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Gravity

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167 (51 to 75) << 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 >>

View count: 1
by B. G. Sidharth

Pages: 387
Publisher: Springer
Year: 2006
ISBN: 1402041519
ISBN: 978-1402041518

The Sixth International Symposium "Frontiers of Fundamental and Computational Physics", Udine, Italy, 26-29 September 2004, aimed at providing a platform for a wide range of physicists to meet and share thoughts on the latest trends in various, mainly cross-disciplinary research areas. This includes the exploration of frontier lines in High Energy Physics, Theoretical Physics, Gravitation and Cosmology, Astrophysics, Condensed Matter Physics, Fluid Mechanics. Such frontier lines were unified by the use of computers as an, often primary, research instrument, or dealing with issues related to information theory. The book contains contributions by Nobel Laureates Leon N. Cooper (1972) and Gerard ?t Hooft (1999), and concludes with two interesting chapters on new approaches to Physics Teaching.

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by Jaroslav G. Klyushin

Pages: 111
Publisher: Galilean Electrodynamics
Year: 2009
ISBN: 5988830137
ISBN: 978-0692003145
ISBN: 978-5846507425


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This book presents a new approach to the Relativity Theory (RT) and Quantum Mechanics (QM). Besides the main motivation for the new approach ? that RT and QM appear to be incompatible with one another ? we note that a number of physically important cases and well documented experiments cannot be explained in the framework of the two theories. This approach has been presented at several conferences and symposia organized by International Scientists Club (ISC) in Russia and Natural Philosophy Alliance (NPA) in USA since 1990's.

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by Michael D. Riversong

Year: 1994,2005

Introduction to basic principles of chemistry from the viewpoint of primarily considering natural resonance. This is a book and CD set.  The CD includes demonstrations of several principles on the Celtic Harp.  Discussions about gravity control and nuclear waste transmutation are included in this work.

View count: 1
by Maurice Cotterell

Pages: 256
Publisher: Celtic Press
Year: 2011
ISBN: 095677220X
ISBN: 978-0956772206

Websites: mauricecotterell.com/

FUTURESCIENCE explains how electricity and magnetism work together to produce the force of Gravity and in so doing reveals the underlying science behind Newton's equation that he tried in vain to uncover; the reason why Gravity is proportional to the masses of two attracting objects, why it grows weaker in proportion to the square of the distance between them, the nature of the mysterious 'Gravitational Constant'?that continues to perplex researