesser 5-log level of Se inactivation to be employed as applied to both liquid egg product and in-shell chicken eggs. Notably and pertinently current science breaks down not only 4. As recently as April, 2014, egg cartons within the New England area displayed a ‘Best By’ date of 30 days while at the same time in materially smaller print under the heading of ‘Safe Handling Instructions’ the public is provided with a notice that unless hard-cooked eggs may be harmful to one's health. Further, 5-log pasteurized liquid egg products and in-shell chicken eggs have no ‘Safe Handling Instructions’ on their containers, but along with US agency authorization for improved public understanding do display the term ‘PASTEURIZED’ in a large font size without the otherwise required ‘Safe Handling Instructions’. 5. When packaged for retail the date employed for either ‘Best By’ or other comparable language displayed upon retail egg cartons is provided for the public to understand the relative timeline of freshness and implied safety as determined by the noted language. Materially the date employed most often utilizes a beginning point of when the eggs are packaged and not the date of lay. That described distinguishing difference is material to the level of pathogenic contamination being present because an already contaminated egg does not become decontaminated with refrigeration. In a matter of a 30-day period of time whether interrupted or otherwise in the absence of deep refrigeration those eggs if contaminated by either viral or 6. As has been recited earlier recent enactments by state and Federal agencies provide for still greater risks of illnesses caused by chicken eggs through extending the ‘Best By’ date to that of 30 days from date of packaging and notably not date of lay when concurrently it is obviously known as already stated on the egg cartons that the eggs should be hard cooked to be safe. 7. Notably, if a pathogen i.e. virus or bacteria is totally inactivated through pasteurization the subject eggs do not risk a level of recontamination occurring which would be lethal to consumers even were interrupted deep refrigeration to occur. 8. The Federal Government passed a regulation in the 1990's to aid in providing improvements to food processing for public protection. It created a plan that was enacted into law which was intended to identify hazards existing within food processing and to provide for their avoidance. That plan included a requirement to identify risks which in the end was intended to improve food safety through attention provided to those identified risks. The name of that regulation and the resulting plan was the Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points which generally is referred to as HACCP. Pertinently, historically chicken eggs have been ranked as the single most cause of foodborne illness both from the present back to at least the 1970's. Egg producers reportedly have conformed to the requirements of adopting and filing a HACCP plan. Notably and materially to the claims contained in this document the HACCP requirements are not only violated in substantial part through delayed collection and packing of eggs prior to deep chilling but also in part are impossible to perform for reason that the systems employed create obstacles which block responsible practices to be employed which result from circumstances that create opportunities for contamination instead of an environment which provides protection against contamination. That results in avenues from which the current ease for Se multiplications into lethal quantities occur in the timeframe as exists between farm to table. That environmental enablement to create high levels of contamination is further compounded by the failure to achieve immediate and continuous deep chilling from lay through point of consumption. Those mentioned flaws in the system stemming from the environment of the farm to the product arriving at the consumer table places the public at serious risk through its misplaced reliance upon the implied protection provided by the USDA Shield as compounded by the false information conveyed through the ‘Best By’ date displayed upon the subject carton whether in-shell or liquid product. 9. The above factors when combined with reliance upon uninterrupted deep refrigeration applied immediately after lay through consumption does not take into account the obvious risks of refrigeration interruptions caused by transportation breakdowns, power interruptions caused by floods, tornadoes, snowstorms and the like whose frequencies give cause for the agency of jurisdiction to provide an altogether different notice for the public safety than that which is currently employed as referenced and described above. 10. No known study provides support whether statistically based or scientifically based resulting from actual experiments involving already 11. The US-FSIS statistical information as recited above is misleading. In part, by using a reference only to Se as found within the chicken eggs and by further limiting its source as stemming from the chicken ovaries without recognizing any other source of Contrary to the above scientific studies indicate opposite findings from those recited US-FSIS findings which is that Se together with other strains of 12. Notably, in a report dated November, 2012, as authored by the USDA Office of Inspector General reconfirmation of the frequency of 13. Reference is made to prior discussions within this document which concern various questionable practices employed by the industry also as known to exist by agencies of jurisdiction that are identified and discussed in greater detail herein above. Those referenced practices place the public in harm's way from misinformation and mislabeling practices employed as such relate to freshness and quantities of contamination as found within chicken eggs being provided to the public which contain fraudulent labeling practices generally known by the industry and Government agencies but generally unknown to the consuming public. More specifically those referenced practices include placing new dates on previously unsold eggs by changing cartons and mislabeling stale and contaminated Grade B eggs through their inclusion within Grade A and Grade AA cartons. Notably, as stated herein before, Government agencies have contracted separate firms to create a vaccine for protection of the public from the invasion of influenza which would impact upon chicken eggs. However, since the Government is well advised as to what science is being performed in the subject areas one must conclude that pasteurization of eggs would be part of a countermeasure to Avian Influenza since the art already exists to totally inactivate both viral contamination and bacterial contamination as found within chicken eggs. Such would provide for a contribution to lower the impact upon the public from influenza and to eliminate chicken eggs as a source to spread a deadly virus in lieu of retaining those eggs as a food source at a time of need. Notably and materially and in contradiction to the implications of its own prior reports regarding the infrequency of In all egg processing plants to display the USDA Shield on the egg carton requires an on-site inspector. The subject eggs carrying manure attached to the shells obviously were either not inspected or overlooked. However, the consistency of that nature of contaminated eggshells indicates that something concerning inspection protocol policy may be involved through which substandard products have become commonplace and not simply overlooked. Comments and Conclusions: A substandard environment common to modern day henhouses likely is the primary source of human illnesses resulting from the impaired health of the chicken as the vehicle for transfer of contaminants including bacteria as one example. All of the issues surrounding the continuous struggle to provide for a chicken egg absent of contamination from either viruses or bacteria likely would be made easier and more effective were the conditions within the henhouse to be materially improved. If improvements to the henhouse and its environment were to occur such would produce a healthier hen which in an improved environment would have less stress and less collateral contaminants to their eggs. In the end the public health would be the beneficiary of what reason dictates to be an appropriate environment for a hen destined in captivity to produce eggs safe for consumption while under current conditions that same hen is being abused daily. The good health of the chicken would materially aid in the reduction of the frequency of contamination of chicken eggs by This invention provides for the total inactivation of all Thus the new inventiveness described herein satisfies both the new and additional needs for higher levels of pasteurization to accommodate the greater heat resistance of viruses over that of bacteria. Such has been accomplished through the application of features contained within the new art identified and claimed herein whose target when initiated was to inactivate Recent viral presence found within birds including migrating birds and domestic chickens have given cause for the scientific community to forecast a pandemic stemming from Avian Influenza which include more threatening virus strains than presently exists. That presence magnifies the opportunity for human-to-human transfer which would add to the chaos created from a pandemic. For clarity and better understanding of both the risks to the public which currently exist from avoidable magnification of the results of a pandemic from avian causes the following two illustrations are provided. First. the most significant pandemic in modern times occurred in 1918 when the world population approximated one-third of that of today. Estimates of mortality from the 1918 pandemic whose source was viral contamination are in the 70 million death range. Second, a pandemic carrying little publicity occurred within the United States only within a two-year span of 2009-2010 for a duration of twelve months within which a virus was reported to be the cause. Resulting reports confirmed that some 60 million people became ill and 12,000 deaths occurred. The new inventiveness to be described in detail herein below includes two areas of primary inventiveness: The first area of primary inventiveness includes a novel protocol for chicken egg pasteurization utilizing the intermittent application of heat and the denial of heat in a unique manner which achieves levels of pasteurization of chicken eggs as measured in logs which inactivates The above introduction introduces the ingredients of new art which enables pasteurization of targeted pathogens as found within chicken eggs while within their shells to be pasteurized to levels which are accomplished through the cyclical application of heat and its denial which provides for cumulative pasteurization to levels as measured in logs never previously available without damage to the raw characteristics of the subject eggs while still providing to the public an egg for consumption that is safe regardless of the nature of its preparation whether as a raw ingredient or partially cooked. The art enabling such utilizes interruptions to the base temperature settings for pasteurization for measured time intervals to accommodate the egg characteristics being processed. Those characteristics include size as measured in weight, water content and other features peculiar to the subject eggs being processed which impact upon the temperatures employed along with their durations required to achieve pasteurization to the targeted level of inactivation programmed. All of the above factors are converted into a formula for pasteurization involving multiple times and temperatures reflective of the egg ingredients referenced together with other pertinent characteristics which aid in refining the protocol employed to provide for total inactivation of the targeted pathogens without consequential damage to the subject eggs involving qualities of raw characteristics, aesthetics and nutritional benefits. The durations of the intervals utilized for applications of heat along with the durations of programmed interruptions to the applications of heat together with the applications of induced chilling at preprogrammed levels and frequencies create variables to the interrupted employment of the targeted pasteurization temperature to avoid coagulation of the fragile outer albumen. Those interruptions provide protection to the fragile composition of the outer albumen through promptly reducing its temperature from the pasteurization temperature setting being employed to one which is below that which causes the continuation of coagulation as is found in temperatures below 128° F. However while the outer albumen is being protected by the lower temperatures referenced the other elements of the chicken egg more specifically identified as the inner albumen, vitelline membrane and the yolk will continue pasteurization during the timeframe within which the outer albumen is being protected from heat damage through residing at temperatures below 128° F. albeit that the other elements will continue with uninterrupted pasteurization but at a lower pace. That described process at times is referred to as cyclical in nature because the temperature applied to the subject eggs has been elevated, leveled off and held for a prescribed time at the targeted pasteurization temperature which for these illustration purposes is selected to be 132.5° F. and subsequent to achieving the target log level for partial pasteurization and to avoid coagulation of the contents of the subject eggs the eggs are reduced in their temperature resulting from preprogramming of the timing and duration of the application of heat, its denial and replacement with induced chilling as measured in time to reflect the characteristics pertinent to that specific batch of eggs which provides for the protection of the outer albumen from heat damage by exposing and holding the outer albumen at temperatures below 128° F. which when the outer albumen has achieved the proper interruption to heat being applied causing coagulation the induced chilling is discontinued, controlled heated and purified water is reapplied and the pasteurization cycle commences again. Notably and of significant importance to the new art is the discovery of the unique characteristics of the outer albumen as such may be employed successfully to create the ability to perform pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs at levels of pasteurization which in the end through the protocol derived from that new knowledge enables inactivation of targeted pathogens to occur for the first time while preserving both the raw characteristics and nutritional benefits of the subject in-shell chicken eggs regardless of the level of contamination and the differing internal characteristics together with the outer albumen's unique composition and location within the subject chicken eggs giving cause to it having a higher risk of damage from over exposure to heat. Most notably, the success of the cyclical nature of the pasteurization protocol employed is dependant upon the outer albumen remaining free from heat damage which under all prior art gave cause to unwanted coagulation of the outer albumen in all applications of the protocols employed even when those applications never reached reliable inactivation of either all Notably, within the formula employed the timed duration of the reduction of heat from the targeted pasteurization temperature selected is based upon the heat tolerance of the outer albumen. Once that protection is secured the cycle of the application of heat and its denial up to and reduced from the targeted pasteurization temperature employed is resumed and repeated until the targeted log reduction of the targeted pathogen has been achieved. The described typical application of heat and its denial protects each element of the egg and most particularly the outer albumen from coagulation. However, notably and significantly, that extra step of intermittent application of heat and its denial uniquely allows for log levels of targeted pathogens providing for total inactivation of all targeted pathogens to occur. At that point the subject eggs optionally may be provided with a final application consisting of a food-grade antibacterial agent which is applied to the eggshells and their exposed pores. The continued contraction of the internal egg draws the mentioned food-grade antibacterial agent into the subject eggs through its exposed pores which provides for an extra level of certainty that any stray pathogen surviving is inactivated. The application of the food-grade antibacterial agent to the exposed eggshells and its pores applied while the eggs continue to contract internally is followed by the application of a food-grade sealant to the exposed eggshells along with their exposed pores which by preference can be either a food-grade wax or a food-grade plastic. Such is applied while the eggs are continuing to contract internally which provides for a more perfect seal and protection from outside risks which unless the eggs are physically damaged will continue to protect against recontamination from their exit from the medium through to the point of consumption. In essence all of the above steps and the ingredients outlined in combination represent a unique protocol which includes the employment of unique features to be performed within an equally unique medium which provides for pasteurized eggs to exit from the protection provided within the pasteurization medium having achieved total inactivation of targeted pathogens without risk of recontamination from point of pasteurization to table excepting for mishandling or unavoidable damage. A second primary claim within claim 1 refers to a new and unique vehicle for pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs that is referred to as the pasteurization medium which periodically may be referred to as the medium. The second area of primary inventiveness includes a new and unique medium as referenced above within which pasteurization of chicken eggs is performed under secured conditions which protect the subject eggs from both contamination occurring from internal sources within the medium and separately from recontamination occurring post exit from the medium. The medium which is new to the art of pasteurization as described herein is self-secured and contains a combination of features which result in a new and separate art that enables the previously described pasteurization protocol containing its cyclical applications of heat and their denials to be employed. Once the new art has been employed within the security of the medium which protects against recontamination of the pasteurized eggs from time of entry into the medium through to their exit carrying with them at exit the benefits of the achievement of inactivation of targeted pathogens resulting from the hereinbefore described protocol employed the subject eggs are provided with a final rinse of an approved antibacterial agent exposed pores of the eggshells. That rinse contains only a food-grade antibacterial agent which is drawn into the contracting eggs through their exposed eggshell pores while still ambiently cooling within the protective environment of the medium. That step is followed by the application of a food-grade protective sealant which provides protection against recontamination from point of exit from the medium through to consumption. Importantly the mentioned self-secured features of the pasteurization medium are both unique and enable full protection from risks of airborne contamination present or attempting entry into the secured environment of the medium where pasteurization is occurring. Both the mentioned airborne contaminants combined with manure and other impurities frequently attached to the chicken eggshells post rinsing prior to pasteurization under prior art provided for sources of continuing contamination of the eggshells post pasteurization resulting from the transfer of pathogens through the exposed eggshell pores into the internally contracting chicken egg while cooling post rinsing. Under prior art the residual contamination carried upon the unclean eggshell not only found a source of entry into the subject chicken egg through the shell pores but also added to the level of contamination present within the subject egg which separately or in combination in large part survived pasteurization for two primary reasons. First, a 5-log level of inactivation of Se as approved by the US-FDA as the agency of jurisdiction as manifested through its sponsored Egg Safety Rule of 2009 continues to be inadequate to satisfy the needs of total inactivation of either Notably and significantly it was learned that no practical quantity of a negative atmosphere within the facility where pasteurization was occurring could be relied upon to avoid recontamination. Thus, the protocol employed not only utilized the now known inadequacies of a pasteurization protocol employing a 5-log level of inactivation of The obviousness of the accommodations to the liquid egg product industry to allow known to be and so-marked to be highly contaminated chicken eggs to be included within liquid egg product without notice to the public that the subject eggs when consumed must be hard-cooked clearly has cost tens of billions of dollars and untold amounts of avoidable misery to the consuming public throughout the time since the 4-log level of The above issues concerning the public's health and pocketbook are compounded both separately in statistics and costs by more flagrant abuses both long practiced and continuing. As recited under the above section entitled ‘Background to the Invention’ for illustration purposes only the cost of limited consumption i.e. six-one egg servings annually consumed in a liquid form by risk group members when less than hard-cooked will cause an equal amount of illnesses. Using the reduced cost per illness for persons of ordinary health as reported by the US-FDA and the US-FSIS as being $20,000. per illness and using the published number of persons contained within high risk groups as being 150.0 million persons the associated annual cost for the described population consuming a small fraction of the eggs annually contained within co-mingled liquid egg product would provide for an avoidable annual public cost of $18.0 trillion. A separate and distinctly different statistic reported by a group of experts whose organization is entitled NERO reports that slightly more than two Grade B eggs are allowed to be co-mingled into in-shell chicken egg cartons containing labels of being Grade A or Grade AA. Grade B eggs are known throughout the industry to be of inferior quality and most frequently older age and include eggs from flocks carrying Significantly, using only the annual costs of the two referenced sources of illnesses from chicken eggs absent of several additional illustrations available such would provide for an avoidable public cost of $37.2 trillion annually which looking at it from one perspective only is adequate to retire the national debt, pay for national healthcare together with major medical for all members of the population, fund over a two year span the unfunded debt held by the country and double the military budget for homeland security needs as well as gaining preparedness for homeland defense through increases regarding same not only to the military budget but also to provide protection against such other risks likened to and including cyber warfare. As an analog to the above the level of pasteurization required for the inactivation of viruses is materially greater than that of The isolated environment for pasteurization provided by the new medium contains specifically designed features which in combination enable the unique achievement and maintenance of a level of protection which is total. That totality is provided by the isolation of the subject eggs from all external exposures to contamination or recontamination from commencement through conclusion of pasteurization containing the new art which enables total inactivation of targeted pathogens. That achievement together with the induced ambient cooling of the subject eggs post having received a protective sealant while still within the protective environment as provided by the unique design of the medium provides for a new protocol that uniquely eliminates well in excess of 1.0 million illnesses annually through the inactivation of the pathogens both historically and forecasted to continue to cause those illnesses at either the chronic level experienced or in a magnified level stemming from a pandemic. For further clarity the subject eggs during pasteurization are placed within a medium containing unique features which include the elimination of all risks of preexisting contamination and all risks of recontamination for reason that the pasteurization process both commences and terminates within a uniquely-designed medium that provides for certainty that the integrity of the sealed and controlled environment which through automation is continuously cleansed and remains secure from inception of pasteurization through to completion. The protocol employed from conception to completion of pasteurization is performed within an isolated environment that is not breached until the eggs are fully pasteurized and fully protected against recontamination through application of a food-grade sealant to their shells and only then are the subject eggs allowed to be exited from the described secured environment. No known reliable resolution to the issues of total inactivation of The new art claimed herein not only provides for full inactivation of both Further to the above under the new art and separately from the pasteurization protocol referenced above as being and integral part of the new art but of equal novelty and importance the environment of the pasteurization medium has been isolated as new art and together with the benefits of new and innovative protocols employed provides for the risks of recontamination to be eliminated. The referenced areas of new inventiveness described and claimed herein fulfill the need to destroy viral contamination as currently found or may continue to evolve and to become found within chicken eggs. The threat to public health from viral contamination of chicken eggs is confirmed by the scientific community as being real, present and already to have occurred in the years spanning 2009 and 2010 which in the United States caused 12,000 deaths and infected more than 60 million people. Further threats of a pandemic are confirmed by test results from studies identifying certain virus strains having evolved into more deadly strains which enable or carry with them strains of Avian Influenza that have the ability to be transferred from human-to-human either by direct contact or through the air. Those mentioned abilities of the new virus strains to transfer illnesses from human-to-human have laid the foundation for a pandemic to spread more rapidly and widely due to their ability to transfer from human-to-human, but in the absence of such ease of transfer nonetheless will impact upon the health of millions. Through current reports delivered by the scientific community within 2013 a collection of scientists concluded that the evolution of viral strains enabling human-to-human transfer of the influenza virus capable of causing a pandemic already has occurred and is continuing to evolve into a form with increased deadliness stemming from the H5N1 virus as one of several viral sources which in the case of the H5N1 already is responsible for international deaths ranging from Europe to the Far East. The forecast that the evolution into still more deadly strains containing even greater ability to be transferred from human to human are confirmed by on-going studies resulting in forecasts from the international scientific community which opines that it is only a matter of time that viruses will continue to adapt in a manner which will expand their current ability already only intermittently achieved to transfer illness from human to human which if continued to progress will give cause for the already forecasted pandemic to occur. The World Health Organization (WHO) is monitoring the surrounding circumstances and has confirmed that the mentioned Avian Influenza-caused pandemic in a materially greater proportion will occur, and it is only a matter of time as to its arrival. That forecast has been reinforced by viral contamination of chicken flocks within the United States during the spring of 2015 giving cause for the slaughter of tens of millions of chickens carrying viral contamination whose source is related to the H5N1 virus. The scientific community agrees that the migration of humans as well as the migration of birds will enable rapid transfer of the virus which also will enable the speed of the spread of illness to be massive and global in scope. No record has been uncovered which confirms the quantity of illness numbers caused by the use of cool, dirty or contaminated rinse water used on eggshells produced for either liquid product or in-shell egg end uses although the science teaching the benefits of the use of warmer water for rinse has long been known and recommended. Notably when lower temperatures are employed for rinse water as used within the United States to cleanse chicken eggshells having a warmer internal egg content the cooler water employed will aid in causing contamination to enter co-mingled, recirculated or repackaged eggs than when the rinse water temperature is warmer than the internal egg temperature when applied. In furtherance to the above contamination is both magnified and spread within the contents of a chicken egg when the quality of the eggs is poorer as caused by extended age and increased levels of contamination as may be aided in the proliferation and spread of contaminants from the contaminated wash water employed. Notably, at least within the United States it is common practice to allow known-to-be contaminated chicken eggs stemming from an environment of uncertainty of age and the temperature at which the subject eggs were stored to be co-mingled with fresh eggs whether in-shell or liquid egg product in their end use and if pasteurized at all the allowable level to claim pasteurization is 5 logs as measured by Se. Globally scientists have confirmed that a 5-log level of inactivation of Se as contained within a chicken egg exceeding more or less 5 days from date of lay will multiply into levels of contamination requiring far greater levels of inactivation than that which a 5-log inactivation level provides. With notable pertinencey the original science contained a 10-log level of inactivation of Since the year 2013 the US-FDA and the US Department of Health and Human Services have been working with foreign companies located in Canada and France in testing vaccines which are intended to be useful in protecting the public from the H5N1 virus which is recognized to be the leading potential source of a pandemic associated with Avian Influenza. However, since the H5N1 virus continues to evolve the vaccine development too is evolving and is being stored for potential need was such to occur prior to the research being in its final form. The lack of a final determination of the strain or substrain of the virus requiring a vaccine adds to the benefits to be derived from a pasteurization protocol for chicken eggs which eliminates the viral pathogens giving cause to the vaccine development as such relates to the portion contributed by contaminated chicken eggs which for 40 years or more annually have been recognized to be the leading source of illness from a food source. It is known that viruses are more heat-resistant than are bacteria. The new inventiveness described and claimed herein addresses the vulnerability to heat as a vehicle for inactivation of both bacteria and the more heat-resistant strains of viruses which exist or may come to exist within the described threat to public health resulting from their evolution which in the end gives cause for the already forecasted pandemic to occur. In regard to the inactivation of viral strains as may be found within chicken eggs which would give cause to a pandemic as potentially enhanced by human-to-human transfer resulting from instances already of record the new art contained within the inventiveness described provides for the inactivation of the more heat-resistant viruses over that of The rate of heat transfer and heat loss follows the order and the distinguishing physical elements within an egg as described above which also provides for differing rates of heat gain and heat loss consistent with each element in that same order. Since the outer albumen contains the thinnest substance and is located closest to the eggshell and the heat transfer employed for pasteurization or preheating as employed prior to pasteurization is applied first to the eggshell, the heat supplied whether through a water bath which is not preferred or a spray or a mist of water directly to the exposed eggshell which is preferred may include purified air as an equal alternative to a spray of water in all of its forms which can be preheated and enhanced by enhancing agents such as ultraviolet or other enhancing agents approved by agencies of jurisdiction for food-grade uses as a precaution against contamination or recontamination as applied to the exterior of the eggshell in a manner which enables all of the exposed shell to receive effectively equal exposure to the described water or air in any referenced form which may include air separately from water in combination with supplemental purification agents previously noted. Those protocols are followed by programmed temperature changes both promptly and totally provided to all of the exposed eggshells. The water temperature changes are programmed to be at a temperature setting above 128° F. for pasteurization to occur. The temperature setting for the purposes of this illustration may be 132.5° F. which is subject to various modifications as is recited in greater detail under the ‘Detailed Description of the Invention’. Excepting the outer albumen the total pasteurization cycle provides for all elements of the egg to maintain a temperature at 128° F. or above throughout the pasteurization cycle as enabled by their rates of heat transfer and heat loss which are not the same but do contain a tolerance level of differentiation which provides for similarity of exposure to heat and its denial without damage to any singular element of the egg. The one exception recited is found to be within the application of heat and its denial as applied to the outer albumen which is the least dense element of the egg in its substance and is also the speediest in responsiveness to heat gain and loss. As a result of the analysis and discovery of the varying characteristics found between the different elements contained within a chicken egg as to their distinguishing differences it has been learned that those distinguishing differences create variables between the elements as such relate to differing rates of heat transfer, heat loss, heat tolerance and potential coagulation. The new art takes advantage of the above-described distinguishing differences between the mentioned elements of the egg and converts that new knowledge into a vehicle for providing egg safety through pasteurization at levels of inactivation of targeted pathogens which may be new, unique and provide equal levels of statistically total safety from both A significant element within the new discoveries is the important discovery concerning how to convert the composition of the outer albumen together with its location being nearest to the exterior of the egg into beneficial use with regard to controlling heat transfer that would enable higher levels of pasteurization to be achieved without material coagulation of any one element of the chicken egg. It was discovered that the rates of heat gain and heat loss as being more rapid within the outer albumen was convertible into becoming the control point of when heat application could be terminated to avoid coagulation of the outer albumen. The discovery of the application of heat being controlled at multiple temperatures within time frames dictated specifically and singularly by the characteristics of the outer albumen is a critical element for achievement of successful pasteurization which totally inactivates targeted pathogens that previously never has been available without damage to the raw characteristics of a chicken egg. The discovery described regarding the outer albumen enabled the other elements contained within the egg i.e. inner albumen, vitelline membrane and yolk to continue pasteurization without damage to their raw characteristics because of their respectively lower rates of heat transfer due to their denser compositions and more remote locations to the heat source than that of the outer albumen. Those discoveries enabled a formula to be created that was adaptable to log levels targeted and adjusted to accommodate such things as the impact of the egg size among other factors known to those skilled in the art which include but are not limited to seasonal changes in egg water content, effects of altitude to the subject eggs together with other influences upon the chickens' environment which collectively or separately influence the duration of heat application to perform pasteurization to a selected log level which provides for total inactivation of the targeted pathogens without damage to the raw characteristics of the subject chicken eggs. All of such has been made available by the discovery of the use of the outer albumen together with its unique differences in its speed in reacting to heat gain and heat loss as measured by its relative comparison to all other elements within the chicken eggs being slower but differing from each other in those same areas which include speeds of heat loss and heat gain. The studies of the uniqueness described of the outer albumen as related to the speed of heat loss and heat gain enabled the creation of a new and unique formula containing variables which accommodate the differing characteristics of each element recited as being within a chicken egg and to employ that new knowledge into the creation of a new formula for pasteurization which resulted in the inactivation of the targeted pathogens whether bacterial or viral uniquely absent of damage to the raw characteristics of any element of the chicken egg. Thus the discoveries contained within the new art include the control of the application of heat and its denial as taught by the discovery of the uniquely different sensitivity levels to heat as found within the outer albumen and the management of that new knowledge through applied practice levels of pasteurization performed through the applications of heat together with intermittent denials of heat to the subject chicken eggs which also provides for the avoidance of coagulation of the outer albumen which enables the achievement of a minimum of a 10-log inactivation of targeted pathogens that includes all strains of For further clarity under all of the described applications whose details are further discussed under the ‘Detailed Description of the Invention’ section that section addresses such matters as exposure times at different temperatures and most significantly addresses security from recontamination which has never been achieved on a reliable basis under all prior art. Notably as discussed earlier but worthy of repetition the new art contains two separate primary discoveries. When employed in tandem they provide for the achievement of total inactivation of targeted pathogens which for the first time includes viral contamination as found within chicken eggs as described above as well as notably and uniquely containing a protocol which effectively provides for the total protection against recontamination. The one exception to the above regarding the presence of a virus within chicken eggs relates to the H3N1 which when present within a chicken egg gave cause for protective actions to be performed which were the same as those performed when Through success of the mentioned inactivation of the pathogens as found within chicken eggs such will provide one major avenue for the speed and spread of the pandemic to be blocked by the new inventiveness discussed herein which effectively enables the total inactivation of the targeted viruses or bacteria through the employment of heat while at the same time preserving the chicken egg as a needed food source. Such is enabled by the application of heat to the targeted chicken egg to a level never before achieved which provides clinical levels of safety while at the same time retaining the nutritional and raw characteristics of a chicken egg and preserving its continued use as a food ingredient at a time of necessity when food that is safe is in short supply. Notably and significantly within the United States alone the preservation of chicken eggs as a reliable and safe source of food would provide for a supply of 7.260 billion dozen eggs produced annually as a source of both highly nutritional and safe food once processed under the new art provided for pasteurization of in-shell eggs which in part can be diverted post-pasteurization to satisfy the need for liquid egg products in their various elements i.e. whole eggs, whites only, etc. Separately the new art which enables total inactivation of pathogens through pasteurization within liquid egg product and in-shell chicken eggs at 5 logs as measured by Se enables 2.1 billion dozen of 7.260 billion dozen to be diverted into liquid egg products which already will have been inactivated at twice the level of what currently is required by the US-FDA under the Egg Safety Rule of 2009. Such would eliminate the costly risks to public health caused by the current level of inadequate pasteurization of liquid egg products being provided to an unsuspecting public. In the course of destroying viral contamination which requires materially greater heat to provide inactivation than does Were the transfers of illnesses from human to human to occur through viruses whose new deviations already have been confirmed to exist as reported by the scientific community and reconfirmed through many scientific reports of record generated by the international scientific community agreement exists regarding a forecast that the foundation for a pandemic must be treated as already being present. Such validates the forecast as provided by WHO as recited herein before. Notably the new inventiveness claimed herein not only provides for the total inactivation of From the above-discussed ability to inactivate viruses as found within chicken eggs it should be noted that in the absence of that ability the transfer of illnesses from human to human increases the threat to the public of a pandemic as conveyed in material part by the contamination carried through the presence of viruses within chicken eggs. That threat which is global in part can be eliminated through the statistical inactivation of the viruses as found or may come to be found within chicken eggs through the employment of totally destructive quantities of heat to rid the targeted eggs of viral contamination which at the same time inactivates all strains of The described destruction or inactivation of the less heat-sensitive viruses targeted requiring materially greater heat for their inactivation than is required for the inactivation of all strains of The differential in heat tolerances as measured in logs as applied to both the H3N1 and the H5N1 viruses as compared to all strains of Notably the new inventiveness through its redundant features also includes the cyclical and intermittent application of heat which includes a correspondingly cyclical denial of heat as its most critical features to enable the protection against coagulation of the outer albumen while at the same time enabling the continuing pasteurization of the denser inner albumen and still denser yolk to achieve the initial 10-log targeted inactivation of viruses when present. The mentioned cyclical feature of applying intermittent heat to the more heat-sensitive outer albumen as previously explained enables not only the achievement of the mentioned targeted 10-log inactivation of viruses but also provides for the ability to expand the inactivation of those viruses to higher log levels which satisfy the need to inactivate still more heat-resistant strains of viruses were such needs to occur. The cyclical feature of the new art provides for and relies upon the redundancy of the application and denial of heat to the outer albumen. That feature enables the more heat-sensitive outer albumen to avoid damage by taking advantage of its more rapid heat transfer through the speed in which it benefits from heat discharge to avoid damage through cooking and loss of its raw egg characteristics as well as its nutritional values. Through fluctuation of the application of heat and the intermittent denial of heat to the outer albumen within a predetermined range and frequency the outer albumen only will be exposed to the heat providing intermittent pasteurization while the other denser elements of the egg can be programmed to benefit from continuous pasteurization as provided from staying within the temperature range within which pasteurization occurs i.e. 128° F. and higher. For improved understanding of this feature of new inventiveness while carrying out the mentioned redundancy in the application of heat providing for the protection of the outer albumen from heat damage it is necessary to control through the use of intermittent transfer of heat the quantity of heat being received by the outer albumen. That control is achieved by the intermittent denial and application of heat which benefits from the least dense composition of the outer albumen which provides for more rapid heat transfer than do other ingredients of the egg more specifically identified as the inner albumen, vitelline membrane and the yolk. The intermittent denial of heat usually can be performed more efficiently for both control purposes and improved economic purposes by use of induced chilling as well as overshooting when heat is applied. Inherent to the processing of chicken eggs as anyone reasonably skilled in the art would know adjustments will be required to the length and intensity of heat exposure from the pasteurization protocol employed as is influenced by differing egg sizes, seasonal changes in water content, increases in levels of contamination caused by material differences in time lapses from date-of-lay to processing together with other elements which give cause to refinements to the art employed as caused by local conditions when employed. Those identified variables once learned will be included into a formula which automatically programs the number of cycles of time and variable temperatures required for a specific batch of chicken eggs to be pasteurized to a specific log level plus the duration of each element of the cycles described to achieve the beneficial results of total inactivation of the targeted pathogens without consequential negative impact to the raw characteristics of the subject chicken eggs. The described protocol provides for statistically total inactivation of all current and anticipated pathogens that may come to exist within chicken eggs which already have and will continue to place the public health at high risk of illnesses. That described high risk to the public is the result of pathogens in the current forms of viruses and bacteria continuing to evolve in the course of self-protection which in the end requires higher levels of pasteurization for their inactivation. Such is further complicated by the results of misinformation caused by human error as is demonstrated by underestimating the level of pasteurization required to totally inactivate Further to the above if the base level of inactivation of In 2013 unpasteurized egg cartons changed their ‘Best By’ dates materially and changed that date to be thirty days. With only interrupted refrigeration available from farm to table in actual practice a more than adequate timeframe is provided for a lethal contamination count to occur within the subject chicken eggs capable of causing illness or death to the consumer particularly if that consumer belongs to one of the high risk health groups. Such is supported by studies which confirm the rate of multiplication of the referenced pathogens to achieve quantities present within a single egg whose numbers reach hundreds of millions of cells in a matter of days using only a base contamination level of 3 Notably and of significant importance under the protocol of the new art described and claimed herein the management of the exposures to temperatures and their duration as applied to each of the internal elements of a chicken egg during pasteurization utilizes the differential in densities of the outer albumen with those of the inner albumen, vitelline membrane and yolk in order to take advantage of the differential in the rate of heat transfer within which each element differs. The newly-discovered beneficial uses of those differentials in the speed of heat transfer to and from the named elements as arranged in their natural order within which the inner egg is composed and its application into a beneficial formula never before reported as utilized enables the achievement of higher levels of pasteurization as measured in logs without damage to the subject eggs in terms of aesthetics, functionality and nutritional benefits. That new and novel achievement provides for complete statistical public safety from illnesses caused by contamination of chicken eggs through either or both viral and bacterial sources. Such is accomplished in material part by using the time lag between the vitelline membrane and the yolk as compared to the time lag required for heat transfer as found within the inner albumen and to a greater extent the outer albumen which consists of substances that vary in their density giving cause to the need to apply or deny heat in temperatures and durations at rates tailored to those preexisting conditions. Notably the denser substances require extra time over the thinner outer albumen to gain or to lose temperature depending upon whether heat is being applied or denied. Because the vitelline membrane and yolk respond materially slower to heat change than does the outer albumen the outer albumen which consists of the least dense substance of all elements contained within an egg reacts with greater speed to heat or its absence than do those mentioned denser elements which respond more slowly to the application of heat and its denial albeit at differing rates consistent with their mentioned natural order. Notably most prior art if not all when attempting pasteurization is limited in the log achievement to the level of inactivation of Se through the need to avoid coagulation of the outer albumen as may be followed by each of the other elements recited. Thus, the new art uniquely employs within its protocol the outer albumen as the basis of control for the amount and duration of heat applied for pasteurization through the novel benefits provided from intermittent application. Under the new art the variances involving heat loss and heat gain are computed and converted into a formula to satisfy the differing requirements for total inactivation of pathogens through adjustments of the variables outlined and discussed concerning the elements contained within the composition of chicken eggs and the impact upon the subject eggs caused by those variables during any pasteurization protocol employed in order to achieve the new and unique levels of inactivation of pathogens while at the same time preserving the raw benefits of the targeted chicken eggs. The referenced variables include the physical characteristics of the subject chicken eggs, their environment and their targeted level of pasteurization together with the specifics of pathogens targeted as such relate to heat transfer. The new art provides for expansion and contraction of the base protocol employed to accommodate not only the peculiar needs through heat inactivation of different pathogens without damage to the raw characteristics of the subject chicken eggs but also incorporates flexibilities within the base protocol to allow for natural features impacting upon the time and temperature regimes employed as would be known to those skilled in the art and as further influenced by material differences in egg water content, altitude as affecting heat transfer requirements, egg size and in the end the targeted log reduction through the employment of formulated time and temperature exposures. For emphasis and certainty of clarity the outer albumen is the first in terms of time lapsed to react to heat gain or loss. The composition densities as contained within the vitelline membrane and yolk gives cause for them to be the slowest in terms of time lapsed to react to heat gain or loss. The understanding of the natural order of the mentioned separate elements within the subject eggs together with the understanding of their composition and relative rates of heat transfer together with their differing speeds of reaction to temperature changes as now understood under the new inventiveness described herein has been converted into a practical formula targeting the inactivation of pathogens as opposed to the inadequacies of prior art to provide such results. The new protocol which uniquely provides for absolute inactivation of targeted pathogens as found within chicken eggs is better understood through the collection of facts only learned and applied under the new art as now recited in detail for clarity of understanding. Under prior art the achievement of a 5-log inactivation of Se was set by the US-FDA in 1997 at the request of this inventor. Achievement of that level of pasteurization as set by the US-FDA enabled a claim to be provided to the public that the product was ‘PASTEURIZED’ which in turn clearly implied safety. It since has been learned and confirmed by agencies of jurisdiction that the mentioned 5-log level of pasteurization frequently has been inadequate to inactivate not only The current art claimed herein uniquely succeeds in protecting the raw features as found within the outer albumen of a chicken egg to provide protection of that substance from coagulation which otherwise would not be useful as applied to uses typical of raw eggs. Notably, the new art for the above-cited reasons employs the outer albumen as the control point whereas prior art utilized the yolk as the point of measure to prove that the targeted 5-log inactivation of Se had occurred. In the absence of protecting the outer albumen from coagulation through mentoring and controlling its heat gain and loss within pre-determined temperature parameters as impacted by both the nature of the source of the heat applied and the measured impact upon each element described within the composition of the subject chicken eggs together with adjustments appropriate to accommodate local conditions no improved log levels of destruction or inactivation of record is known to be available before the discoveries of such as reported and claimed herein. Absent of the now-described new art no prior art existed which was capable of protecting the public from the more heat-resistant viral contamination while maintaining the raw characteristics of a chicken egg and its safety to be consumed as a basic food source when less than hard-cooked. Those benefits from the new art discussed and disclosed herein reduce the severity of the chaos expected and forecasted by the scientific community to occur in the near term in the form of a pandemic caused by Avian Influenza a/k/a the ‘Bird Flu’. Even in the absence of a pandemic viral contamination together with its capability for human-to-human transfer already established as a matter of fact as having occurred in 2009-2010 in the United States is here to stay. Under the above-described circumstances a dependency of relying upon deep chilling of the chicken eggs only to retard the pace of multiplication of The above-recited issues not only create risks to an uninformed public but also create additional risks when misinformation from official sources goes unattended. That misinformation is not limited to but includes two primary examples among others. In the first instance cartons containing non-pasteurized egg carry a statement entitled ‘Safe Handling Instructions’ which in size of print and language employed leaves the vast majority of the public uninformed as to its existence. That referenced ‘Safe Handling Instructions’ by authorization of the US-FDA is not required to be displayed on cartons carrying pasteurized eggs. In the second instance were eggs to be pasteurized at 5 logs the term ‘PASTEURIZED’ can be displayed as allowed by the US-FDA. Notably, it has been common knowledge that no strains of Significantly, as a result of the above-cited information it is notable that although no change in policy has occurred regarding the continued omission of the display of ‘Safe Handling Instructions’ on cartons of pasteurized eggs the US-FSIS has confirmed that a 5-log pasteurization protocol of Se does not succeed in the inactivation of all The new risk of a pandemic has a prior history. As an important and timely anecdote the inadequacies of the above-described regulatory issues became critical to the United States public's health in 2009-2010 when a pandemic sickening some 60 million persons and killing some 12,000 persons occurred in the Untied States resulting from a deviation from the H1N1 virus which remains non-specific as to the original host virus. That experience confirmed the presence of the health risk to humans caused by viral contamination to birds and their eggs as previously forecasted and continued to be forecasted by both the scientific community and the World Health Organization (WHO). The contribution provided under the new art described herein for public safety is timely and contains negligible added cost to the public. Separate but resulting from the above-reported pandemic of 2009-2010 the Health and Human Services agency (HHS) has endorsed and provided a commitment for some $150 million in funding to an independent firm to provide for the research and development of a vaccine which is intended to provide the public with protection from the potential arrival of the influenza described as the Bird Flu. In the end, as mentioned herein before, the scientific community finds consensus that the current threat of Avian Influenza will again blossom into a pandemic through the primary vehicle of birds migrating and spreading viral contamination to other birds which include chickens and their eggs. With the oncoming threat caused by new and more heat-resistant viral strains over bacterial strains as found only until recently to be the sole contaminant to chicken eggs with the exception of the H3N1 virus the inadequacy of all prior art to consequentially exceed a 5-log inactivation of the bacteria identified as Se without loss of the raw characteristics of the subject eggs has become critical not only to both the egg product industry and to the in-shell egg industry but also to the public which already has been forewarned of the potential for a global pandemic stemming from Avian Influenza and has just finished experiencing a pandemic ending in 2010 caused from avian sources which include both chickens and their eggs as well as the arrival of the H5N1 virus in chicken flocks within the United States. Under the new inventiveness described herein an answer to the inactivation of all forms of Notably and of material importance the new art not only achieves the mentioned 10-log inactivation of aggressive and dangerous pathogenic viral strains which are becoming increasingly present within chicken eggs but also contains within its protocol which is unique to the new art the ability to materially expand that protocol through repetition or redundancy of the individually tailored elements within the protocol employed to accommodate the differing characteristics of the subject eggs being processed along with the targeted level of inactivation required to provide certainty that inactivation of the targeted pathogens is total. That novel level of flexibility as provided under the new art described above allows for needed adjustment of the protocol to accommodate differences between egg batches. Those differences give cause to adjustments within the base formula employed which include accommodation for differing egg characteristics such as size and water content as two examples but also includes the characteristics and differing levels of heat resistance as found within targeted pathogens. That knowledge provides for adjustments to a base computerized formula programmed-to-be readily adjusted to accommodate the needs for successful performance of the described protocol. The described protocol employed to provide pasteurization to a level of inactivation of pathogens present within chicken eggs is performed within an equally novel medium to the pasteurization protocol described above which as described herein below provides for pasteurization from inception through completion to be performed without risk of surviving contaminants post-pasteurization or recontamination before any exposure occurs from a potentially contaminated environment as found external to the medium. The new art further protects against pathogenic recontamination whether viral or bacterial which has occurred under all prior art either through inadequate pasteurization or faulty protocols preventing against recontamination which frequently but not exclusively have been found to be enabled by concentrations of airborne contaminants resulting from pasteurization of large quantities of chicken eggs within their shells effectively exhaling pathogenic viruses and bacteria in sufficient quantities to overcome negative atmospheric precautions through protocols employed during pasteurization. That phenomenon enables recontamination of the subject eggs when internal contraction of the subject eggs en masse occurs during ambient cooling. The cooling creates contraction of the internal egg which draws in air through its exposed shell pores. The resulting air current provides a suitable avenue for the airborne contaminants to flow into the eggs through their exposed eggshell pores which gives cause for recontamination of eggs previously contaminated but more significantly gives cause for eggs to become contaminated when nonesuch contamination previously existed. Under the new art those risks of recontamination have been resolved through the creation of a new and unique pasteurization medium containing numerous unique features and protocols which provide for a secured environment as well as protection against exposure to recontamination as enabled by the redundancy of arts which inactivate pathogens when present while blocking and treating all avenues for the entrance of new pathogens from the external environment surrounding the secured environment of the new and unique medium for pasteurization of the subject eggs as described in greater detail herein under the section entitled ‘Detailed Description of the Invention’. In Summary: Under the new inventiveness claimed herein the pasteurization temperature selected is applied to the shells of the subject eggs in the preferred form of a spray of water. The spray of water readily can be converted into different densities which include a mist and in all cases will contain a food-grade antibacterial agent as the preferred method over that of a water bath which is viable under certain new controlled conditions as discussed herein but is not preferred. The mentioned preference of a water spray to perform the transfer of heat and its denial while performing pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs results from the recognition of its superior adaptability to fluctuations in temperature as called for from protocol employed using equipment and controls which enable prompt changes in water temperatures which conform with the precision required to satisfy the need for changes in water temperatures, improved control over rates of heat transfer and rates of heat denial for predetermined durations which also include the needs for and the benefits from both the prompt and consistent application of heat transfer whether added in its employment or denied in its employment as called for within the unique protocol for pasteurization described. Those improved controls are particularly important to avoid even the slightest risk of over cooking any element of the subject eggs being pasteurized since the level of inactivation achieved never has been performed before and a lack of either reasonable precision and consistency of the characteristics of a raw chicken egg particularly as applied to the sensitivity of the outer albumen to heat causing coagulation can occur on very short notice or only from what may seem to be a modest deviation of the protocol employed. The predetermined durations of the elements within the cyclical applications of heat and its denials conform to the inventiveness under discussion which allows for the applications of heat and the denials of heat to be customized into a programmed protocol which provides for specific durations of heat applications and their denials to the shells of the eggs during pasteurization. The interruptions to the applications of heat and their denials are adjusted in their durations to reflect the needs for protection of in-shell eggs against heat damage. To aid in the understanding of the uniqueness of the protocol employed together with its equally unique achievements to inactivate targeted pathogens without damage to the raw characteristics of the subject eggs which contain a variety of variations the protocol employed within the new art as programmed and described and claimed herein accomplishes such through a preprogrammed application of heat and its denial specific to the characteristics of the batch of eggs being processed for pasteurization. Each variation of the protocols employed includes the cycling of the application and denial of heat to the subject chicken eggs through employing a unique process which consists of the raising of the temperature of the subject eggs to the targeted pasteurization temperature and holding them there for a preprogrammed duration which is followed by lowering the temperature of the subject eggs back to the original temperature of the subject eggs at the time of the beginning of the described process. The timeframes for all elements of the described protocol are characterized for these descriptive purposes to be cyclical in nature. Each cycle is tailored to provide relief from sustained heat being applied to the outer albumen through preprogramming the application of heat as followed by the application of chilling in greater intensities of each of such for the outer albumen than the other elements of the subject chicken eggs. Such is done in a manner and to an extent which enables the outer albumen to have limited durations of exposures to heat during the heating cycles while at the same time allowing all other elements not requiring the same relief from heat causing damage to their raw characteristics to continue to receive heat from uninterrupted pasteurization albeit the pasteurization temperatures applied will be fluctuated to accommodate the level of pasteurization targeted to accommodate the specific characteristics of the individual elements of the subject eggs being processed without giving cause to damage from excessive heat to any one element contained within the subject eggs. Throughout the pasteurization protocol employed during the times equilibrium has been reached between the yolk and the water spray temperature or its optional counterparts when employed a holding time providing for approximately 1 log or slightly more occurs before the temperature is reduced. That protocol is repeated until the targeted logs for total inactivation of the targeted pathogens has been completed. As discussed earlier the outer albumen through its accelerated rates of heat gain and heat loss dictates the temperatures employed along with the duration of a cycle as well as the number of cycles to be employed to achieve the targeted level of inactivation as measured in logs specific to the targeted pathogen. Such is the result of a discovery that the composition of the outer albumen provides for more rapid transfer of heat and more rapid results from heat being denied. That knowledge under the new art is applied in a unique manner which confirms that such can be used constructively within a protocol for pasteurization of chicken eggs as is now contained within the new art as described and claimed herein. The new art enables the use of protocols which succeed in providing for the total inactivation of both bacterial and viral contaminants when found to be present within chicken eggs. The art employed to inactivate targeted pathogens is both unique and effective in achieving log levels never before achievable without damage to the raw characteristics of the ingredients contained within a raw chicken egg and most particularly the outer albumen. Those discoveries enable higher log levels of inactivation of targeted pathogens to be achieved by formularizing the critical control points of coagulation of the outer albumen and applying that formula into a protocol which through preprogrammed applications of heat and its denial reflecting the differing characteristics found within a given batch of chicken eggs allows for the outer albumen to escape heat damage through applications of induced chilling on a programmed basis which enables the outer albumen to be protected against heat damage while at the same time all of the other denser substances as found within chicken eggs similarly being heated or cooled are allowed to continue pasteurization without interruption by their internal temperatures being preprogrammed to remain above 128° F. In the end the protocol employed allows repetition to the described applications and denials of heat which provide for the achievement of the targeted log level required for the inactivation of the targeted pathogens. The number of cycles required to achieve the targeted pathogen inactivation are the result of the tolerance levels of the outer albumens' tolerance to heat as dictated by the characteristics of the specific batch of chicken eggs. Notably, each batch processed contains eggs of similar size as measured by weight. Their relatively common size dictates their common level of tolerance to heat which enables pasteurization under the new art to be achieved without reduction of the raw characteristics of the subject eggs. Such allows for the conversion of the application of heat and its denial into a preprogrammed protocol which includes the new art of applications of cycles which apply controlled amounts of heat and controlled amounts of cooling to the subject eggs to the extent dictated by the previously described specifications of the eggs being processed at pre-selected temperatures and durations which are programmed to achieve total inactivation of targeted pathogens while protecting both the raw characteristics and nutritional benefits of the subject eggs. Those cycles cumulatively will equate to the achievement of the targeted log level of the outer albumen while the denser elements of the subject eggs in their natural order as found within a chicken egg will achieve the same targeted log level of pathogenic inactivation without falling below 128° F. Heat damage to the denser substances is avoided by lowering the temperatures but only to an extent that does not interrupt the pasteurization occurring. In the end the targeted log level is achieve for all elements including the outer albumen which has escaped damage from heat exposure by programmed retreats to temperatures below 128° F. The denser elements of the subject chicken eggs will not be chilled below 128° F. because of the protection against heat damage provided from their varying higher densities which allow for the continuation of pasteurization at differing rates due to their differing densities which in each case is slower than that of the outer albumen to achieve the pasteurization level as measured in applicable logs. Although the denser elements carry with them differing rates of heat transfer in the end their margins of differences are not enough to warrant altering the applications of heat employed to the specific characteristics of the subject batch of eggs being subjected to high log counts of pasteurization enabling total inactivation of the targeted pathogens. Such is confirmed through test results which have taught that once the targeted log level at an applied temperature for pasteurization has been achieved the various elements continue to have a tolerance for heat beyond the targeted log level. That additional tolerance for heat allows for a level of flexibility which enables a modest overshooting of the targeted log level to be employed for each element contained within the chicken egg to achieve the targeted log level for the inactivation of targeted pathogens. Notably, the outer albumen temperature is impacted by its higher rates of heat gain and heat loss which give cause for the art employed to provide the outer albumen with obtaining protection from heat damage through finding refuge provided from the intermittent applications of heat and its denial as interrupted by induced chilling which together provide for a haven within which the outer albumen is protected from heat damage by providing solely it with periodic temperatures below 128° F. The described outer albumen protocol employed for its protection results from the discovery that the natural order contained within the composition of the subject eggs parallels the changes in the densities of those same substances. Hence the applications and the denials of heat follow an order which in the end achieves the targeted result of pasteurization with only minor differences in the logs achieved to each of the denser elements as nature has provided that order to be i.e. least dense as found within the outer albumen resulting in the most rapid transfer of heat gain or heat loss, followed by the inner albumen, followed by the vitaline membrane and in the end the yolk. The yolk being the most remote and the densest element within a chicken egg can tolerate the heat being applied outside the shell being received last and can tolerate it being the last to loose its heat. That natural order of heat gain and its disbursement from outside the shell inwards and its transitioning between each of the elements once completed is reversed through applying a selected form of chilling which may be induced or ambient that when completed carries with it the outer albumen being below 128° F. and each of the other elements within the subject chicken eggs continuing pasteurization and carrying with them temperatures at 128° F. or above. Once the outer albumen has reduced its temperature to the targeted temperature below 128° F. the cycle for pasteurization is reinitiated. To avoid heat damage to any one element the cycles are repeated for predetermined intervals which end with the achievement of the targeted log reduction without damage to any one element as found within the chicken eggs because the inventiveness has been taught by the order provided by nature that the transfer of heat inwards will follow the order created by differing composition densities of each of the ingredients found within chicken eggs. That discovery combined with the further discovery that the outer albumen composition providing for materially greater rates of heat transfer both as measured in gain or loss enabled the new and unique protocol to be formulated as adjusted to accommodate already discussed variations within eggs and the variations required to inactivate pathogens providing that the special characteristics as found within the outer albumen are allowed to govern the protocol employed which in the end provides for a new and unique vehicle to achieve inactivation levels of targeted pathogens which effectively are total as applied to those found within chicken eggs while at the same time preserving the nutritional and physical characteristics of a raw in-shell chicken egg. Through the novelty of the discovery of how to use the vulnerability to heat damage of the outer albumen to an advantage focus was made upon the results of experiments performed upon the rate of heat transfer contained within the outer albumen which lead to new knowledge as to its rates of heat gain and heat loss. The knowledge gained lead to the association of the mentioned speed of transfer as influenced by the location of the outer albumen as compared to other elements within the chicken egg consisting of denser substances identified as the inner albumen, vitelline membrane and the yolk. It further was discovered that those other named elements shared two common characteristics. They were more remote from the heat source than was the outer albumen which was surrounded by the eggshell to which the application of heat for pasteurization was applied in the first instance. In the second instance the composition of each of the other elements contained varying higher densities in their composition and carried with them a location within the egg which followed an order of least dense to most dense. That sequence in the same order accepted heat being applied and discharged heat when cooling in reverse of that order. Briefly stated and summarized the fragility of the outer albumen caused by its thinner composition resulted in a higher rate of heat transfer both in gain and loss which in each case is reflected by a greater rate of speed in changes of temperature than all other elements contained within the egg. Those more rapid transfer characteristics of the outer albumen whether through temperature gain or through temperature loss are enhanced by its closest proximity to the heat source which also serves as the vehicle for disbursement of heat during periods of heat loss which under the new protocol employed enabled the intermittent application of both heat and its loss to occur on a programmed basis to avoid damage to the outer albumen during pasteurization under the new art which increases materially the quantity of heat applied to perform its improvements to public safety through achieving the total inactivation of pathogens found within chicken eggs. The described programmed applications of heat together with the programmed denials of heat providing for total inactivation of targeted pathogens through materially higher levels of pasteurization resulted in the discoveries employed which included the unique enabling protocol of the cyclical application of heat and its denial that has become the basis of a new and unique program for pasteurization enabling the benefits derived from total inactivation of targeted pathogens. That program avoids damage to the outer albumen through the mentioned cyclical application of heat and its denial which provides a new and unique capability to perform pasteurization without damaging the contents of the subject egg to any consequential level while at the same time and for the first time has enabled total inactivation of viruses and bacteria which now give cause for the public for the first time ever to be free from illnesses caused by less than hard-cooked chicken eggs. The achievement of not only the total inactivation of all strains of The discovery of how to use those differences in a novel manner to provide an urgently needed broader spectrum of pasteurization has been enabled by the flexibility of the protocol employed which satisfies the requirements described concerning the adjustments to the application of heat and its denial without causing consequential damage to the raw characteristics of the subject egg while at the same time providing for full and reliable protection against pathogens which already are present or may come to be present within chicken eggs. As an illustration of the differing rates of heat transfer as found within different elements contained within chicken eggs research results confirm that the relative acceleration of heat transfer which is characteristic of the outer albumen over that of the denser substances found within the eggs consisting of the inner albumen, vitelline membrane and yolk reveal that a spray water temperature of 137.5° F. applied to eggshells for five (5) minutes generates an outer albumen temperature of 131.1° F. and a yolk temperature of 115.2° F. which confirms the differing impacts of heat upon the outer albumen as being both pertinent and confirmatory to the conclusions reached within the new art as such relates to the heat transfer characteristics contained within the outer albumen. The ingredients of the above comparative analysis of heat transfer to other elements within an egg confirms that the increased sensitivity to higher heat and heat denial as being characteristic to the outer albumen over those of other elements contained within the chicken egg. Upon further research that pattern was reconfirmed and equilibrium between the named elements occurred shortly thereafter. Further experiments now indicate and confirm that a similar rate of heat loss occurs when either ambient cooling or induced chilling is applied. Those observations and their confirmations lead to using the fragility of the outer albumen as applied to heat gain and heat loss to be employed in a constructive manner which lead to the intermittent applications of heat and its denial through which achievement of greater log levels of inactivation were enabled to totally inactivate targeted pathogens while preserving both nutritional and raw characteristics of the subject in-shell chicken eggs. For further clarity to better understand the novel protocol discussed above the art employs a repetitive protocol for the application and denial of heat which is described as being cyclical in nature as is confirmed from records demonstrating the difference in the time spans between the least dense element as represented by the outer albumen and the most dense element as represented by the yolk when heat is equally applied to those elements for the same duration. What was learned was that the outer albumen in a matter of five (5) minutes achieved a temperature differential with that of the yolk approximating 15° F. which reconfirms the foundation of facts necessary for the ability to achieve log levels for the inactivation of targeted pathogens as found within chicken eggs through intermittently fluctuating the application of heat and its replacement with induced chilling in a manner which primarily interrupts the quantity of heat being applied to the outer albumen which otherwise would give cause for its coagulation and loss of raw characteristics. In summary, studies performed during the research of this portion of the new art confirm that the slower rates of heat gain and loss as found within the denser inner albumen, vitelline membrane and yolk can be used to advantage through proper management of heat gain and loss as applied to the thinner outer albumen through utilizing its more rapid speed in heat transfer as expressed through both heat gain and heat loss as enabled by its inherently thinner composition. The discoveries described and claimed herein contain new and unique phenomena which use the greater speed of heat gain and heat loss of the outer albumen of a chicken egg to a significant advantage which results from its conversion into a formula that enables the unique ability to achieve the targeted goal of higher log levels which totally inactivate viruses which already exist and continue to evolve and to provide for a major threat to public health when consumed in any form of an egg food ingredient that has been prepared for consumption when less than hard-cooked. The above-described advantages are enabled by the new ability contained within the new inventiveness to achieve log levels of inactivation of materially more heat-resistant viruses than as found to exist within Additional to the above-described protocol benefits the following uniquely enables the total inactivation of viruses currently found or expected to become found within chicken eggs through achievement of new levels of pasteurization specifically targeting the inactivation of viruses which require higher levels of inactivation through exposure to heat for their inactivation than do bacterial contaminants as found within chicken eggs. That achievement not only succeeds in the total inactivation of The above-described inactivation is ensured to be permanent and complete in its inactivation of targeted pathogens because of its unique features which include a new and fully secured medium for pasteurization which prevents invasion of its environment through a combination of internal security and ingredients uniquely contained within the medium which enable total inactivation of targeted pathogens to the subject chicken eggs through the provision of a cleansed environment within which the described protocol is employed from the inception of pasteurization through its completion. Those features as contained within the uniquely protected environment of the referenced medium are unique and critical to the above-described elements of the protocol employed for pasteurization as discussed previously herein above within which all pathogens are inactivated to a level which is total. Notably, under prior art no pathogen reliably was inactivated totally under the protocol employed whether such was for liquid egg product end use or in-shell chicken egg end uses. The problem of inadequate pasteurization continues to give cause for Certain of the matters involved in reaching the new achievements of total inactivation of both viral and bacterial contaminants without exposure of the subject in-shell chicken eggs to recontamination as provided through the application of the protocol contained within the new art includes but are not limited to two primary subject areas as discussed below. Background: Bacterial strains as known to contaminate chicken eggs have greater vulnerability to heat than do viruses. Since viruses are less heat-sensitive than are bacteria the level of heat as measured in logs to inactivate viral contamination automatically will inactivate any The pasteurization achievements described herein before were enhanced by still an equally important additional area of new inventiveness which was made available through the discoveries provided by a pasteurization medium that overcame risks to public health caused by inadequate pasteurization and at the same time provided protection against recontamination. Notably the above-described art must be employed within the framework of a fully and reliably protected environment. As discussed in greater detail under the section of this application entitled ‘Detailed Description of the Invention’ a unique and secured facility has been designed to provide pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs to a level which provides the public with a level of statistical inactivation which is complete while maintaining the substantially raw characteristics of an in-shell chicken egg. That level of pasteurization is made available through the pasteurization protocol summaries provided hereinabove and described more fully under the section entitled ‘Detailed Description of the Invention’. Description of the Medium: As a primary and unique new area of inventiveness which complements an additional description of an area of new and distinctly different inventiveness involving a unique pasteurization art which utilizes the intermittent application of heat to the chicken eggs enabling new and materially higher levels of pasteurization to occur as measured in logs is found within an equally unique and distinctly separate inventive protocol to be employed within a secured medium which through its novel features protects the subject eggs from recontamination during and post-pasteurization including protection against airborne or contact risks through the eggs enabling recontamination when exiting the medium post-pasteurization to table. Such is enabled by new art which ensures the preservation of a clean and contaminant-free environment from inception of the pasteurization protocol through its completion which includes the time at which the eggs have received a protective sealant post-pasteurization but prior to their exit from the secured environment of the new and unique medium which now includes the performance of pasteurization to a level achieving statistical inactivation of the targeted pathogens through employment of the protocol described earlier herein which provides for the achievement of inactivation without egg damage to its raw characteristics through preprogrammed interruptions of heat and its denial. From inception through completion of the pasteurization process the environment of the pasteurization medium is isolated and controlled to provide safety from recontamination. Only after the selected level of pasteurization has occurred and the eggs have received protection from environmental sources of contamination external to the medium that protection is preserved through the application of a food-grade sealant to the eggshells. Only after that eggshell protection is provided do the subject eggs exit the medium into the unprotected environment outside the medium. From that point forward and through consumption the subject eggs benefit from the total inactivation of the targeted pathogens and are protected from recontamination by the sealant affixed to the shells. As a subsidiary discovery and for further security from processing through table a preferred egg carton produced from self-destructive bio-plastic as made from corn will be employed carrying with it a sealed environment which contains a continuous application of an antibacterial agent built into the confines of the secured environment as provided by the carton. Notably no art for pasteurization of either liquid egg product or in-shell eggs currently provides to the public pasteurized eggs in-shell or in liquid egg product form which provide for the total inactivation of the targeted pathogens whether all strains of Because chicken eggs when laid contain either visible signs of manure on their shells or in most cases contain traces of manure on their shells which may not be clearly visible and that manure carries with it known contaminants which likely include The employment of an optional external shower containing an antibacterial agent together with an elevated temperature of the water is employed and applied through a spray and is made a part of the preferred protocol to be employed for selected circumstances. The mentioned elevated temperature of the spray is above 128° F. and once elevated is not to be lowered for reason that the internal egg will contract and attract the entrance of still greater numbers of contaminants. Such rinsing combined with the rinse water which includes a food-grade antibacterial agent is particularly useful to rid chicken eggs of their external contaminants which frequently contain visible signs of manure. Such provides a solution to the inadequacies provided under current practice to employ infrequent changes of the rinse water together with infrequent replenishment of the antibacterial agent within the mentioned rinse water. Since the rinse water rapidly collects contaminants carried by the shells of the subject eggs and the life of the antibacterial agent contained within the water has a shelf life frequently measured to be less than 12 minutes post-co-mingling with the water one reasonably skilled in the art would correctly conclude that the rinse water itself when exceeding 12 minutes without change as frequently is the case is a major source of contamination of all of the eggs being processed and exposed to the mentioned water. Such risk of contamination of all of the eggs exposed to the rinse water is compounded by the natural sealants of the shell pores at time of lay being washed away by the mentioned rinse water which in the end creates a conduit through the exposed pores of each shell of each egg to receive the contaminants contained within the rinse water which may be more numerous than the Of significant importance to the topic of egg safety each of the following two primary claims of inventiveness stand on their own as may be useful under certain circumstances but when utilized together enable inactivation of pathogens to a level never before achieved including the absence of consequential damage to the raw characteristics of the subject chicken eggs. Within the above-referenced two primary claims when employed together they enable the performance of pasteurization to levels as measured in applicable logs which without additives as currently used within liquid egg product achieve a level of total inactivation of targeted pathogens without consequential loss of the raw characteristics of the subject chicken eggs including but not limited to their nutritional benefits as well as their raw egg functional characteristics. 1. The first of the two primary claims of inventiveness for all in-shell chicken eggs subjected to pasteurization is found within a unique pasteurization protocol that employs the intermittent application of heat to the subject in-shell chicken eggs as generated through the previously-identified sources of heat generation. For these purposes the preferred use of a spray or a mist of water at predetermined temperatures for predetermined durations in part or in whole may be utilized to provide pasteurization to the subject eggs in their separate elements or as a combination of elements concurrently exposed as determined by the source of heat selected. As an added but necessary feature to the pasteurization protocol selected the spray or mist employed will contain a food-grade antibacterial agent which will preserve the inactivation of targeted pathogens occurring throughout the pasteurization protocol employed. Herein the use of the term ‘spray’ will be considered to be interchangeable with the term ‘mist’. The reference to the application of heat as described above also is described occasionally within this document to be cyclical in its application. That cyclical application of heat and its denial is unique to the art described herein. At the peak of the application of heat achieving a targeted temperature for pasteurization that temperature is maintained throughout the time equilibrium between all elements of the shell egg and the water being applied has occurred and a selected log level of inactivation of the targeted pathogen has occurred. That initial level of inactivation is dependant upon extraneous factors impacting upon the contents of the egg. Once that phase has been completed the preferred spray water temperature is lowered to below 128° F. and held there until such time as the other portions of the in-shell chicken egg have reduced their temperatures to approximately 130° F. at which time the application of heat through the preferred water spray is resumed and all elements of the chicken egg commence with temperatures rising to the initial 132.5° F. as selected to be the preferred temperature for pasteurization for purposes of this illustration. After all elements of the chicken egg have risen to that selected temperature level the temperature is maintained at that level until a predetermined additional level of pasteurization has occurred. For purposes of this illustration which is subject to variables caused by the chicken eggs themselves the log level achieved at each interval where equilibrium is achieved with the pasteurization temperature selected i.e. 132.5° F. in this illustration the anticipated holding time at each cycle occurring will approximate an inactivation of the targeted pathogen by 1 log which may reach 1.5 logs under selected circumstances. For purposes of clarity of understanding the selected pasteurization temperature together with the duration of application of that temperature to the in-shell chicken eggs is not only influenced by the chicken egg characteristics which are general and as previously recited reflect differences in size, water content and altitude as applied to temperature ranges as illustrations to be considered when adjusting protocol for pasteurization. Also and of significant importance such includes the new dynamics of the outer albumen characteristics as found within its composition that provides for more rapid heat gain and heat loss than each of the other elements contained within the chicken egg as compounded by its exterior location within the egg as related to the eggshell providing for far greater exposure to external temperatures than do the more inward elements of the subject eggs. Once the term of exposure is terminated as will be learned later in this document the temperature of the preferred water spray is lowered primarily to protect the integrity of the functionality of the outer albumen which is performed to an extent that provides for other elements within the egg to continue to be pasteurized i.e. above a temperature of 128° F. at the end point of its decline giving cause for the use of the term ‘cyclical’. The above illustration depicts the application of heat regardless of its source through a unique conveying medium into and throughout the subject eggs which are composed of substances containing differing densities and differing heat sensitivities giving cause for the heat to be applied intermittently to avoid coagulation of any one element within the chicken egg while at the same time recognizing and honoring the different densities and rates of heat transfer present within each element of the subject eggs. In the end that new and unique protocol enables the benefits of total destruction of pathogens without compromise to the raw characteristics of any one element contained within the subject chicken eggs. Under the described new inventiveness enabling a range of inactivation upward from 10 logs as applied to viral contamination and 12 logs as applied to With regard to the already discussed cyclical application of heat and its stated novel benefits the new art provides for the preservation of the raw characteristics of the outer albumen through interruptions of the otherwise constant application of heat during pasteurization. That new art which sometimes is described as the cyclical application of heat as applied to all elements of the eggs achieves log levels qualifying a claim of total inactivation of all pathogens which may be present whether viral or bacterial. Those benefits are made available through the intermittent or cyclical application of heat to the subject intact chicken eggs whether their end use is to provide for traditional servings customary to in-shell chicken eggs or whether their end use is for conversion into liquid egg product and uses customary to that product. Since the current level of pasteurization for liquid egg product may be as little as 5 logs as applied to Se bacteria and under the Rule of 2009 so-identified eggs containing high levels of As described earlier under the new protocol the internal egg temperatures will be brought to equilibrium with the heated water in whichever form the water to be employed is selected. The cyclical application and denial of heat notably and specifically employs intermittent applications of heat to the subject eggs through the temperature of the spray water employed as the preferred option to those others previously identified as options which are not preferred. Such is performed with intermittent denial of heat together with the intermittent application of selectively controlled and treated colder water which enables a unique achievement of higher log levels of inactivation of targeted pathogens never before achieved along with the benefits to public health provided from total inactivation of targeted pathogens present while at the same time preserving both the aesthetic and raw characteristics of the subject chicken eggs. The mentioned cyclical nature of the application of heat and its denial within the preferred embodiment of the art will be enhanced by controlled induced chilling which will accelerate pre-selected changes in temperatures of the spray water employed for pasteurization to be applied intermittently at prescribed times and for prescribed interval durations as adjusted to conform with the characteristics of the egg and its environment in order to accelerate the total pasteurization time to be lesser and more affordable as another feature of benefit derived from the improved safety achieved from the protocol described. Additional efficiency of time which converts into lower public cost of product is achieved by overshooting the targeted pasteurization temperature and discontinuing said overshooting when all of the content of the subject chicken eggs reach equilibrium with the targeted pasteurization temperature selected to be employed. Under the new art described herein public safety from 2. The second of the two primary claims of inventiveness described and claimed herein consists of a highly secured environment to protect the subject chicken eggs from exposure to pathogenic contamination once the protocol selected for pasteurization has been employed. That protection continues until not only the completion of pasteurization enabling total inactivation of targeted pathogens has been completed but also provides security from recontamination through the subject eggs receiving protection from environmental recontamination post-exit from the secured environment of the mentioned medium regardless of the art of pasteurization selected and employed i.e. use of treated water or other means of pathogenic inactivation as recited hereinbefore to be available for the protocol selected. Such is enabled through the unique design of a medium within which pasteurization is conducted. The unique design of the secured environment of the pasteurization medium includes equally unique and separate features whose collective ingredients provide for an isolated and protected environment within which continuous cleansing occurs which includes the air and the water as well as the secured environment provided by the medium. That secured environment is not violated from the arrival of the subject chicken eggs through to and including their exit as being pasteurized to a targeted log level that totally inactivates pathogens which may be present whether bacterial or viral and a protective sealant against recontamination has been provided to each egg prior to exit from the secured environment provided by the medium. The cleansing process within the medium employs features which include but are not limited to ultraviolet to protect the isolated air within the medium from stray contaminants were such to be present. Also within the described medium the preferred protocol includes the use of shower heads appropriately designed and strategically located which employ either a spray or a mist of treated water as needed for the protocol employed which may contain a food-grade antibacterial agent which may be applied within the water or separately to the subject eggs as called for within the protocol. The application of the controlled duration and programmed heated water begins with a drenching of stacked eggs placed within specially-designed flats dedicated for use to ensure that an even and controlled drenching of each egg being subjected to the new and unique pasteurization protocol has occurred. Excepting the end of the pasteurization protocol employed the water spray will include a food-grade antibacterial agent. Such is performed within the protection provided from the uniquely secured environment specifically designed and created for the pasteurization medium. The alternate choices of inactivation of pathogens through that of the use of heated water either wholly or in part will benefit from the secured environment provided regardless of the vehicle for the generation and disbursement of heat to the targeted chicken eggs. As an alternate to the preferred strategically located shower heads provided within the unique and secured medium described above is a bath which is not preferred due to its containing a greater risk of accumulating contamination together with its reduced potential to promptly change temperatures as efficiently as found within a water spray or a mist as serviced by the continuous cleansing process featured within the protected environment of the referenced medium. For those reasons the bath remains open as an option but is not preferred. Notably, eggs grown off-site most often will contain contamination on their shells and also the subject eggs may not have benefited from immediate, continuous and deep chilling. Those same eggs may also carry with them dates of lay which have provided for the known-to-be rapid multiplication of not only Although the presence of viral contaminants was known to exist prior to 2009 and also known to require still greater levels of inactivation than Further to the above and as recited earlier in the section entitled ‘Background to the Invention’ in a report authored by NERO confirmation of current practices of long prior standing were addressed which included but were not limited to recommendations that the practice of changing egg cartons containing unsold eggs into new cartons containing new ‘Best By’ dates be discontinued. Separately the co-mingling of Grade B eggs which frequently contain high counts of All of the above confirms the need for the public good that a reliably safe chicken egg be made available to a public whose taste for such has grown from 4 billion dozen consumed in year 2000 to a number pushing 10 billion dozen consumed currently. For certainty of clarity of the uniqueness of the new discoveries reported the current levels for inactivation of pathogens require pasteurization to levels as measured in logs which never before could be accomplished without coagulation of the subject chicken eggs. The new art resolves the issue of total inactivation of both viral and bacterial contamination within chicken eggs while preserving both its nutritional and functional raw characteristics including aesthetics. The utilization of a shower over that of a bath is the preferred medium for pasteurization under the new art to perform the described protocol for reasons that the control of a sanitized environment is more readily available through the use of a shower over that of a bath and the flexibilities of temperature, precision of length of exposure to temperatures and employment of ingredients are more readily available to provide consistency of safety and functional qualities to the end product. Through use of programmed temperature changes of the spray water set initially at the highest water temperature to be employed whether targeting all of the subject chicken egg contents or separate elements within the subject chicken eggs the subject water preferably is applied in the form of a spray or a mist which in either case will contain an approved food-grade antibacterial agent. The temperature of the water spray is raised and lowered at frequent and prescribed intervals which are determined by their impact upon the outer albumen. The accelerated rate of pasteurization provided by the preferred initial water spray temperature is reestablished when the mentioned outer albumen receives additional heat derived from the temperature of the water in whatever form it is applied to the eggshells providing that it is within a temperature range of 128° F. or above and continues to increase in its temperature until reaching the preferred pasteurization temperature of 132.5° F. as used for these purposes of illustration. The water contained within the spray will contain a food-grade antibacterial agent except at the end of the pasteurization protocol employed. At the end of the pasteurization protocol employed a final rinse of the subject eggs will be provided utilizing solely the food-grade antibacterial agent selected. For purposes of consistency of the end product each batch of eggs being pasteurized will receive water temperatures controlled by preprogrammed protocols which enable consistency of end product in terms of success in log levels of inactivation achieved as well as assurance gained through automation that the end product has been both fully pasteurized but damage to the raw characteristics of the subject eggs has been minimized. The mentioned water temperature changes result from controlled fluctuations of the initial egg temperature achieved for the commencement of pasteurization as followed by the lowering of the temperature as preferably enabled through the use of a shower or a mist containing a temperature which is no lower than 128° F. for all internal elements of the chicken egg excepting the outer albumen which is programmed to fall to a temperature between 123 to 127° F. As described hereinbefore the duration of pasteurization at each temperature setting is determined by such factors as size of eggs, altitude of the facility, chicken diet, variables in chicken water consumption among other considerations as would reasonably be known to those skilled in the art of chicken egg production and processing. Notably, overshooting of temperatures to reduce the total time required for pasteurization can be performed but should be performed with care to ensure that the benefits of total inactivation have occurred without damage to the raw characteristics of the subject eggs. Separately but importantly the outer albumen is being provided protection from heat damage through lowering its temperature intermittently from the initial water spray temperature setting which for these descriptive purposes is programmed to be 132.5° F. The new and unique protocol provides for continuous pasteurization of all elements of the chicken eggs excepting the outer albumen which in pertinent parts consists of the inner albumen, vitelline membrane and the yolk. The intermittent application of heat enables continuous pasteurization to occur for all of the denser elements identified which allows for the outer albumen singularly to receive special treatment. That special treatment to the mentioned outer albumen is the key element within the pasteurization protocol under the new art described herein which through new discoveries of how to utilize the outer albumen characteristics to enable the achievement of higher log inactivation of pathogens never before achieved without damage to the raw characteristics of the chicken eggs and more particularly the outer albumen. For clarity, post equilibrium between the water spray temperature setting and the eggs' internal temperatures having been reached and their equating to the preferred pasteurization temperature of 132.5° F. used as an illustration for these purposes the subject eggs dwell at that equilibrium temperature for a selected time which becomes part of the cumulative time of the pasteurization process selected which in the end provides for the generation of the needed log reduction of the targeted pathogen. In the interest of clarity the subject eggs are exposed to pasteurization at any time any element pertaining to the egg body within the shell achieves a temperature of 128° F. or higher. The quantity of heat transfer as measured in time to achieve logs will differ for each element of the egg. Therefore as each egg in terms of temperature and in terms of each ingredient within each egg travels from 128° F. to the pasteurization temperature selected i.e. for these illustrative purposes 132.5° F. through the use of employing a spray for its application log reductions will occur to each of the recited elements of each egg at different rates and in differing quantities. The art form herein integrates the rates of heat transfer of each element found within a chicken egg. What has been learned is that each element has different levels of tolerance to heat. Those differing levels of tolerance enable non-exact levels of heat to be applied to certain elements while using the least flexible element as the base from which deviations may stem. As a pertinent example the outer albumen has the least flexibility in heat tolerance as compared to other elements i.e. the inner albumen, the vitelline membrane and the yolk. Those referenced ingredients qualify the outer albumen to be used as the vehicle of choice as such relates to overshooting the heat application and the resulting log achievements for itself and the vitelline membrane as well as the yolk since each of those can accept additional heat as measured in logs more readily than does the outer albumen. Notably, that novel information provides the flexibility required for the outer albumen to be the baseline for the targeted log selected to achieve inactivation of the targeted pathogen. For the benefits derived through further explanation a given virus may require a 10-log inactivation. That is accomplished by the application and denial of heat giving cause to the outer albumen to only achieve pasteurization when at 128° F. or above as measured by logs. The denser inner albumen is slower to react to heat change and slower to be damaged by heat than the mentioned outer albumen. Therefore the new protocol provides for the outer albumen only to go below 128° F. at predetermined intervals and for predetermined timeframes which are below the minimum temperature that pasteurization occurs with reliable measurability. The inner albumen is allowed to fluctuate down to but not below the mentioned 128° F. because its density is greater. That greater density gives cause to the inner albumen taking longer for it to achieve the targeted log level than does the outer albumen. Hence the characteristics of the inner albumen give cause for it to continue to be within the temperature range for active pasteurization to occur. However, the inner albumen benefits from achieving pasteurization without coagulation at higher temperature levels for programmed durations than previously achieved through the use of the intermittent or cyclical application of heat and heat denial described and dictated by the differentiations of transfer rates as measured in time between each of the elements contained within the egg. Although the heat transfer rates of the elements composing an egg differ in the end each of the mentioned elements of the egg when exposed to the new art protocol will achieve the targeted log reduction of the selected log destruction targeted. Enough heat tolerance exists within each element of the subject egg to allow for overshooting the selected log reduction to accommodate the needs of the denser elements to reach a level of inactivation which is complete as applied to the targeted pathogen selected. Such is made available through a combination of adjustments to the cycle length representing the time taken to reach the equilibrium temperature for pasteurization, its holding time at that temperature together with the time of denial of heat including induced chilling which creates a full cycle. For clarity the shortening of the time of the described cycle and the lowering of the preferred pasteurization temperature in a manner related to needs identified by the characteristics of the batch of eggs being pasteurized will provide efficiencies to the length of times taken for completing a cycle of pasteurization including the avoidance of heat damage to any element of the subject eggs. By extending the cycles to reflect a portion of the impact gained by lowering the pasteurization temperature log levels can be increased to provide for either or both higher levels of pasteurization as measured in logs as well as enabling a lower risk of coagulation of the albumens as would be caused from a greater intensity of heat. In principle the vitelline membrane and the yolk also in graduated form have more tolerance to the rate of heat gain and heat loss which manifest themselves through a slower rate of change as caused by the inherent greater densities of those substances along with their more remote locations from the heat source as provided through the application of water and not directly at the yolk which is a discussed alternate option for a different form of heat transfer. Notably, the preferred protocol includes a water spray employing temperature changes as well as continuous purification together with an additive containing a food-grade antibacterial agent. All of the described ingredients are located and performed within the uninterrupted and protected environment of the new and unique pasteurization medium. In the end depending upon the very batch of eggs being processed in principle a formula is created which employs the results from preliminary test analyses of the relationships between the targeted log levels and the egg characteristics which include the outer albumen as the baseline. For better understanding in prior protocols it was learned that a size large chicken egg to achieve a 5-log pasteurization level on average took 2 minutes less than did a size extra large. In principle that nature of test runs can be performed to provide guidance to create a formularized program which provides for the frequency and quantity of heat transfer in terms of loss or gain to achieve log levels targeted to inactivate specific pathogens as derived from the basics described within the cyclical program of heat application and its denial as claimed. It is worth noting for better understanding that the above-described foundation facts concerning egg ingredients contain a natural order within their location within the shell. That natural order of ingredients includes differing densities which correspond to differing rates of heat transfer according to the density of the subject substance and transfers heat gain or heat loss at differing rates. As an example the yolk is impacted by heat and transfers heat at a slower rate than does the outer albumen. The new art applies that knowledge in a manner which protects the outer albumen from heat damage while at the same time allowing for the next most heat-sensitive inner albumen to receive heat. The inner albumen by virtue of its location and greater body density within its substance than the outer albumen is provided protection from damage caused by rates and quantities of temperature changes whose resulting damages are lesser than those of the outer albumen. While those applications are occurring a cyclical effect is created which includes the application of heat and its denial to all elements within the subject egg unless the heat applied targets the yolk initially. An element of that cycle results from the vitelline membrane and the yolk continuing to receive heat which may exceed the targeted log level but when such occurs it is modest enough in its excess to not cause heat damage to those denser but graduated elements. In conclusion and as one illustration to the above the yolk composition allows for modest overshooting of the targeted log while at the same time the inner albumen does not have a composition which provides for the same degree of flexibility before damage. In such an example the inner albumen may receive 12 logs while at the same time the yolk may receive 12.3 logs under the same protocol employed. What has been learned is that in practice the highest degree of inflexibility to heat damage is found within the elements of the egg which contain the least dense substances in their compositions i.e. the outer albumen and the inner albumen. Therefore the outer albumen needs periodic sanctuary from the heat as is provided from intermittent cooling through the protocol employed which provides for lapses in heat from the preprogrammed water spray temperature settings which allow for the outer albumen to quickly become protected from heat damage by cooling to levels below 128° F. and returning intermittently as the heat through the program employed which is referred to as being cyclical is increased. The inner albumen needs the same nature of treatment but does not need the added protection provided from temperatures below 128° F. because its rate of heat transfer is slower than that of the outer albumen. It has been discovered that both the vitelline membrane and the yolk which contain the densest substances can use those denser substances to an advantage enabling higher log levels of inactivation of targeted pathogens because of their denser substance and less vulnerability to modest overshooting as compared to their less dense counterparts as found within the two mentioned albumens. Those described egg ingredient characteristics once recognized opened the door to discoveries which were incorporated into a formula that enable materially higher levels of pasteurization of chicken eggs than all prior art could accomplish which in the end enabled the required levels of inactivations of all strains of bacteria and further for the first time enabled log levels of inactivation of viruses never before accomplished without damaging the raw characteristics of the subject eggs. As previously discussed when heat is applied directly to the denser yolk through use of such sources which include microwave, ultraviolet, heat lamps, concentrated solar energy as well as radio waves adjustments to the heat levels provided by the intermittent use of heated water preferably in the form of a spray or a mist will be employed to provide protection of the vitelline membrane and the two forms of albumen discussed in order to avoid either inadequate pasteurization or damage to those substances through excess heat applied. The alternate identified vehicles for heat transfer directly to the egg yolks although desirable to increase the speed at which pasteurization occurs carries with it risks that pasteurization to a targeted level directed to the yolk may succeed but may carry with it uncertainties that comparable pasteurization as measured in logs may occur without damage to the more sensitive and differing densities of the three albumen groups contained within the same egg in three different locations i.e. outer albumen, inner albumen and vitelline membrane. Since the new art effectively doubles the pasteurization protocol as measured through logs in order to satisfy requirements that all pathogens which may be present within the subject eggs have been inactivated the preferred art which is more manageable for both measure and control are best achieved through the use of water as applied by employing abrupt changes in temperature for varying preprogrammed durations together with a food-grade approved antibacterial agent either co-mingled within the spray water or applied separately which eliminate the uncertainties caused from utilizing two different protocols to provide the combination of one result to the whole egg i.e. pasteurizing the yolk to the targeted log level through one means and pasteurizing the differing densities as found within the albumen through separate means. Intermittent application of induced chilling to the outer albumen is preferred over ambient cooling. In recognition of jurisdictions which do not allow for the use of water to be applied to eggshells an alternate and equally unique protocol can be employed which consists of a combination of heat and ultraviolet as one area of several areas of options available which do not employ a liquid fluid as the vehicle for in-shell chicken egg pasteurization while achieving log levels of inactivation of targeted pathogens which as discussed herein throughout enables total inactivation of the targeted pathogens to occur without consequential damage to the raw characteristics of the subject eggs. Once the protocol described has been applied the then sanitized foreign and potentially contaminated matters attached to the eggshells and upon the pores can be wiped clean which enables the benefits from the pasteurization provided to be retained while at the same time the appearance of the subject eggs generally will be free from unsightly signs of contamination. Post the completion of the protocol described the then pasteurized in-shell chicken eggs receive protection against recontamination through the application of a food-grade sealant whose base can be wax or a plastic preferably through a form of application which provides protection from external contamination post departure from the pasteurization medium through to point of consumption. Separately but notably the benefit from induced chilling when limited to the outer albumen as intermittently applied throughout the pasteurization process selected for specific egg types and for specific pathogens targeted uniquely reduces the outer albumen's exposure to heat which makes available benefits that include the ability to provide levels of pasteurization never before available without damage to the raw characteristics of the chicken eggs. Those additional benefits not only open the door for the needed higher log levels to provide for consumer safety but also shorten the overall time for pasteurization to achieve the selected targeted log level from which the efficiency gained from induced chilling also reduces the end product cost. Notably, the protection to the outer albumen as provided by induced chilling enables log levels of inactivation of targeted pathogens to occur which is an essential achievement to provide for assured public safety and is unique to this described art of new inventiveness. The employment of intermittent induced chilling only will occur within the secured environment of the pasteurization medium whose designed security against invasion of pathogens provides protection against recontamination which otherwise would be enabled to occur because the mentioned chilling gives cause to the internal egg contracting which brings in unwanted pathogens that are blocked or inactivated through the described cleansing features contained and provided on a continuing basis as found within the unique and secured environment within the pasteurization medium. In support of the above during contraction which occurs post-application of heat for pasteurization when within an impure environment as provided under all prior art impurities gain entrance into a chicken egg through its shell pores which is aided by the suction created from the contraction of the internal elements of the subject eggs post-pasteurization. Summary: For clarity and better understanding the pasteurization medium receives eggs which optionally may be pre-rinsed and sanitized before commencement of pasteurization. That optional protocol includes the employment of a rinsing process of the in-shell chicken eggs to be performed outside of the pasteurization medium in order to materially reduce entry of contaminants located on the eggshells from gaining entry into the eggs through their exposed pores. That described external application of heated water containing a food-grade antibacterial agent is useful to reduce risks of unwanted entry of contaminants located on the shells of the eggs to be subsequently subjected to pasteurization. The blockage from entry of externally located contaminants including those which may be located on the eggshells is accomplished by applying heated water at temperatures below 128° F. but higher than the internal temperatures of the eggs subjected to the shell rinsing. That protocol enables the expansion of the internal eggs which blocks entry of externally located contaminants passing into the subject eggs through exposed shell pores. The subject eggs after the described optional external treatment are transferred into the isolated and secured environment of a new and unique pasteurization medium within which they initially receive a separate heated water spray containing a food-grade antibacterial agent as part of the pasteurization protocol employed. Under all variables of the pasteurization protocols available to be employed each includes a protocol that provides for heating the subject eggs during pasteurization to an extent that gives cause for the air sacks located at the blunt ends of the chicken eggs to reduce in size due to the expansion of the internal contents of the eggs as caused by the mentioned application of heat. During pasteurization the heat employed causes the internal bodies of the eggs to expand into the voided space previously occupied by the air sacks. Under the new protocol the environment created within the unique security provided by the pasteurization medium allows for the protected use of sanitized water including food-grade chemical additives utilized for prescribed limited durations, the intermittent applications of heat as well as the intermittent applications of induced chilling, utilization of sanitized air provided by but not limited to combinations of ultraviolet light, filtration and reverse osmosis which in combination or separately if employed with continuity enables total inactivation without risk of pathogenic survivors or recontamination of the subject eggs. Notably, that protocol not only provides for total inactivation of targeted pathogens but also provides for a fundamentally raw egg in both its characteristics and nutritional benefits. For emphasis and further clarity the subject eggs post their optional treatment performed externally to their entry into the secured environment of the pasteurization medium are subjected to an increase of temperature to achieve the preferred initial internal targeted pasteurization temperature of 132.5° F. which is used only as an illustration of the targeted pasteurization temperature to be employed for these descriptive purposes. Once the subject eggs begin receiving heat post entry into the pasteurization medium the internal contents of the eggs begin their expansion. That expansion blocks entry of any stray pathogens which at the end of the protocol employed within the security provided by the medium will inactivate stray pathogens along with all pathogens present within the medium as well as those within the subject eggs. If stray pathogens remain alive and have not been forced to escape through the eggshell pores resulting from the expansion caused by heat of the internal egg contents at termination of pasteurization and while the subject eggs are ambiently cooling which provides for the internal egg to contract a final application of a food-grade antibacterial agent is applied to each of the exposed eggshells and through the combination of internal contraction and exposed eggshell pores the mentioned agent is drawn inwards. That final application of the described agent ensures the inactivation of any stray pathogens. The described final step of applying an antibacterial agent to the subject eggshells to ensure the inactivation of stray pathogens is followed by the application of a sealant which enables the mentioned agent whose life may run a few days to continue its purpose in the inactivation of the mentioned stray pathogens if present. Post the described protocol having been performed further contamination is blocked through the protected environment provided by the medium within which post pasteurization and pre-exit the eggs are sealed through the use of the application of the mentioned food-grade sealants. Under the new art described and claimed herein new and unique benefits are made available through the redundancy of using a cyclical application of heat and chilling to perform pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs in a manner which provides certainty that a total inactivation of targeted pathogens has occurred without consequential damage to the raw characteristics and nutritional benefits of a raw chicken egg. No prior pasteurization protocol of record can claim reliable inactivation of either or both excessive The protocols for the employment of new inventiveness enabling the statistically complete inactivation of more aggressive and heat-resistant viral pathogens over those of bacteria create the need satisfied by the unique features of the new art which provides for a selection of options from which the processor may select. The following describes a selection which is not the preferred selection but will be useful under certain circumstances peculiar to needs. In recognition of jurisdictions which do not allow for the use of water to be applied to eggshells an alternate and equally effective new protocol has been discovered which succeeds in providing total inactivation of targeted pathogens without use of water. Under the mentioned discovery water employed for pasteurization is substituted by purified air that is applied according to the art described herein which uniquely employs intermittent applications of heat interrupted by programmed chilling of the subject eggs on a programmed basis which in the end provides for levels of pasteurization as measured in logarithms (logs) which achieve both total inactivation of targeted pathogens while retaining the raw characteristics and nutritional benefits of a raw in-shell chicken egg. The mentioned interruptions allow for pasteurization of the subject in-shell eggs to occur at higher levels than all prior commercial art has provided without damage to the raw characteristics of the subject eggs and particularly the most sensitive element to heat as taught to be the outer albumen. The heat transfer whether through air or water is performed through the use of nozzles which enable differing densities of heated or chilled water to be sprayed on a pre-programmed basis directly unto the eggshells. The temperature interruptions created by the temperature changes caused by alternating heated water with chilled water as now adapted to include air avoids heat damage to the highly sensitive outer albumen. That protocol as more fully described herein before employs water as its base ingredient which under this section of the new art is substituted by air which when employed contains times of exposure to specific temperature settings that can be modified by parties reasonably skilled in the art to accommodate the modest differentials in heat transfer found to occur between the use of water and the use of air whether to accommodate a heat gain or a reduction of temperature resulting from the change of temperatures within the protocol employed. In the end whether through the use of a water base or an air base the described art achieves log levels of inactivation of the targeted pathogens which are total and are unique to the art described and claimed herein. For clarity, the new art in the form now outlined and claimed herein includes the ability to substitute water employed for in-shell chicken egg pasteurization with purified air. The employment of purified air utilizing the applicable elements of the ingredients of the new protocol for pasteurization employing water as is also claimed herein can be performed interchangeably within its key elements. Once the protocol described has been applied the then-sanitized foreign and potentially contaminated matters attached to the eggshells and upon its pores can be wiped or blown clean. The new art enables the totality of food safety benefits derived from the pasteurization provided to be retained while at the same time the appearance of the subject eggs generally will be free from unsightly signs of potential contaminants. Through the discovery described herein regarding new and unique protocol contained within the new art regarding the application and denial of heat as delivered by air as qualified to be a substitute for water such enables delivery of an end product of a chicken egg that is pasteurized to levels never before accomplished which provides for the total inactivation of targeted pathogens. Under the new art prior to exit from the secured environment of the pasteurization medium the application of a shell sealant is provided to protect against recontamination from time of exit from the medium through to consumption. Notably, current reports indicate that unwashed and un-refrigerated chicken eggs carry with them lower frequency of The above-described new inventiveness provides for public consumption of chicken eggs whether in-shell or converted into liquid egg products which allows for human consumption in all recipes without need of hard-cooking to avoid risk of illnesses. Such is the result of the new art described herein providing total inactivation of pathogens currently found or anticipated to become found within chicken eggs. Notably the inactivation of pathogens includes all strains of For certainty of clarity in the first instance viruses are targeted to be inactivated because the inactivation of viruses enables the automatic inclusion and destruction of undesired bacteria resulting from their having a lower tolerance to heat than do viruses. In the second instance viruses in their current form are forecasted to be converting into new strains which already show signs of enabling human to human transfer which in the end already has been forecasted to give cause to a pandemic. Although the forecast of a pandemic from viruses as found within chickens and their eggs is worldwide in its sources and confirmation exists that the US through its Health and Human Service Agency having funded $150.0 million to perform research on a vaccine no protection against the pandemic risk through pasteurization of chicken eggs has been performed or even mentioned as being helpful particularly were such to be expandable above current levels of 5 logs as applied to Se in order to successfully inactivate all strains of In summary the preferred option substitutes the described waterbath located within the protected environment of the medium with a drenching shower, drenching mist or as otherwise preferred may include purified air at controlled temperatures and be applied in the same manner as would be available through water in the form of a mist. Each of the choices referenced includes an additive of an antibacterial agent which provides for each of the eggs to receive exposure that equates to the same level of inactivation of pathogens targeted as would have been targeted within the other options which include the less preferred waterbath and the otherwise preferred use of a spray of water which might include its application in spray and mist forms. Both protocols whether a shower or a bath in the end would use antibacterial agents of food-grade quality within the water of the medium selected but also would employ intermittent applications of heat and its denial to perform targeted levels of pasteurization more fully discussed within this section as well as within the ‘Detailed Description of the Invention’ section. The intermittent application of heat is of significant importance to the discoveries cited herein which enable the total inactivation of targeted pathogens while preserving the fresh and raw characteristics of chicken eggs. Because the previously-described preference over a waterbath is the use of a water spray or mist that preference is further enhanced by the benefits derived from both the ease and the speed of converting a heated spray into a chilling spray to protect the heat-sensitive outer albumen from heat damage i.e. coagulation. The described efficiency over the control of water temperatures provides the further benefit of reducing the public cost of the end product through the cost savings gained from a shorter pasteurization cycle. Further to the above a spray is more certain to provide continuously clean water blended with an antibacterial agent than is a water bath. Of equal merit to the preferred use of a spray or a mist to transfer heat, the results of its denial or the applications of induced chilling to the subject eggs through even applications to the exposed eggshells has been found to be equally effective through the use of a protocol employing air versus water. That application of controlled air temperatures applied through the air to the subject eggshells in a manner which is direct, even and at a consistent velocity includes the use of food-grade non-liquid anti pathogen additives selected either singularly or in combination from ultraviolet, heat, microwave as well as other cleansers discussed hereinbefore whether applied singularly or in combination as may be required to enable the total inactivation of the pathogens targeted. Excepting the protocol for pasteurization that does not employ water in any form as part of its overall protocol which as discussed above can be found within cleansed air employed at specific temperatures and velocities when applied as the preferred alternative to water employed in the form of a mist or a spray of treated water applied at deferring densities post substantial pasteurization having been completed as measured in logs the eggs are moved from their above-referenced optionally employed shower or immersion located at the entrance to the medium to a separate area within the medium at which point they receive a continuous spray consisting of coarse water optionally converted into a mist of purified water containing a food-grade antibacterial agent which is applied at intermittent and predetermined temperatures. That optional application provides for the optional partial cleansing of the eggshells prior to transfer into a pasteurization medium which reduces the burden of the process employed within the medium. Notably, the optional external rinse is at a temperature which is above the internal temperature of the subject eggs but below the temperature of the medium upon entry. Such temperatures provide for more effective external rinsing which denies further invasion into the subject eggs of unwanted pathogens as carried by both air and foreign matters attached to the subject eggshells. With regard to the above-described protocol were the specific targeting of the egg yolk to be employed using electronic means as one of the variables to how temperature transfer options hereinbefore described would be applied the shower in any of its optional forms i.e. a coarse spray, a fine spray, mist or otherwise would be adjusted to accommodate specific needs concerning the subject eggs being processed which may include such considerations impacted by changes to the time and temperature formulas to provide for the direct application of heat to the yolks of the subject eggs through the water spray temperature settings selected. An alternate and preferred choice to the described treated water spray or the treated water spray mist is contained within a direct application of a food-grade antibacterial agent applied directly to the eggshells post-completion of pasteurization and pre-application of the food-grade sealant selected. That application is applied directly to the eggshells whose pores are exposed. As the ambient cooling within the medium occurs the undiluted agent will be drawn inward into the bodies of the eggs through the shell pores which will provide protection against stray contaminants that still may exist within the secured environment of the pasteurization medium. During the described process the internal temperature of the subject eggs continue to gradually diminish and the egg contents continue to contract internally which in both circumstances are characteristic of eggs while cooling. The source of the residual heat available from final ambient cooling is located within the yolk whose density and location gives cause for it to be the last element within the eggs to reach equilibrium with the temperature of the medium during ambient cooling. The internal contraction of the eggs while cooling post pasteurization draws inward the applied antibacterial agent to the eggshells which ensures continuing inactivation of stray pathogens. While contraction of the eggs is occurring within the secured medium post pasteurization and the temperature of the internal eggs is nearing ambient condition with the external environment to the medium a preferred sealant is applied to the eggshells consisting of a food-grade wax or plastic sealant in a preferred manner of application employing a spray which when applied is drawn into the eggs through their exposed shell pores which seals the eggshells from external penetration by pathogens. The eggs have two membranes located between the eggshells and the body of the eggs which contain their contents. Those membranes together with the shell sealant collectively provide additional security from recontamination stemming from external sources utilizing exposed shell pores as their source of entry. Upon completion of the pasteurization protocol the eggs exit the protected environment provided by the medium. The above-described elements employing treated water in the form of a spray or a mist as preferred over a water bath is applied directly to the chicken eggshells. Under the new art claimed herein that protocol is changed from the use of purified water to the use of purified air. The inclusion of the option of purified air is employed together with the combination of features contained within the new art which primarily consists of but is not limited to a secured medium within which pasteurization is performed. Such enables for the first time total inactivation of targeted pathogens including all strains of Under the new art the combination of a secured medium to process eggs provides a proven and effective barrier from airborne contaminants to locate upon the matters attached to chicken eggshells post lay as is magnified by the egg contracting internally post lay which creates a mild but significant air current attracting airborne contaminants to join with the contaminants present within the foreign and frequently contaminated substances found upon eggshells at time of lay. Under the new art an option for continuation of the practice of not washing eggshells is provided without the penalty or risk of allowing subsequent contamination to occur internally to the chicken egg once the natural sealant has either become ineffective from the passage of time or physically compromised from cracks and dents to the eggshells. Through pasteurization performed without the use of a liquid fluid the concerns of increasing internal contamination of chicken eggs are eliminated. The raw characteristics substantially are preserved along with nutritional benefits. Even under ambient conditions shelf life is extended. Notably and significantly a further benefit to all of the above now is gained and made available through in-shell chicken egg pasteurization employing new art which achieves inactivation of pathogens to a new level which for the first time provides for the total inactivation of targeted pathogens whether through inactivation of all strains of In conclusion, both notably and significantly, the new and materially higher levels of log reductions of pathogens which may be present upon or within chicken eggs are now made available for total inactivation through new and unique art which utilizes a collection and uses of protocols in a novel manner that provide for what effectively is the total inactivation of pathogenic contamination of chicken eggs while at the same time providing for the denial of recontamination or risks of incomplete levels of pasteurization while maintaining the nutritional, aesthetic and functional characteristics of a raw chicken egg. That flexibility which is unique to the new art described enables production of safe eggs to include the additional benefit of having recaptured the natural taste of the egg while at the same time delivering a statistically safe egg for use in all recipes and to provide the benefit of safety to most particularly the 150.0 million persons within the United States identified to be at high risk of illness caused by unsafe foods. In the absence of a forecasted viral threat the same new art of pasteurization can be adapted through adjustments of the length of time of heat application to satisfy the destruction of The inadequacies of a 5-log inactivation are common knowledge to the scientific community. Also it is common knowledge that the mentioned inadequacy enables the regeneration through multiplication of the Further to the above attention is drawn to the already recited practices which exasperate the already significant risks to public health caused by contaminated chicken eggs together with the loss of public dollars potentially measured in trillions resulting from those practices. Those practices include but are not limited to illnesses and deaths caused from repackaging of eggs of stale dates into new packages containing new ‘Best By’ dates in the first instance. In the second instance the acknowledged practice of including two plus Grade B eggs in 12-egg cartons labeled as either Grade A or Grade AA is both immoral and likely illegal. Such is magnified by agencies of jurisdiction being party to producing public health statistics which confirm that 45% of the population consists of persons with compromised immune systems and mislabeled eggs not only is causing greater numbers of illnesses, and deaths but also when calculated in dollars using any reasonable formula the result is an avoidable public cost measured in trillions of dollars. As has been discussed and noted above, there are several different elements contained within the invention. Each element is important unto itself. However, when employed together their combined contents create for the first time the ability to provide a total food safety benefit for the chicken egg consuming public through two new primary achievements. The first new primary achievement is a method that enables the total inactivation of The second new primary area of inventiveness is referenced as being the pasteurization medium. The pasteurization medium is peculiar to the new art claimed herein. The new medium enables total inactivation of As has been discussed and noted above under the ‘Summary of the Invention’ the new influenza threat spanning the globe has a viral base source which generally is identified as Avian Influenza that is commonly referred to as the bird flu. In the pasteurization processes described and claimed in the above-noted patent ingredients pasteurization is carried out in optional forms by way of intermittent applications of heat as contained within purified water through application of a spray or a mist as one option. A second option employing the same secured environment of the medium employing a similar protocol as that of the described water is employed by the substitution of the water in all of its forms with purified air. Each of the two preferred applications i.e., water and air as described, are preferred over the selection of a water bath for reasons more fully discussed under the prior section entitled ‘Summary of the Invention’. Under the protocol employed within the new art, whether purified water or purified air is employed, the selection is similarly programmed to fluctuate in its temperature, enabling the subject eggs being pasteurized to be protected from heat damage, which if not protected, would give cause for the subject eggs to loose their raw characteristics. The new art as is more completely described herein above by reference is included within this section. More particularly, reference is made to the portion of the new art which both protects the subject eggs from risks of heat damage, while at the same time and for the first time enables the inactivation of targeted pathogens, which include all strains of The new and significantly important inventiveness described and claimed herein concerning pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs also provides for a new and unique total inactivation of pathogens present which enables the conversion of the subject pasteurized in-shell eggs into liquid egg products, which currently give cause to significant health risks to the consuming public resulting from inadequate pasteurization. The inadequate pasteurization as applied to Separately but of distinct importance the new art through all of its elements enables not only the inactivation of pathogens already as found within chicken eggs, which include bacterial strains and viral strains, but also those which may come to be found within derivative strains that evidence confirms likely are to occur. Those new strains may include the need for greater protection from pathogens more resistant to heat. Under prior art protocols employed for pasteurization, inactivation of pathogens possessing newfound resistance to heat is unavailable. Their inactivation now can be satisfied through the new art being discussed, which provides for the achievement of still higher levels of inactivation, as enabled by the art contained within the new pasteurization protocol employed that has been more fully discussed hereinbefore. Under the new protocol enabling the total inactivation of viral strains, the level of heat application to achieve said inactivation of the viruses exceeds the heat application required to inactivate all strains of For further clarity, in practice the new inventiveness through its protocol provides for a level of viral destruction or inactivation of 10-logs or greater as may be needed to accommodate the inactivation of viral strains which require additional log reduction over that of the most prominent and heat-resilient bacterial strains currently causing contamination of chicken eggs. Although Se is not the most heat-resilient strain of Notably, the new art employs pasteurization and not sterilization. In pertinent part, pasteurization preserves nutritional values within the food source targeted, whereas sterilization loses the nutritional values of the food targeted. In summary, the first of two areas of new and primary inventiveness under the new pasteurization art described herein and claimed as new inventiveness includes the unique ingredients of the protocols employed resulting from new discoveries, which provide the ability to accomplish the inactivation of both viral and bacterial contaminants as enabled through redundancy of the application of heat and the unique denial of heat intermittently applied to the least dense but most rapid heat transfer element of the various elements contained within chicken eggs, which is found to be characteristic of the outer albumen. That described intermittent application and denial of heat, as controlled and measured by and from the outer albumen, represents the primary control point of the new and unique protocol employed, which enables the achievement of levels of inactivation of targeted pathogens never accomplished previously without loss of the raw characteristics of the chicken eggs. That described new knowledge has led to new discoveries disclosed and claimed herein which now enable the inactivation of both viral and bacterial contaminants as found within chicken eggs or as forecasted to become sources of contamination to chicken eggs through viral mutations of existing strains or from independently evolved new viral strains, which in each instance require materially greater heat exposure to achieve inactivation than does Notably and materially, the present state of the art cannot deliver inactivation of any targeted virus or new threat from any source currently evolving as studied and reported by the scientific community to a level of log destruction as measured by Se without damaging the raw characteristics of chicken eggs whether in-shell or within liquid product form or whether whole or separated into albumen only or yolk only, while at the same time inactivating the new viral strains or species of contaminants known to exist and known to be continuing to evolve into a public threat caused by a virus which is capable of sickening the public through either human-to-human transfer or through an inordinate quantity of illnesses independently encountered by the egg-consuming public. Of equal notability, the Government itself for reasons which remain unclear, reduced the inactivation level of all strains of Separately, the details of the new art described herein include the replacement of the prior art risk providing protocol of employing a 5-log level of pasteurization as may be found within a contaminated chicken egg without qualifications provided to the public in advance that the subject eggs frequently may cause illness or even death. Notably and of primary importance, the new discoveries in material part employ the advantages provided from the significant differences found within both the heat transfer and heat retention of the outer albumen, as compared to each and all of the other elements of the chicken eggs. For clarity of understanding, the outer albumen contains different characteristics and a different density in its composition from those of the inner albumen, vitelline membrane and the yolk. Those differing characteristics most significantly include the lesser density of the outer albumen as compared to the densities contained within the inner albumen and the vitelline membrane as well as the yolk. The differences in the densities of the mentioned substances together with their differing proximities to the heat source, whether those sources are being provided with heat or with an absence of heat or still further have been subjected to induced chilling enable new teachings to occur, when understood and considered together provide for the first primary element of new inventiveness to occur. That new first element is dependant upon the unique use of the composition of the outer albumen in combination with its unique location in relation to the eggshell and proximity to the source of heat or chilling. The outer albumen's composition and location, in combination with its thinnest relative composition provides for the outer albumen to be the key measure of control of heat transfer over all other elements within the subject eggs, as derived from the advantages provided from the outer albumen's higher rates of heat transfer whether from heat gain, heat loss post-heating and induced chilling. That protocol provides for heat damage to the outer albumen to be eliminated, while at the same time the exposures of all other elements of the subject eggs, including their graduated denser compositions as represented by the inner albumen, vitelline membrane and the yolk, benefit from prolonged and interrupted applications of heat, its denial and the inclusion of intermittent induced chilling to achieve the desired higher targeted log reduction selected without loss of the inherent raw characteristics of the subject chicken eggs. The benefits from the discoveries derived from utilizing the different densities of the egg components together with their resulting differing rates of heat transfer enable higher log levels of destruction of targeted pathogens to occur without damage to the raw characteristics of the subject chicken eggs. In the end, this new and particular area of discoveries addressing the differing elements of the eggs and their varying rates of heat absorption and heat discharge are utilized in a unique and positive manner, which enable greater log levels of pathogenic inactivation of targeted pathogens than prior art has achieved without negative impact upon the raw characteristics of the subject chicken eggs. That achievement of inactivation of both viruses and bacteria is enabled through the described new inventiveness, which not only enables new threats from viral contamination to be compromised fully but also concurrently provides for the total inactivation of in-shell chicken eggs contaminated with any and all strains of Importantly, the new art claimed herein initially targets a pasteurization level for chicken eggs as measured in viral logs to be a 10-log level of inactivation of the H5N1 virus as being representative of the pertinent viral group. At the same time, through the intermittent application of heat and its intermittent denial which is unique to and a fundamental part of the new art, the present inventiveness provides protection against coagulation of the outer albumen that otherwise would give cause to the loss of the raw aesthetic and functional characteristics of the subject eggs. Consequentially, were it to occur that a 10-log level of inactivation of viruses as found within chicken eggs is inadequate to inactivate all viruses present, the new art provides for a programmed continuation of the cyclical application of heat and its denial to be extended employing a preferred option of induced chilling. The present inventiveness enables the total inactivation of the targeted pathogens without giving cause to loss of nutritional benefits or functional benefits of the subject chicken eggs as compared to their raw counterparts. The new chicken egg pasteurization art employs an initial 12-log inactivation of The materially higher levels for total inactivation of both of the mentioned pathogen groups are enabled by a new and unique pasteurization protocol employed within an equally new and unique purified isolated environment to be found within the medium employed. That protocol contains new and unique features which can be employed to either or both of the mentioned pathogen groups separately or concurrently. The present invention includes the application of heat through a purified water source or optionally a source employing purified air, which in either of the options employs heat applied at a predetermined temperature setting of 132.5° F., for these illustration purposes only. That water temperature will be identified and treated as the preferred pasteurization temperature, which is applied in its preferred form through a spray or a mist or in an equally effective form through use of purified air applied directly to the eggshells of the subject eggs at specific temperatures, at specific intervals and for specific durations. These parameters are determined primarily but not solely by influences caused from the environmental characteristics of the location of the processing facility and the source location of the subject eggs, egg characteristics generally and the individual local characteristics of the subject eggs. From the information discussed herein above, a new art has been generated which is employed through a new and unique formula adaptable to the described conditions precedent, which through its flexibility accommodates pasteurization exposure times of the subject eggs. By doing so, this invention not only to provides a level of pasteurization, as measured in targeted logs, through adjustments to accommodate particular local characteristics influencing the subject eggs together with providing a level of inactivation of the targeted pathogens intended as adjusted in all applications to accommodate not only the differences contained within chicken eggs as to size and contents but also the quantity of inactivation as required for the total inactivation of each pathogen targeted. Such is accomplished through the controlled employment of heat and the denial of heat applied to the shells of chicken eggs, optionally through the use of a spray or a mist of water which also will contain an approved food-grade antibacterial agent. The application of the water in its mentioned forms to the subject eggshells employs different temperatures for different durations which are derived from formulas that accommodate the quantities of heat required to achieve the targeted inactivation of the targeted pathogens, as measured in applicable logs (logarithms), without consequential damage from heat to any one element of the chicken egg. The art in practice utilizes the application of heat and its denial to be prompt through use of consistent temperatures for specific durations programmed to accommodate the egg characteristics present, the log level targeted for inactivation and the adjustments to accommodate exposures necessitated from differing egg characteristics being subjected to the pasteurization protocol being employed. The programmed protocol is adjusted to reflect not only the targeted log level to be achieved for inactivation of the targeted pathogens but also includes modifications of the time and temperature employed to reflect accommodations to the differing individual egg characteristics. Those mentioned considerations are further adjusted to reflect the inactivation of the targeted pathogens as such applies to the duration of the application of heat and its denial as optionally delivered through a fine spray or a mist of water at predetermined temperatures and for predetermined time intervals, which also can contain a food-grade antibacterial agent as applied to the exposed eggshells. A formula which includes the specific characteristics of each element of the chicken eggs being subjected to pasteurization together with their relative differences in heat sensitivity as compared to the outer albumen, including its rate of heat gain and heat loss in terms of time and temperature of exposure to both heat and induced chilling along with the targeted log reduction of the targeted pathogen all are incorporated into the resulting protocol. The protocol delivers the treated water through an optional use of a spray or mist at predetermined intervals along with predetermined durations of intervals containing preprogrammed temperature changes to accommodate the subject egg characteristics. Interruptions of the alternating applications of sanitized and heated water in the form of a selected spray and employment of induced chilled water containing a sanitizer applied at programmed alternating intervals along with the application of the heated water spray, at the end of the term called for achieves the protection of the outer albumen from heat damage while continuous pasteurization is being performed to each of the other elements contained within the subject chicken eggs. Those elements other than the outer albumen include the inner albumen, the vitelline membrane and the yolk, each of which requires different quantities of heat in terms of exposure times to a selected temperature to achieve pasteurization. Through customized formulas to accommodate the individual characteristics of the subject eggs, the use of a unique feature common to all formulas employed, which includes attention to the protection of the outer albumen from heat damage by interrupting the application of heat intermittently through either induce chilled air or water in applications directly to the eggshells. These features provide for the lowering of the temperature of solely the outer albumen to below 128° F. and remaining there for a specific time, which accommodates both the characteristics of the subject eggs and accommodates the protocol employed, which suspends the chilling of the outer albumen when the inner albumen approaches 128° F., at which time the induced chilling is suspended. This suspension can be achieved through use of a fluid consisting of water or air and heat disbursed through the same sources, which is applied to the outer albumen through the shells of the subject eggs to an extent wherein the targeted pasteurization temperature used herein as 132.5° F. is reached. The described art includes deviations in exposure times in all phases to accommodate the characteristics of the batch of eggs being pasteurized, as well as the needs described to protect the outer albumen from heat damage. These needs dictate the time and temperature of exposure of each element contained within a chicken egg to achieve pasteurization of a targeted pathogen at the targeted total inactivation level without loss of aesthetic or loss of functional characteristics as expected to be present within a raw chicken egg. Notably and of equal effectiveness, it has been learned that the use of purified air can be employed interchangeably with purified water to achieve equivalent results through the application of the purified air to the subject chicken eggshells employing the same shower heads readily modified to accept air in lieu of water in its various forms. Further, approved food-grade agents to purify air being disbursed are readily available to provide the same level of sanitation to the subject eggshells as those employed for the alternative use of water. The option provided through the use of air requires modest adjustments easily formulated to accommodate changes in rates of temperature changes, as influenced by the density differences found within air and the selection of the water selected to be employed. The velocity of the air versus the form of water employed is a contributing factor to the formulation of the protocol to be employed. Since both water and air share in being fluids, their characteristics are easily modified to accommodate the impact of their differences upon the transfer equipment employed to accommodate the disbursement of the heat and chilling in both forms whether air or water. Notably, each of those substances can be made more effective in their rate of heat transfer or in their rate of chilling, which preferably will be induced for improved control and cost efficiencies, as called for and enabled under the new art. When utilized properly a targeted log reduction of a targeted pathogen, whether viral or bacterial, can be performed, which uniquely provides for the total inactivation of the targeted pathogen as may be found within a contaminated chicken egg. Thus, using the elevated heat sensitivity of the outer albumen to reflect the benefits from its unique location, as being next to the heat and chilling sources through its being an abutter to the eggshell, a formula reflecting those unique characteristics modified to accommodate the heat transfer characteristics of the differing densities, as found within each of the other elements contained within a chicken egg, along with their differing locations from the heat or chilling sources, in the end provide for a formula enabling the total achievement of inactivation of the targeted pathogens without consequential damage to the internal contents of the chicken eggs. As determined through the teachings learned through the experiments employed, the exactness of the targeted logs of pasteurization for the targeted pathogens when achieved for each element of the subject eggs will not contain the same targeted log levels of inactivation, but in each case will meet or exceed that targeted level of pasteurization without damage to the element of the eggs receiving more than the minimal level targeted. As an illustration, the densest composition of the egg is found to be within the yolk. That composition combined with its most remote location requires greater exposure to heat in terms of time and temperature to achieve the same targeted log reduction as does the outer albumen as one example. The formulas employed under the new art are dictated by the rates of heat transfer or heat loss as measured by the outer albumen. Therefore, the rates of heat transfer and heat loss together with the rates of chilling as applied to the outer albumen become the control points of the formula for pasteurization under the new art. All other elements of the eggs require different levels of exposure as measured in time for the same temperature to produce the same result from pasteurization as measured in logs. The time required for each of the different elements is non-exact, but in each case allows for a tolerance level to be accommodated through the new formula employed, which provides for each element to benefit from the targeted log reduction but also to exceed that targeted reduction to an extent that accommodates the other elements to achieve the same targeted level of inactivation through longer exposure to the heat being applied without delivering damage of consequence to any element requiring extra exposure time. In the end that discovered flexibility from each element, as compared each to the other, enables pasteurization to the targeted log level to occur, but in certain specific cases to exceed the targeted level of inactivation through greater exposure to the heat source in terms of time without causing consequential damage to the more heat-sensitive other elements within the subject egg. In summary, the discovery of how to convert the different tolerances to heat as characteristic of each of the primary elements composing the chicken egg i.e. the outer albumen as thinnest in substance and most rapid in heat gain or loss, the inner albumen which is next most rapid in the same characteristics as found within the outer albumen, the vitelline membrane contains within its compositional characteristics a greater density in its substance than does the outer albumen, which results in greater heat tolerance and slower rates of cooling than do both of the mentioned albumens. The most dense substance, which also is the most remote in its location, is the yolk, which requires greater time for heat gain and heat loss as compared to the discussed other elements within the chicken egg. Thus, the achievement of a targeted log under the new art is available, although that targeted log may result in excesses as measured in logs to certain elements as found within the inner albumen and the outer albumen. The greater densities of the vitelline membrane and the yolk, allow for the yolk to achieve the targeted inactivation, while at the same time giving cause to both the outer and inner albumens to modestly exceed the targeted logs without damage to the raw characteristics of those specific elements. This ability is made available through the new and unique cyclical application of heat and its denial, which is a key element of the new art described and claimed herein. As separately discussed, the broader fluctuations in temperature provided to the outer albumen enable the concurrent protection of the inner albumen and the vitelline membrane. Such is enabled by the discovery that the heat tolerance of each element, once identified, can be converted into a formula which accommodates all of the differing heat tolerance levels through the application of heat and its denial along with the associated cooling. In the end, this heating and cooling creates a common result of a pasteurization level, as measured in logs, which contains enough tolerance through additional heat and recovery from the lack of heat to provide an end result which succeeds in providing a targeted log reduction of a targeted pathogen. This log reduction allows for complete inactivation without damage to any one element of the subject chicken eggs, as enabled through use of interrupted applications of heat and chilling, whose durations fall within the tolerance levels of the egg composition to accept pasteurization without damage to the raw characteristics of the subject eggs beyond those which noticeably alter either the functional, nutritional or aesthetic characteristics as found within raw in-shell chicken eggs. As the evolution of both viruses and bacteria continues, the formula contained within the new art notably and pertinently is uniquely adaptable to increase the quantity of inactivation, as measured in logs, needed to accommodate the total inactivation of new and more heat-resistant strains of the targeted pathogens. What has been learned is that the described unique method and success of the inactivation of the mentioned viruses not only requires more heat, which under the described new art is applied intermittently to avoid damage to the raw characteristics of each element of the subject chicken eggs through overexposure, but also requires achievement of a log count specific to inactivation of each targeted virus or an adaptation as made available under the new protocol. Thereby, the method provides for adequate protection against differing strains of viruses through employment of one targeted level of log inactivation capable of inactivating each strain of the collective strains that may exist at a given time. This capability is possible, providing that the fundamental area of new inventiveness employing the application of heat and its denial, as controlled by the tolerance levels to both heat and rate of acceptance and denial by the outer albumen, is not violated through the choices of protocol made available for achievement of new levels of pathogenic inactivation. For certainty of understanding, the features of the new inventiveness and the new inventiveness' unique capacity to provide public safety through total inactivation of pathogens, as found within chicken eggs, to achieve materially greater levels of inactivation as measured in Se logs represents a notable and important part of the new inventiveness. This achievement is provided by features of flexibility to achieve greater or lesser levels of inactivation of targeted pathogens, accomplished through a unique method of employing the described cyclical application and denial of heat to avoid causing material reduction of the raw characteristics of the subject chicken eggs as governed by the limitations and flexibilities of the outer albumen. The number of cycles to the application of heat and its denial both govern and enable the increase of logs or their decrease, depending upon the targeted level of inactivation pursued for consumer safety. The scientific community confirms that a 10-log inactivation of viruses as found within chicken eggs equates to 12 logs of the Se bacteria more or less. The model employed under the new art claimed herein represents the collective results from research information which confirms that a change in Various agencies have confirmed the need to raise log levels to accommodate the inactivation of more heat-resistant strains of The uniqueness of the new art providing for levels of pasteurization of chicken eggs is demonstrated in the first instance by its ability to eliminate risks of illness from viral and bacterial sources through providing total inactivation of the pathogens mentioned when present, which also preserves what may become a needed food source. In the second instance and as a collateral discovery, the new art achieves levels of pasteurization for in-shell chicken eggs which maintain the raw characteristics of a chicken egg while providing statistically complete consumer safety from viral and bacterial contaminants, as found or may come to be found within in-shell chicken eggs, which never before has been achieved. That new food safety achievement is the result of the total inactivation of all The discovery of the differing relationships between the ingredients of the eggs, together with their densities and differing heat transfer rates, form the basis for the first of two primary areas of discoveries as referenced and described hereinabove. In the first instance, those discoveries include one which takes the mentioned differences between the egg ingredients into consideration when the application of heat is performed. That new and unique application sometimes is described herein as being the cyclical application of heat and its denial. That description is intended to apply to the application and denial of heat at programmed intervals, which create a cycle as measured in the elevation in temperature of the subject eggs to the targeted pasteurization temperature, which for these illustrative purposes is identified to be 132.5° F. Once having achieved the pasteurization temperature and equilibrium having been achieved between all elements of the subject eggs, the subject eggs are held there until they achieve slightly more than 1-log of inactivation of the targeted pathogen, before the temperature applied is reduced preferably by the efficiencies provided from induced chilling. The mentioned 1 plus logs is enhanced on average by 20% of one log throughout the process for each time the temperature is raised to the targeted pasteurization temperature and equally for each time the temperature is lowered from the pasteurization temperature to the point of beginning. After the holding time at the targeted pasteurization temperature of 132.5° F., the outer albumen through the mentioned chilling solely is provided with a temperature of below 128° F. The outer albumen is held at a temperature below 128° F. until such time as the inner albumen nears reaching 128° F. When that occurs, the heating cycle of the subject eggs is reinitiated for all elements to return to the targeted pasteurization temperature, which for these purposes is identified to be 132.5° F., at which point a new cycle begins. That cycle is repeated until the targeted log level has been achieved. The described protocol concerning the outer albumen forms the basis of the new art and enables the unique ability for the art to uniquely achieve total inactivation of targeted pathogens whether bacterial or viral without consequential damage to any portion of the subject eggs. For certainty of clarity and emphasis, once each element described and found within a chicken egg is exposed to heat from either purified water spray or from chilled purified air and equilibrium with the selected targeted temperature for pasteurization is reached between each element, as found within the subject eggs, the pasteurization to achieve a targeted log reduction for each element within the subject chicken eggs commences. For these illustration purposes, the pasteurization temperature employed is 132.5° F. While the egg is reaching its targeted pasteurization temperature, a portion of a 1-log level of inactivation is achieved. Once equilibrium between all elements contained within the subject eggs occurs with the targeted temperature of 132.5° F., the subject eggs reside at that temperature until an additional 1 log more or less is achieved. To avoid overexposure to the heat provided by the mentioned 132.5° F., the subject eggs then are provided with a prompt reduction in either the water or air temperature, employed to an extent which enables the outer albumen temperature to fall below 128° F. and all other elements to remain at 128° F. or above. Such provides for continuing pasteurization of the other elements mentioned, albeit at different rates due to their differing locations as related to the heat source as well as their differing composition in densities, size or weight characteristics, while at the same time the outer albumen is provided protection from overexposure from continuous heat exposure by programmed interruptions to the applications of heat. This protection is enabled by controlling the temperature being applied to all elements of the eggs, which includes induced chilling to accelerate the reduction time taken by the outer albumen to reach the targeted lower temperature below 128° F. Similarly overshooting to achieve the targeted pasteurization temperature more efficiently is a preferred option. Through its more rapid reaction to both heat and chilling, the outer albumen quickly reacts to temperature changes and benefits from avoiding coagulation through the protection provided by rapid temperature changes, which for these purposes would be from 132.5° F. to one which contains a temperature below 128° F. While the outer albumen finds protection in the described lower temperature range, all other elements of the chicken eggs continue to be exposed to 128° F. or higher, as enabled by their lesser vulnerability to heat giving cause to loss of raw characteristics. That continuity of heat enables pasteurization to be continuous for all elements, excepting the outer albumen. After the outer albumen has reached temperatures below 128° F., the next thinnest substance within the egg identified as the inner albumen will follow the outer albumen in its reduced temperature, but while doing so it will continue with pasteurization. The still denser elements consisting of the vitelline membrane and the yolk will follow the inner albumen and each of those elements at their separate rates will continue to pasteurize. Once the inner albumen reaches the mentioned 128° F., which represents the lowest temperature that pasteurization occurs, the process is reversed to one which begins the application of heat again. Hence, the use of the term ‘cyclical’ within this Application to cover the elevation of heat applied to a chicken egg, as followed by holding it at that temperature for a predetermined time and reducing the temperature to the same temperature as the beginning and holding it at that temperature for a predetermined time before beginning the elevation of the temperature again. Notably, just as induced chilling aids in providing economic efficiencies to the protocol described through shortening the time taken for pasteurization targeted as measured in logs, the same principle can be employed in overshooting the targeted pasteurization temperature referenced as 132.5° F. for these illustrative purposes. By employing either or both overshooting the targeted pasteurization temperature and the use of induced chilling on a controlled basis to avoid damage to the egg ingredients, efficiencies of time and cost are enabled through shortening the time of the pasteurization cycles which create the mentioned economic benefits. Once equilibrium has been reached throughout each element of the subject eggs at 132.5° F., the subject eggs are held at that temperature to achieve an additional 1-log level more or less of inactivation. Once that additional 1-log level of inactivation has occurred the protocol described repeats itself. Once the targeted log reduction has been achieved through repetition of the protocol described, subject to jurisdictional requirements, the subject eggs are cooled. This cooling occurs preferably through the use of induced chilling either from a purified water spray or the alternative of chilled purified air, and the subject eggs are optionally sprayed a final time with a food-grade antibacterial agent. The antibacterial agent is drawn into the contracting eggs through their exposed pores. These steps are then followed by the application of a shell sealant, which optionally may include a food-grade wax or food-grade plastic sealant or an equivalent that may be applied through various means which include but are not limited to a spray, bath or a roller which provides for a minimum of 95% coverage to the subject eggshells and their exposed pores post pasteurization and prior to exit from the protection of the medium. Upon completion of the above recited steps, post pasteurization, the subject eggs are removed from the protected environment of the pasteurization medium and allowed to proceed with their protected eggshells to their end destinations. The various key elements contained within Reference Numeral 1: in-shell chicken eggs stacked in flats; Reference Numeral 2: flats of new and unique design providing for 95% more or less exposure of in-shell eggs to receive tempered and purified air or water; Reference Numeral 3: depicts the employment of strategically located multiple spray heads which service the application of either purified air or purified water in various forms to both pasteurize and chill the subject eggs. The employment of strategically-located multiple spray heads enables a preprogrammed saturation of treated air or treated water in various forms ranging from a course spray of water to a mist which is applied directly to the exposed chicken eggshells. The application of water, if selected in lieu of purified air, can be programmed to contain varying spray densities through use of automated spray heads, which are adjustable to not only supply water with varying coarseness of the spray of water employed but also to supply either heated or chilled water containing a food-grade antibacterial agent or solely a food-grade antibacterial agent without water as the protocol employed described hereinabove requires. If air is selected in lieu of water, in principle, the same method of application can be employed, which includes the application of purified air containing preprogrammed temperature changes, as discussed previously, in its employment to be comparable to the protocol employed for water with minor obvious adjustments to accommodate the density differences between substances. The above described protocol is followed by the eggs ambiently cooling within the protection of the medium, during which time those eggs receive a protective sealant, which preferably is a food-grade wax or as an alternative a food-grade plastic, applied post pasteurization and just prior to the internal egg temperatures having achieved equilibrium with the reduced temperature of the medium that generally will equate to the temperature of the environment external to that of the medium. Post pasteurization, the application of a selected sealant is applied to the exposed chicken eggshells, while still within the protected environment of the medium. The residual heat within the eggs post pasteurization and prior to their exit from the medium will be adequate to draw in through the exposed shell pores the protective eggshell sealant, which protects against recontamination during its route from processing to table. Post application of the sealant, the eggs exit the secured and protective environment of the medium and enter the unprotected environment to point of consumption, while benefiting from having been pasteurized on the inside and being protected on the outside from recontamination. In the end, the new protocol provides the public with statistically total safety from illnesses caused by either or both viral and bacterial contamination of chicken eggs resulting from materially improved pasteurization enabling new log levels of inactivation to be achieved which provide for total inactivation of the targeted pathogens. Here follows an outline containing pertinent comments regarding the protocol employed under the new art claimed herein, which not only includes a unique pasteurization protocol but also includes the customized equipment which provides for a novel secured environment within which the equally novel pasteurization protocol is performed. Sequence Outline: Prior to commencement of pasteurization, the subject eggs are transferred into flats whose custom design includes the ability to be stacked vertically and to receive a flow of water from strategically located shower heads whose spray is unimpeded by the design of the flats which provides for an even application of the water to flow around each egg and to provide each egg with equal exposure to the variable adjustments of the spray water temperature being applied which will contain a food-grade antibacterial agent at all times except only for the exception outlined herein below. The mentioned water applied through the described spray may vary at times between a mist, a fine spray or a coarse spray which can be automatically alternated for time, temperature and duration to suit the protocol being employed which may change to accommodate the non-identical features of batches of eggs being processed as well as the targeted pathogen selected for inactivation together with the associated variables to achieve pathogenic inactivation which is total. Initially the stacked eggs within the customized flats prior to entrance into the secured environment of the pasteurization medium optionally will receive a spray of water treated with a food-grade antibacterial agent heated to a temperature which must be below 128° F. and can be as low as 123° F. as the preferred range. That spray of water, as enabled by the strategic location of multiple shower heads together with the design features of the custom design of the egg flats, provide for maximized exposure to the free flow of the water together with its food-grade antibacterial additive which together are provided as an option. If opted, such is performed outside the pasteurization medium for a prescribed time which enables the achievement of each egg and all of its particles to reach equilibrium with the elevated temperature of the sanitized spray water. Once equilibrium has been reached between the internal temperature of the egg and the external spray water temperature being applied, the mentioned spray water temperature, which is located outside of the pasteurization medium never is reduced. That feature provides for the expansion of the internal egg from the heat applied. Through the expansion of the internal egg invasion of external contaminates through the eggshell pores substantially is blocked. Pathogens either existing within the body of the eggs or trapped between the outer membranes and the eggshells in material part will either be forced to exit from the pressure caused by the expansion of the internal eggs or be inactivated by the sanitizing agent contained within the mentioned sanitized water applied. Under the above-described option once the shells have been cleansed with the spray from a shower containing a food-grade antibacterial agent and equilibrium of each internal egg has been achieved with the targeted external shower water temperature, the subject eggs promptly are transferred into the secured environment of the pasteurization medium. In each instance the invasion of airborne pathogens materially will be reduced and the concentration of surviving pathogens being carried within the chicken eggs into the secured environment of the pasteurization medium correspondingly will be reduced under this optional pre-pasteurization protocol preparation. The overall benefit achieved from the optional employment of the external shower is to reduce the quantity of pathogens present upon the eggshells stemming from their having multiplied into quantities resulting from the time made available from the date of lay to the date of the rinsing process, which frequently enables multiplication of the targeted pathogens to become excessive. The described shower provides for the benefit of the quantity of contaminants present upon the eggshells being reduced, but notably are not eliminated through the application of the described shower containing a food-grade antibacterial agent. All of the above protocol is optional to aid in reducing the level of contamination frequently existing upon un-cleansed eggshells prior to entrance into the secured environment of the pasteurization medium. Notably and further to the above, the treated water employed for the rinsing process can be substituted by the use of similar temperatures applied to the subject eggs employing adjustments to accommodate the use of food-grade purified air in lieu of the referenced food-grade purified water. Such would be followed by pasteurization within the referenced safe environment of the medium. The second new area of primary inventiveness is found to be within a new and unique pasteurization medium created for pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs with the specific purpose of providing both housing for the mechanics for pasteurization to be performed within a self-sufficient environment. This medium protects against external contamination and is secure from violation of that security throughout the duration of the equally unique pasteurization protocol being employed as described hereinbefore, which achieves total inactivation of pathogens that may be present at high cell count levels stemming from either or both bacterial or viral sources. Once within the isolated environment of the pasteurization medium, which contains novel security and continuous purification features that are described in greater detail in this same section hereinabove, the eggs receive continuous and varied protection against contamination or recontamination provided to the subject eggs through the optional use of a shower containing a food-grade antibacterial agent, whose temperature is programmed to vary from a preferred pasteurization temperature of 132.5° F. to temperatures below 128° F., which is below the effective pasteurization temperature range. Such water temperature changes occur at prescribed and programmed intervals. All of the above water applications together with their temperature changes and approved food-grade additives for perpetual purification during processing are replaceable with only modest alterations with purified air. The targeted log levels inactivate the more heat-resistant viral strains over those of The new art reflects the discoveries made concerning the relationships between the individual densities of the elements contained within a chicken egg, as such relate to heat tolerances and rates of heat transfer, as further impacted by their relative location to the eggshells. The eggshells are the first locations of the heat being applied externally to the subject eggs. The internal contents of the subject eggs and their specific locations provide for the basis of a new formula for pasteurization. This formula enables a new ability to utilize the differing densities and the individual locations of the components, as found within the subject eggs containing different levels of heat sensitivity as well as different rates of heat transfer, resulting in new art that satisfies the total inactivation of the targeted pathogens without consequential damage to any one of the mentioned elements contained within the subject chicken eggs. Once the above-described protocol has been performed and the targeted pathogens to be inactivated has occurred and while the subject eggs are within the protection of the secured environment of the mentioned medium, the shells of the pasteurized eggs are treated with a final spray containing solely a food-grade antibacterial agent. That agent is drawn into the subject eggs through the exposed eggshell pores, post substantial pasteurization having occurred, while the internal egg is continuing to contract due to ambient cooling occurring post pasteurization while still within the protected environment provided by the medium. The contraction of the egg while within the safety and purity of the new and unique medium draws into the eggs through their exposed shell pores the food-grade antibacterial agent which provides a final level of security to the subject egg purity achieved from the total inactivation of pathogens through the new pasteurization protocol employed. If any agency of jurisdiction outside of the United States were to disallow the application of the described antibacterial agent to the eggshells post pasteurization employing either air or water as the medium, that added step of precaution intended to inactivate any stray pathogens either can be replaced with a non-liquid agent or eliminated altogether. While still within the protected environment of the medium and while contraction of the internal egg is still in process due to ambient cooling post substantial pasteurization having occurred, the shells of the subject eggs are provided with a food-grade sealant which can be either a wax or a food-grade plastic sealant applied to the eggshells and their exposed pores. Notably, the residual heat during ambient cooling while within the protected environment of the medium draws the selected sealant as applied to the eggshells into the exposed pores of the eggshells, after which, post reaching ambient temperature with the temperature within the medium, the eggs are exited for packaging and shipment. As is more fully detailed hereinabove, within the description of the new art, which employs pasteurization protocol options of performing pasteurization through either a water based pasteurization protocol or through an air based pasteurization protocol enabled by modest and straight forward modifications, which incorporate the benefits of the unique features contained within the self sufficient and protected environment of the pasteurization medium as modified to accommodate the fluid selected for pasteurization which in each case will provide for the total inactivation of all pathogens as found or may come to be found within chicken eggs through the employment of the new protocol. Notably and significantly the above described protocol, together with its performance within the uniquely appointed medium, enables a breakthrough to the art of creating pasteurized liquid egg product currently allowed by regulation to be performed at a known to be inadequate 5-log level of inactivation of The above recitation addresses the pasteurization inadequacies of all prior art to inactivate Notably and more dangerously, viruses and their derivatives carry with them more heat-resistant strains of the Avian Influenza virus, which both require greater heat inactivation than do all strains of The described new art through its novel features provides for what is effectively considered to be total inactivation of viruses through achieving a pasteurization level providing for a 10-log level of inactivation of all strains of viruses likely to be found within a chicken egg which includes the most dominant strain identified as the H5N1. The USDA Research Laboratory in Athens, Ga., confirms that Se inactivation at the same time and temperature exposures as that of the H5N1 virus produces up to a 40% greater inactivation of Se than does the same exposure as applied to the H5N1 virus as measured in Se bacteria logs. Since it requires 10 logs to inactivate the H5N1 virus with scientific certainty, such would produce an equivalent of a 12-log inactivation of Se automatically to occur. Notably, were either viruses or For clarity of understanding, the importance of the discovery of the benefits gained from the novel use of a programmed application of heat and its denial as employed during pasteurization in a manner termed to be cyclical in its nature enables the prevention of heat damage to each element of the internal egg. At the same time, the new art provides for the total inactivation of targeted pathogens to be achieved without material loss of the raw characteristics of the subject eggs while notably achieving log levels of pathogenic inactivation never before available without loss of the raw characteristics of the subject eggs. That accomplishment now is restated for emphasis and clarity. Summary and Conclusions: The US-FDA as preceded by the USDA traditionally allowed eggs contaminated with a virus identified as the H3N1 to be pasteurized to the equivalency of a 4-log level of inactivation using the bacterial strain of Se as the measure when found within chicken eggs that were intended for uses specific to liquid egg product. Under the Egg Safety Final Rule adopted in 2009 the mentioned 4-log inactivation protocol as applied to the bacteria strain Se was increased to 5 logs which was intended to use Se as representing the level of inactivation for all strains of Notably and significantly the described new inventiveness for the first time enables the total destruction of all known to exist Notably and of related importance sterilization of a chicken egg will inactivate pathogens but at the cost of the loss of nutritional values. It is pertinent to note that pasteurization preserves both the nutritional benefits and the raw characteristics of a chicken egg even when pasteurized at 12-logs as is made available under the new art described herein which inactivates all strains of In the instance of new strains of viruses such carry with them a new and unique threat to public health not previously experienced from chicken eggs. As found under the H5N1 virus its potential ability to transfer serious and frequent fatal illnesses occurring from human-to-human has given cause for the scientific community to forecast that through mutations or deviations from the mentioned H5N1 it can be reliably forecasted that such will give cause for either one of or part of a base viral source to convert into an aggressive viral source which will provide for the rapid and broad transfer of illnesses from human-to-human which in the end creates the already confirmed arrival of that virus as being the foundation for a pandemic whether through human-to-human transfer of the virus or whether through the common areas of exposures to the public at large. The described deficiencies of current chicken egg pasteurization protocols employed to inactivate the targeted bacteria selected using Se as the measure employed when combined with the greater levels of inactivation of As discussed in greater detail within this section hereinbefore, the initial step employed within the pasteurization medium involves the selection of the vehicle to transfer heat or chilling to the subject in-shell eggs being pasteurized. The selections include the use of a water bath treated with a food-grade purifier, which is not the pasteurization medium of preference. The preferred options include uses of a water spray treated with a food-grade purifier, which is equally preferred with the use of air also treated with a food-grade purifier as the medium to transfer air through nozzles similar to those employed for water. In each case, the selected vehicle contains induced heat and induced chilling carried to the subject in-shell chicken eggs through employment of a new and unique protocol. This protocol contains the applications of both heat and chilling at preprogrammed temperatures for preprogrammed intervals and durations applied to the subject in-shell chicken eggs, which deliver at the end of the protocol selected chicken eggs that contain a level of pasteurization which both are free of targeted pathogens and have retained substantially all of their aesthetic and functional raw egg characteristics. The shower containing either sanitized water or sanitized air is performed at prescribed intervals for prescribed temperatures and durations, within the confines of the protected environment provided by the medium. The temperatures initially of the water or air being applied always will be elevated in their initial application to be above the temperature of the subject eggs upon their receipt into the medium. Both options of the referenced showers will contain a food-grade antibacterial agent to ensure that water and air purity are maintained for continuous inactivation of pathogens which may be present. Unlike all forms of water rinses generally practiced in the United States, the water circulated through the mentioned showerheads will be continuously cleansed during recirculation. The mentioned water employed will contain the option to be in the form of a spray or a mist. The precaution of the internal egg temperatures being equal to or slightly lower than the temperature within the medium at time of entrance is required to protect against residual pathogens present from accelerating their multiplication within the new and secured environment provided by the medium. The protocol recited above, together with the mentioned features concerning perpetually circulating purified water which may be substituted with similarly treated purified air, is provided to the exposed chicken eggshells within the secured and perpetually sanitized environment provided by the pasteurization medium. The protocol is further enhanced in its effectiveness by multiple layers of filtration, heat and ultraviolet treatment, along with a food-grade antibacterial agent continuously applied to the purified water or air throughout the pasteurization processes of each batch of eggs. All of the recited options, protocol employed, features of the medium and the controlled intermittent applications of heat together with induced chilling collectively are unique to the new art, which ensures total inactivation of targeted pathogens, retention of both nutritional and raw characteristics of the subject eggs and the preservation of the benefits of pasteurization achieved from risks of recontamination of the subject eggs from pasteurization through table as enabled and reinsured by the uniquely secured environment of the medium. The temperature within the shower serviced by purified water or as employed by its air alternative is to be controlled for accuracy of both time and temperature through continuous monitoring of the internal temperatures of the subject chicken eggs, which include the outer albumen, the inner albumen, the vitelline membrane, the yolk and the air sack, to ensure that variations caused by the environment of the subject eggs together with their sizes, i.e. weight, together with differing impacts upon the subject chicken eggs in their receipt of heat or chilling applied in ratios preprogrammed for the art described herein together with adjustments called for by differences found within water or air temperatures and exposure times to those temperatures. These variations satisfy the peculiarities of egg sources that include but are not limited to size, diet, water consumption, altitude and other factors understood by those skilled in the art. As the expansion of the egg content occurs during pasteurization, certain targeted pathogen cells, whether inactivated or not, are forced out from the egg through its pores into the environment of the medium. At this point, continued inactivation is provided through built-in protective provisions contained within the medium, which create the inactivation of targeted pathogens through exposure of the residual pathogens to ultraviolet, dry heat and food-grade anti-pathogenic agents applied directly to the eggshells. Notably and specifically, post the subject eggs having achieved substantial pasteurization through use of either purified water or purified air, depending upon the protocol selected, and only after pasteurization has been substantially completed in achieving the targeted log level for inactivation of the targeted pathogens while remaining within the protected environment of the medium, the subject eggs optionally can be relocated within the medium to a separate area within the medium. In either case, the eggs are provided with a shower of water or air containing the selected food use approved bactericide or alternatives which may be more appropriate for viral contamination. As an option to purified water and of equal merit for the eggs being processed, the use of purified air containing a selected food use approved bactericide can be employed. Under either protocol, the fluid choice selected to be used within water or air may require approval for food-grade use together with the ability to inactivate the targeted pathogens whether bacterial or viral. After the subject eggs have received the mentioned application of the agent selected and are ambiently cooling, the continued contraction of the subject eggs draws the mentioned agent into the eggs through its exposed shell pores, which provides for additional protection of both the pasteurization results and reinforces protection against unexpected anomalies causing recontamination to occur. Post receipt by the eggshells and their exposed pores of the above mentioned agent selected, the subject eggs while continuing to contract internally from residual heat and prior to their exit from the protection provided by the medium, receive a sealant to the eggshells and its pores consisting of either a food-grade wax or a food-grade plastic as the preferred sealants. That described final step of providing the sealant to the subject eggshells, as performed within the medium, protects the subject eggs from a contaminated environment, which always is a factor present for unprotected pasteurized eggs being exposed to environments which commonly are contaminated to an extent which over time would void the benefits of pasteurization. Notably and materially, the above described protocol provides for equally effective variables within a common protocol to employ either purified water or purified air as the vehicle of choice to provide for both the application of heat and chilling of chicken eggs to achieve the safety provided through levels of pasteurization which in the end are total. Where agencies of jurisdiction are concerned with the employment of water in any form to either cleanse eggshells or to employ a water based pasteurization protocol, air can be optionally utilized together with its purification and ability to carry with it the transfer of heat to both pasteurize and to purify the air from contaminants along with other described agents which too are not water dependent. Cleansed air provides for an end product, which not only extends shelf life to be greater than un-refrigerated, un-cleaned eggshells and the results from unwashed and un-refrigerated eggs, but also ensures protection against the natural inclination of the public storing eggs that are unwashed and not fresh longer than is appropriate before consumption. Notably, the new art satisfies the recited concerns over the employment of water in any form associated with chicken eggshells. The new art also provides for superior safety from current bacterial risks, as found to be present on eggshells, and safety from their transfer into both the eggs internally through the passage of time, which is enabled by the deterioration of the natural sealant provided to the eggshell pores, which usually occurs in 10 days or less. In certain jurisdictions a 5-log level of inactivation of bacteria, when present within an egg or upon its shell, has been deemed to be sufficient to provide public safety to consume less than hard-cooked chicken eggs. The bacteria of measure in the United States is Anecdotally, under prior art, the eggs post pasteurization, as performed within a treated water bath, were transferred out of the bath onto a conveyor belt. The time of transfer averaged approximately 3 minutes. After transfer onto a conveyor belt, the subject eggs promptly were provided with a spray of an antibacterial agent to avoid airborne recontamination. During that mentioned 3 minute period, within which the subject eggs were exposed to an external environment containing a significant negative atmospheric pressure change, most of the eggs became recontaminated from airborne To better understand the significance of the discovery of the benefits derived from the creation of a new medium for pasteurization containing self-sufficiency, required security and an environment within which the new and unique protocol for pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs is performed, the following described failures under prior art of this same inventor is provided. First, the targeted level for pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs, as provided to this inventor by senior officials at the US-FDA in 1997, was that a 5-log reduction of Second, the level of pasteurization originally set for liquid egg product in or 1970 was 10-logs. Sometime subsequent to that date the level of inactivation of The consequences of the above are reflected within the US-FDA Egg Safety Rule of 2009, which altered liquid egg product inactivation of As noted more fully elsewhere hereinbefore, various practices continue which threaten public health in magnified amounts over that which would occur from inadequate pasteurization at 5-logs of contaminated chicken eggs were such to be practiced in otherwise good faith. Nonesuch good faith practices have occurred. Specifically, two Grade B eggs are allowed in each dozen of so marked and so displayed with the USDA Shield which confirms that the subject eggs have been as Grade A eggs. Further to the above, unsold eggs are allowed to be repackaged and to be provided with a Grade A symbol to replace the same symbol on the prior package and are allowed to have a new “Best By’ date which generally is represented to be 30 days post packaging. Such enables a minimum of between two and three months from date of lay through to the last day of the ‘Best By’ date represented. Still further, the average number of eggs produced within the United States annually exceeds 8 billion dozen of which somewhat more than 2 billion dozen are converted into liquid egg product. The new US-FDA Rule referenced above allows for known to be highly contaminated chicken eggs to be co-mingled into liquid egg product once pasteurized to a 5-log level of inactivation as measured by Se. As mentioned hereinbefore, the original standard for inactivation of Further to the above, new teachings confirm that the quantity and concentration of The first of the two primary areas of inventiveness is described to be ‘cyclical’ in its nature. That term is applied because it is apt to the new art that provides for the application of heat and its denial in a programmed manner which is unique. Specifically, the new art provides for the application of heat to in-shell chicken eggs which raises each element internal to the subject chicken eggs to a predetermined targeted pasteurization temperature. Depending upon the tolerance level of the outer albumen to the heat applied the subject eggs are held at a predetermined temperature identified as the pasteurization temperature long enough to achieve partial pasteurization but short enough to avoid damage to the outer albumen. Once that time frame has been established to suit the peculiarities of the subject eggs as influenced by size, water content and other considerations discussed herein before the egg temperatures are lowered to protect the outer albumen which contains the greatest heat sensitivity and the greatest rate of heat loss. The outer albumen of each egg gains that protection from temperatures below the minimum pasteurization temperature of 128° F. For reasons discussed in greater detail herein before, the other elements of the chicken eggs due to their locations being more remote on a graduated basis from the heat or cooling sources being applied on a programmed basis do not require the same level of protection from heat damage as does the outer albumen. Notably, when heat is applied to an in-shell egg the outer albumen is the first element achieving an inactivation level involving the targeted pathogens. The other elements of the chicken eggs are slower than the outer albumen to react to both heat and its denial which includes both induced chilling and accelerated heat gain. By applying heat to all elements of the eggs and discontinuing the application of heat once equilibrium between all elements within the chicken eggs and the targeted pasteurization temperature have occurred the chicken eggs are held at that temperature depending upon their individual characteristics for a period of time, most often producing a 1.0- to a 1.75-log reduction of the targeted pathogens which is expected to be a virus requiring a greater number of cycles for their inactivation than those required to inactivate current strains of The above-described protocol, when employed in the following sequence, creates a description of the novel method employed for pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs through use of the unique characteristics of the outer albumen to provide for the parameters to be employed through the application of heat and its denial through which from repetition a cycle of events that includes in the order of their occurrence raising the internal temperatures of the subject eggs to a targeted pasteurization temperature and holding that achieved temperature for a prescribed time as governed by the heat tolerance level of the outer albumen which is followed by the lowering of the temperature of the outer albumen to be below 128° F. that in the end produces a result as measured in logs achieved for the inactivation of the targeted pathogen then is repeated until said logs achieved equate to those logs required for that targeted pathogen to be totally inactivated. That protocol creates what is described to be a cyclical event stemming from the redundancy of the application of heat as the beginning point of pasteurization resulting from the internal heat of the subject chicken eggs achieving 128° F. and being elevated to the selected pasteurization temperature as measured by each element within the chicken eggs each achieving temperatures which at minimum are equal to or may slightly exceed the common internal pasteurization temperature targeted for each chicken egg. At the point in time that all elements within the subject chicken eggs having achieved the mentioned pasteurization temperature selected, the subject eggs, depending upon their characteristics, are held at that temperature for a time which more or less achieves 1.0-logs at minimum. Post achievement of the mentioned log level resulting from the holding time at the targeted pasteurization temperature, the subject eggs are cooled through preferably induced chilling to the extent that the outer albumen singularly reaches a temperature below 128° F. more rapidly through the preferred induced chilling. Once that has been achieved the described cycle is resumed and repeated until each element as previously described to be within the subject chicken eggs has achieved the targeted log level which equates to the total inactivation of the targeted pathogen selected. The achievement of the log level targeted through the art employed is enabled by the protection against heat damage of the outer albumen which uniquely is accomplished through the intermittent programmed lowering of the temperature selected for pasteurization being intermittently applied which includes the mentioned induced chilling also being applied intermittently on a pre-programmed basis which enables the outer albumen to fall below 128° F., as programmed to avoid heat damage. That protocol is unique within the art of pasteurization and protects the outer albumen from heat damage while at the same time allows for the denser portions of the subject eggs to continue to receive heat albeit in lesser quantities, which, in the end, provides each element including the outer albumen with a level of inactivation, which is complete, as applied to both bacteria and viruses that may be present while retaining substantially all of the physical and nutritional benefits of a raw egg. The achievement of the targeted log level by each of the non-identical elements of the subject in-shell chicken eggs is achieved by the continuous pasteurization provided to those elements, excepting that of the outer albumen for reason that, as mentioned earlier, the outer albumen singularly is protected against heat damage causing loss of raw characteristics through programmed lowering and raising of its temperature to below 128° F., which protects it against heat damage. Programmed test results confirm that the achievement of the targeted log level by the densest and most remote element within a chicken egg is found to be the yolk. Through adjusting the holding time of the outer albumen while below 128° F., damage to any one element within the egg in terms of heat causing loss of raw characteristics is avoided by the automatic reduction of the heat to each of the other elements although differing in their quantity and rate due to their differing densities and locations as related to both the outer albumen and the external source of the heat being transferred through the eggshell. Although the targeted log reduction may vary between the least dense outer albumen with those of the more dense other elements contained within the subject in-shell chicken eggs, enough flexibility in heat tolerance has been learned to exist for those elements to allow for the targeted log level of the densest element as found to be the yolk to achieve the same targeted log level of inactivation, while at the same time avoiding damage to the other elements i.e. the inner albumen and the vitelline membrane without consequential loss of their raw characteristics. That cycle on average will produce a log result which as applied to each element of the chicken eggs will in non-exact form produce an expected total single cyclical result of a 1.5-log reduction for each element within the chicken eggs. Therefore, if the log reduction programmed is targeted to inactivate all strains of The benefits from levels of pasteurization described above, as made available through the cyclical application of heat and its denial, has been identified as the first of two primary areas of inventiveness, which now has been made available through the new art described and claimed herein. That important area of new art is complemented by a second primary area of inventiveness, which includes a new and unique pasteurization medium that is secure from the risks contained within an external environment to which chicken eggs are exposed whether as raw in-shell eggs or as converted into pasteurized in-shell chicken eggs. The problems of initial contamination of chicken eggs, whether the contamination is Within the second element of the two primary areas of inventiveness, as contained within the new art, the previously described new and unique pasteurization medium provides total and continuous security from the external environment, which, in the end, enables the subject eggs to be protected from the perils contained within the unprotected external environment. In the unprotected external environment, the extremely difficult problem exists, caused by airborne recontamination occurring either post pasteurization or if not post pasteurization post lay while the internal eggs are contracting through cooling within a totally unprotected environment until reaching ambient temperature. Certain attempts to sanitize rinse water applied to raw chicken eggshells have been utilized, but that practice is flawed to an extent from which contamination is enhanced and spread more often than reduced. Exposures to the external environment post pasteurization under all prior art currently employed for in-shell egg pasteurization includes the risk of airborne contaminants whose mass has been proven to be uncontrollable. That phenomenon gives cause for recontamination or increased contamination to pasteurized eggs, resulting from the mass of airborne All of the above issues are resolved by the second of the two primary areas of inventiveness, which is referred to as the pasteurization medium. The pasteurization medium uniquely contains a secured environment, along with numerous safeguards contained within that environment, to preserve its integrity, which includes total security from the outside environment beginning at the commencement of pasteurization through to its completion. The features of the new medium containing the protected environment within which pasteurization is performed are discussed in greater detail earlier within this same section. The sealed environment of the medium avoids reliance upon a negative atmosphere, where pasteurization is performed as employed under prior art, which failed to provide protection and in fact allowed for recontamination from airborne The first of two primary areas of inventiveness as is discussed and claimed hereinabove at the inception of this section includes the cyclical application of heat and its denial to in-shell chicken eggs, which enables the unique ability to inactivate targeted pathogens without loss of the raw characteristics as found within raw in-shell chicken eggs. The second primary area of inventiveness containing the vehicle described for pasteurization is identified and referred to as the pasteurization medium includes features enabling total inactivation of pathogens which in turn enables the art contained within the previously discussed first of the two primary claims contained herein to occur. Within the novel pasteurization medium its features include a new and unique self-sufficient and clinically safe environment for the pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs from inception of pasteurization through to its conclusion. The medium contains unique abilities to provide purity to an end product through continuous purification of all elements within its secured environment. To perform the second of the two primary areas of the new inventiveness which includes the ability, more fully discussed hereinbefore, to pasteurize in-shell chicken eggs to materially higher logs than available under prior art as measured by logs applicable to either or both viruses and In summary, there are two new and unique primary areas of inventiveness for pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs, which when employed together in the manner described herein throughout enable the achievement of total inactivation of targeted pathogens which under all prior art never has been available without either damage to the raw characteristics of the subject eggs or the loss of their nutritional qualities. The first of those mentioned two primary areas of inventiveness involves a programmed cyclical application of heat and its denial within which adjustments are made to the application durations of the selected temperature of the heat being applied to the subject chicken eggshells together with its denial and its replacement with induced chilling for pre-selected application durations. Such is performed through programs employed, which change from one to another as influenced by the targeted log levels of inactivation required for a specific pathogen, as further influenced by the specific characteristics of the subject chicken eggs. Those targeted results include timings of the protocol employed, which govern the durations of the applications of heat and induced chilling without causing damage to the raw characteristics of the subject eggs. This ability is provided by the flexibilities of time and temperature contained within the protocol employed that enable the total inactivation of targeted pathogens through the flexibility provided from differing exposures to heat as tempered by the ingredients of the new art to be intermittent in its application of heat. a This allows for total inactivation of the most heat resistant pathogens which may be found or come to be found within chicken eggs. In the preferred embodiment of the pasteurization medium described, which includes the protocol employed for heat gain and loss that target different elements within the composition of the egg, which through the selective management of heat, as applied to those elements, enables the acceptance of higher log levels of inactivation of both viral and bacterial contamination to occur without material reduction of the raw characteristics of the targeted chicken eggs. The cyclical application and denial of heat through induced chilling is accomplished through measuring logs achieved, which result from heat application having been applied throughout the eggs in a manner which addresses the differing locations and densities of each element within the composition of a chicken egg. Those mentioned elements include the yolk, which is the most remote element of the egg and its equally dense vitelline membrane as well as the somewhat less dense inner albumen. Such is accomplished by applying heat to the internal egg intermittently, whose limitations are governed by the quantity of the heat applied to the whole egg as modified and controlled from the higher rates of heat transfer as found within the least dense element of the egg as represented by the outer albumen. For ease of understanding, the lesser density of the outer albumen requires only intermittent application or denial of heat to accomplish targeted temperature changes. By using the outer albumen's highest speed in heat gain or loss over those of the other elements contained within chicken eggs that speed provides for the outer albumen achieving temperature changes together with targeted log achievements more swiftly than do other elements of the chicken egg. Through the use of intermittent but controlled durations of a unique method of the application of heat and denial of heat, the new protocol enables applications of heat in greater total quantities, which in turn enables higher log reduction of targeted pathogens without damage to either the raw characteristics of the chicken eggs or a reduction in their nutritional values. At the same time, the new protocol provides total inactivation never before achieved of viruses and bacteria requiring up to or exceeding 12-logs, as measured by Se, which under current science enables inactivation of all strains of either viruses or When performed by one reasonably skilled in the art, the monitoring of the denser vitelline membrane and yolk together with environmental factors which influence pasteurization in general, from impact by such extraneous factors including but not limited to altitude, egg water content and egg size along with the targeted pathogens to be inactivated, produce results which can be factored into an equation employing intermittent applications of heat to the subject eggs in a manner previously referred to as the cyclical application of heat and its denial. Whether pasteurization is performed through a formula employing either purified air or purified water, adjustments to the formula in relation to time and temperature will be required, as applied to their respective rates of flow. These rates of flow will be adjusted to accommodate not only the rates of flow of both water or air, as employed to accommodate their individual densities which impact upon their rates and quantities of heat or chilling transfer due to their differing compositions both separately and comparatively, together with their end impacts upon the rates of heat or chilling transfers due to differing in-shell egg sizes, which in the end collectively enable the specific characteristics of the batch of in-shell chicken eggs being processed to achieve total inactivation of targeted pathogens without inconsistencies of consequence to the end product. In the end, the targeted and never before achieved log levels enabling the destruction or inactivation of both The second of the above mentioned two primary areas of inventiveness involves the employment of the pasteurization protocol within a protected environment provided by the pasteurization medium, whose benefits provide security from risks of either incomplete inactivation of pathogens or recontamination which when achieved together provides certainty that no statistical risk of illness of consequence from either viral or bacterial contaminants as found or may come to be found within chicken eggs will occur. As a result of the two above described areas of primary inventiveness, consisting of the cyclical application of heat and the medium within which it is employed, when employed in tandem such provides the public with the benefits from not only the newfound safety from illnesses traditionally caused by eggs which are reported to be the leading cause of foodborne illnesses but also provides the public with the benefits from the subject eggs retaining nutritional, functional and aesthetic characteristics as found within their pre-pasteurization raw states. Further, the new art not only accomplishes the achievement of the retention of raw egg aesthetics and nutritional features post-pasteurization through employing ingredients of the new art claimed, which includes the use of fluctuating temperatures as applied to the internal ingredients of the subject eggs as is made available through the intermittent and alternating applications of both heat and induced chilling together with the timing of programmed applications and denials as described in greater detail herein before. Said new art also enables the statistical inactivation not only of all deviations of all strains of Notably and of significant distinguishing importance over prior art, the new art not only provides for satisfaction of deficiencies to current pasteurization protocols employed, as found within both in-shell chicken eggs and liquid whole egg product, which as acknowledged through Government agency reports, together with interpretations of studies performed by the scientific community, confirm that a 5-log protocol for In the instance of new strains of viruses, such carry with them a new and unique public threat not previously experienced from chicken eggs as is found under the H5N1 virus with its potential ability to transfer serious and frequent fatal illnesses from human-to-human or at the least give cause to serious illnesses through consumption of eggs containing the H5N1. Those underlying issues have given cause for the scientific community to forecast that the H5N1 through continuing mutations or deviations is a strain of virus which is most likely to give cause for either one of or part of a base viral source to convert into an aggressive viral source which in the end creates the already confirmed arrival of that virus together with potential deviations creating a foundation for millions of illnesses stemming from less than hard-cooked chicken eggs even without its potential furtherance for human to human transfer. The described deficiencies of current chicken egg pasteurization protocols to successfully inactivate The new art discussed above enables public protection which is timely. The discussed virus strains which in part will be found within chickens and their eggs as deviations from strains already existing will in the end contribute to a global pandemic in a magnitude comparable to that of the 1918 pandemic as has been reconfirmed by current forecast provided by the World Health Origination. That pandemic killed well in excess of 75 million people. In support of an increase in numbers of causalities resulting from a new pandemic over the casualties estimated as having occurred in the mentioned 1918 pandemic such is influenced by both population growth and ease of spread through current public mobility over that of the 1918 timeframe. Notably and significantly, reports from mid-2015 and prior as authored by the scientific community including WHO discuss the need for development of a vaccine together with the delays occurring for that development as being caused primarily from the continuing evolution of the virus which may enable not only Avian Influenza to occur but also in material part will create massive contamination to chicken eggs that materially will broaden the scope of the pandemic. As previously discussed, the threat of a pandemic generated by a virus repeatedly is forecasted by the scientific community as being both in the making and inevitable. Potential evidence of the accuracy of that forecast occurred in the United States in 2009-2010 which was reported publicly a year later in 2011. A new strain of virus having certain similarities to prior viruses identified as a category to be within the Swine Flu species occurred in the United States only with notable lack of publicity as to its scope and devastation. The strain of virus was new but resembled characteristics of those found within the Swine Flu which is not limited to swine. Confirmed reports show that within the Unites States in less than a two-year span i.e. twelve months bridging two years more than 60 million people were sickened and 12,000 persons died. The virus was identified as the H1N1. Recent scientific studies confirm that a 5-log pasteurization protocol for Significantly and notably, as a separate area of public misinformation to that of the above-mentioned H3N1 virus being inactivated at 5 logs a similar misrepresentation of reliance upon a 5-log level of inactivation for all All of the above described issues which have been practiced for decades now can be overcome through the benefits provided from the new art claimed herein which achieves total inactivation of both bacterial and viral contamination as may be present within eggs which may be co-mingled with eggs that have escaped contamination. Such provides a remedy to the lack of notice by agencies of jurisdiction to the simple, obvious and logical fact that at time of lay the subject chicken eggs may be internally warmer than the hen house environment which would give cause for the eggs to contract internally and to draw in contaminated moisture being applied to the eggshells or air which too is likely to be contaminated. The problems of contamination of the eggs through contraction as discussed are similar to the issues experienced by prior art employing pasteurization which gave cause to massive quantities of airborne contamination to occur during a brief period made available from the timeframe of the eggs exiting the pasteurization medium through to the time of application of an antibacterial agent being applied to the exposed pores of the subject eggshells which occurred in a matter of approximately three minutes even when countermeasures of an increased negative atmosphere within the pasteurization setting was employed. The new solution contained herein to provide certainty of safety while preserving the nutritional and natural taste of the subject eggs is pasteurization to a log level which provides the needed certainty of inactivation of all pathogens threatening public safety as performed within a medium that provides the subject eggs with protection against recontamination from point of entrance into the medium through to the point of exit from the medium post pasteurization through to consumption. That art now becomes available through the claims recited herein. Of notable significance to the new level of safety benefits uniquely provided under the new art discussed and claimed herein in significant contradiction to the new discoveries the US-FDA as recently as in 2009 not only confirmed under The Egg Safety Final Rule that co-mingled and so-labeled highly contaminated chicken eggs could be utilized for public consumption without restriction of any nature if pasteurized to a 5-log level of inactivation of Se. Notably, the end product bearing the term ‘PASTEURIZED’ and not bearing the contents of the ‘Safe Handling Instructions’ required on raw egg cartons is misleading although it continues to be employed. It is general knowledge that a 5-log inactivation of Se whether for in-shell chicken eggs or within co-mingled liquid egg product under current practices already described has no hope whatsoever of providing reliable safety to replace the need for hard-cooking. The misinformation provided to the public is particularly more noteworthy for the 150.0 million persons contained within risk groups. Material to the risks and inadequacies of the current pasteurization process enabled under the mentioned Rule the inclusion of known to be highly contaminated chicken eggs containing high counts of Thus, under prior art the mentioned inactivated contaminants post-pasteurization to the 5-log level of Se inactivation were enabled to rapidly multiply in the absence of immediate and continuous induced chilling whose purpose only is to retard the mentioned multiplication that in practice neither inactivates nor destroys the targeted viruses or bacteria. Even were the minimizing of the multiplication rate through prompt chilling to occur the time lag to deep chill stacked eggs provides adequate time for higher levels of pre-contamination to become potentially lethal to high risk groups even were the eggs to achieve uninterrupted deep chilling from the initial application of the chilling through to table. In support of the unreliability of continuous and uninterrupted deep chilling from farm to table the national distribution system for chicken eggs when considered together with interrupted transportation and storage caused by time and distance together with breakdowns and delays from weather conditions collectively contribute to a level of risk of illness not utilized as part of the protocol for safety provided from continuous and prompt deep chilling as performed in a laboratory setting. The above-described circumstances outline the public health risks caused by the inordinate speed of multiplication by pathogens including Notably, the arrival of viral contamination within chicken eggs, at best, has been rare and when previously mentioned has been limited to the H3N1 virus. In those references to the H3N1 virus the same level of destruction or inactivation was employed through pasteurization of liquid egg product equating to 4 logs using Se (bacteria) as the baseline of measure until 2009 when the level of inactivation was raised to 5 logs as applied to Se. It is obvious to the scientific community that the inactivation of a virus requires either greater heat as measured in temperature or longer terms of heat at lower temperatures than does In 2014 WHO continued to acknowledge that a pandemic generated from an Avian Influenza viral source since referred to as the Bird Flu was in the making. The only question left open was when such would occur and not whether such would occur. Notably to the above-referenced forecast by WHO that the contamination of chicken meat by two new virus strains has been reported by a leading United States supplier on two occasions in October of 2013. The press releases disclosed that Tyson Foods, one of the nation's largest chicken meat providers, had destroyed flocks containing the H7N7 virus. Those reports confirmed the very recent arrival of the virus into the chicken food chain. It also confirmed that the same virus only recently had traveled from Asia to the United States. Logic dictates that contaminated chicken eggs and the pandemic as recently forecasted by WHO and referenced as the ‘Bird Flu’ may be only one mutation away from occurring. Such is confirmed through prior statements discussed hereinabove which report that the U.S. agency identified as the HHS has contracted with a French-based firm to develop a vaccine in anticipation of the so-called ‘Bird Flu’. The contract size involves $150 million for the research and development program. The new art described and claimed herein for chicken egg pasteurization protocol uniquely provides for a secured environment which hereinbefore has been referred to as the medium. The medium prevents recontamination to which all prior art concerning in-shell chicken egg pasteurization failed to accomplish. Under certain protocols contained within prior art the in-shell eggs exited the pasteurization medium and promptly began internal contraction during ambient cooling. Between the time of exit from the prior pasteurization mediums employed to the time that an antibacterial agent was applied to the exposed eggshells post-pasteurization as followed by an insufficient coverage of the eggshell provided by a protective sealant as performed under prior art, the eggs experienced not only recontamination but greater quantities of eggs became contaminated as a result of the process both being incomplete in its level of inactivation of The new art contains protocol which not only solves the above-recited issues of inadequate pasteurization and recontamination as applied to In conclusion, when the described new art of pasteurization is performed and has achieved total inactivation of pathogens without negating raw egg characteristics, as enabled through utilizing the new protocols made available and performed within the described environmentally-safe medium, the successful achievements of an end product will consist of pasteurized eggs statistically free of both viral and bacterial contaminants while at the same time preserving the nutritional, aesthetic and functional qualities of a raw chicken egg. No prior art for chicken egg pasteurization has met those standards on a commercial scale. Notably the described features under the new art as recited when performed together enable higher and needed levels of pasteurization to be available for the total inactivation of pathogens, which include but are not limited to viral contaminants and The protocol claimed and described herein provides for options which include but are not limited to in the first instance an option which is not the preferred option that consists of one tank containing a food-grade sanitizer within water which in its utilization provides for rinsing and sanitizing in-shell eggs prior to entering the secured environment of the pasteurization medium. A second option is to replace the external tank containing treated water with an external shower also containing a food-grade antibacterial agent, which performs the same function as described for the first option employing a bath but provides for the application of a heated spray of water containing an antibacterial agent to pre-sanitize the eggshells prior to their transfer from the external application of the mentioned shower into the pasteurization medium. That described spray of water employed prior to the subject eggs being transferred from outside the pasteurization medium into a location within the pasteurization medium is the preferred protocol to be employed. That protocol employing prescribed and sanitized heated water in the form of a spray outside of the pasteurization medium may be substituted with an application of purified air which has been found to be of equal effectiveness to a spray of water when modified accordingly. The employment of the mentioned spray of purified air in lieu of purified water both employing food-grade additives would satisfy jurisdictions restricting the use of water being applied to eggshells in their raw state. Under all circumstances the subject eggs upon entry into the secured environment of the pasteurization medium will receive a spray of sanitized water to provide additional cleansing of the eggshells, as enabled by the sanitized water being heated to a temperature higher than the subject in-shell chicken eggs but below 128 F. which is the temperature recognized to represent commencement of pasteurization. The shower employed may include in its composition either purified water or purified air at controlled temperatures which are preprogrammed to accommodate the specific characteristics of the subject chicken eggs being processed through an automated program adjusted accordingly. Post receipt of the above-described treatment of the eggs to protect against external and perimeter invasion of pathogens gaining access through potentially exposed eggshell pores together with those pathogens which may be located between the shells and the eggs' outer membranes, the subject eggs upon entry into the pasteurization medium are subjected to an increase of temperature to achieve the preferred initial internal targeted temperature for pasteurization of 132.5° F., which may be adjusted to reflect the needs peculiar to the raw chicken eggs selected as more fully discussed herein before. That targeted temperature is a preferred temperature that also is subject to adjustment based upon a series of factors concerning variances within eggs or the environment within which pasteurization is employed as has been more fully discussed hereinbefore. For better understanding the protocols for the employment of new inventiveness enabling the statistically complete inactivation of more aggressive and heat-resistant viral pathogens over those of Once the subject eggs have been transferred within their customized stacked flats post having received the preferred external rinse containing heated water treated with a food-grade antibacterial agent and having been transferred into the protected environment of the pasteurization medium the pasteurization protocol can be commenced within the secured environment of the medium which contains continuous protocol for maintaining the purity of that environment as discussed in this section previously. The pasteurization protocol employed as also discussed within this section earlier provides for applications of heat and its denial which in the end through adjustments automatically programmed enables the total inactivation of targeted pathogens through the described intermittent application of heat, its denial and the intermittent application of induced chilling which in practice is performed redundantly until the targeted pathogen statistically has been inactivated but in a manner which preserves its raw aesthetic appearance, its nutritional benefits and its functional characteristics as likened to those of a raw in-shell chicken egg. While the foregoing disclosure shows illustrative embodiments of the invention, it should be noted that various changes and modifications could be made herein without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. The functions, steps and/or actions of the method claims in accordance with the embodiments of the invention described herein need not be performed in any particular order. Furthermore, although elements of the invention may be described or claimed in the singular, the plural is contemplated unless limitation to the singular is explicitly stated. There is a process which can pasteurize in-shell chicken eggs to inactivate pathogens when present which includes all strains of salmonella and all strains of viruses that historically have been known to exist within chicken eggs and currently are known to be evolving into new and separate strains which may cause large quantities of human illnesses unless countermeasures are developed and employed. One such countermeasure is provided through pasteurization of the subject in-shell eggs through pasteurization involving concurrently a secured environment together with a protocol which enables total inactivation of the targeted pathogens whether bacterial or viral without risk of recontamination. 1. A method of pasteurizing in-shell chicken eggs which achieves total inactivation of targeted pathogens comprising of:
(1) pasteurization of the subject eggs is preceded by placing the in-shell chicken eggs into customized flats whose design maximizes the exposure of the eggshells to the temperatures of the fluids employed to provide for a level of exposure of the subject eggshells equating to 95%; and (2) allowing the eggshells of the subject eggs to be exposed to a preheated fluid whose temperature will be selected from a preferred range of temperatures of and between 128° F. and 138.5° F. to perform pasteurization; (3) the preferred fluids employed for pasteurization are either in a liquid form as found within water or in a gaseous liquid form as found within air; (4) a food-grade approved anti-bactericide will be employed within the pasteurization process to add certainty to the otherwise employed protocols performed which include the uses of anti-bacterial fluids applied to the eggshells while concurrently receiving exposures from a light beam as found within ultraviolet which in each case perform as additives to treated water or as additives to treated air which in all substances selected will be compatible to its co-mingling with air that in all options benefit from the presence of applied heat as well as applied chilling as employed within water when used as the pasteurization transfer vehicle or within air as an alternate fluid to that of water when employed as the pasteurization transfer vehicle; (5) the food-grade agent to be employed within the selected fluid whether such fluid is water based or air based will include the selection of a bactericide with capabilities to function at temperatures which range from approximately 120° F. to 150° F. to cover the temperature range spectrum of the new art employed which allows for overshooting the preferred pasteurization temperature selected to allow for improved product quality controls derived from said overshooting; (6) post the initiation of pasteurization and equilibrium between all of the separate elements within the subject chicken eggs having been achieved with that of the selected pasteurization temperature the subject eggs are allowed to dwell at that selected pasteurization temperature for a prescribed time which equates to the time required to achieve a 1.0 to a 1.75 log reduction of the targeted pathogens; and (7) discontinuing the application of a heated fluid and replacing the heated fluid with a fluid containing a temperature below 128° F. which for both consistency and efficiency purposes will be served by a separate line carrying separate nozzles and fluid including air as an option constantly circulating and chilled to a predetermined temperature and allowing the subject eggs to dwell at the temperature selected below 128° F. until such time as the outer albumen achieves a temperature below 128° F.; and (8) upon the outer albumen reaching a temperature below 128° F. the subject eggs continue to be exposed to the temperature of the chilled fluid for a period of time ending with the inner albumen achieving a temperature of 128° F. or slightly higher i.e. 129° F. more or less; (9) once the inner albumen has achieved a temperature between 128° F. and 129° F. the chilled fluid is discontinued and replaced with the heated fluid whose temperature as recited is selected from a range of temperatures between 128° F. and 138.5° F. Once the internal egg temperatures have reached equilibrium with the selected pasteurization temperature the completion of a pasteurization cycle has been achieved; and (10) the logs achieved from each cycle will include log levels achieved from come-up times and come-down times cumulatively; (11) the cycles are replicated until the total inactivation of the targeted pathogen has been achieved; (12) upon achievement of total inactivation of the targeted pathogens having occurred the subject eggs while in the protection of the isolated and sealed environment are allowed to cool. That cooling gives cause to internal contraction of the subject eggs. Such provides an opportunity to directly apply any one of US-FDA Food Use approved bactericides which contain shelf life time sufficient to allow for the application to the exposed eggshell pores and to allow that bactericide to spread throughout the internal contents of the subject eggs between its membrane and its shell to further ensure the inactivation of stray pathogenic survivors; the (13) above protocol is followed by the application of a food-grade wax or a food-grade plastic sealant to the exposed eggshell pores while the residual heat within the subject eggs is causing contraction of the internal egg. That contraction provides an opportunity to draw the sealant inward which creates a seal to the pores of the eggshells and provides protection against recontamination post exit from the medium; (14) the recitations contained hereinbefore represent the novel features of a sequential protocol to be employed for achieving total inactivation of targeted pathogens as may be found within in-shell chicken eggs which is achieved through providing prescribed and intermittent applications of heat and chilling which is performed according to the tolerance levels to heat found to be present within the outer albumen of a chicken egg; (15) the achievement of inactivation of targeted pathogens under the new art described hereinabove initially targets a 10.0-log level of inactivation of viruses anticipated to be potentially a co-contaminate of in-shell chicken eggs which correspondingly according to current science equates to a 12-log inactivation of the most heat resistant strains of (16) were the targeted pathogens to alter their nature or resilience to heat to require still higher log levels of inactivation greater than the new art claimed herein anticipates the new art accommodates those potential needs for still greater levels of inactivation through simple adjustments to the protocol described herein which accommodates that potential need for greater inactivation by adjusting the number of cycles employed; (17) storing eggs in a corn-based bio-plastic carton after treatment. 2. A method of pasteurizing in-shell chicken eggs which achieves total inactivation of targeted pathogens comprising of:
(1) placing the subject eggs within stacked egg flats prior to placing the egg flats within the pasteurization medium; (2) to accommodate the protocol employed within the pasteurization medium the egg flats contain a design which enables a minimum of 95% of each shell of each chicken egg to be exposed to the free flow of a fluid which primarily will be applied to the subject in-shell chicken eggs through the application of fluids which preferably includes water and additives as well as air and additives appropriate to their individual densities and absorption capabilities; (3) the application of fluids to the exposed eggshells will be applied preferentially through use of sprays of varying densities performed by strategically placed nozzles to ensure each egg fully benefits from the exposure to the application of the water employed and its corresponding temperatures together with programmed additives; (4) the application of fluids to the exposed eggshells will be applied preferentially through use of sprays of varying densities performed by strategically placed nozzles to ensure each egg fully benefits from the exposure to the application of the air employed and its corresponding temperatures together with programmed additives; (5) a secured environment containing novel features and unique security will be employed for performing the new and unique art of pasteurization of in-shell chicken eggs; (6) the pasteurization protocol employed fully is performed within the confines of a controlled and secured environment of the medium which is its most significant and unique feature; (7) the medium performs pasteurization within a secured and controlled environment from the point of time of entrance of the subject eggs through to and including their exit from the medium; (8) at exit from the medium the subject eggs will have been pasteurized to a level of inactivation of targeted pathogens which is total; (9) the targeted pathogens include primarily but are not limited to all strains of (10) the medium provides the security required to provide for uninterrupted total inactivation of the targeted pathogens through pasteurization without risk of recontamination which in part is the result of not only the mentioned secured environment but also is the result of features within the medium which equally are unique to that of the art employed; (11) the art employed provides for a self-sufficient environment within the pasteurization medium which is programmed to perpetually cleanse itself through treatment of its air, its temperatures and built in filtration of both fluids employed whether air with additives or water with additives; (12) further to the above the medium benefits from a perpetual and uninterrupted secured environment which provides for protection against external contamination that is a primary feature of the new art employed. The protocol includes monitored recirculation of both filtered water and filtered air and their reinforcement through the employment of heat to inactivate all stray pathogens which may survive the multiple levels of inactivation provided within the pasteurization medium. All of the above precautions are reinforced by constant exposure of pathogens to ultraviolet light or its equal which as a further precaution includes a perpetual monitoring, recording and automated signaling when deviations from the protocol employed occur; (13) having lost all pathogens present within or upon the subject eggs through having achieved total inactivation of the targeted pathogens through the log levels achieved under the new art employed the subject eggs just prior to exit receive a final shower of a food-grade antibacterial agent which penetrates the exposed eggshell pores to provide a final step of inactivation of stray pathogens; and (14) once the application of the antibacterial agent has been applied and just prior to the subject pasteurized in-shell chicken eggs reaching ambient temperature a food-grade sealant is applied to the eggshells which can be selected from either a food-grade wax or a food-grade plastic; (15) upon conclusion of the above steps and the subject eggs having been provided with the described inactivation of pathogens the eggs are prepared to be used by the public for unrestricted consumption without risk of illness. 3. A medium for pasteurizing in-shell chicken eggs which achieves total inactivation of targeted pathogens comprising:
stacked egg flats having a design which enables a minimum of 95% of each shell of each chicken egg to be exposed to the free flow of a fluid; attached nozzles configured to ensure each egg fully benefits from the exposure to the any fluid applied from the nozzles; and a secured environment inside which the egg flats are stored.RELATED APPLICATIONS
BACKGROUND TO THE INVENTION
Introduction
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
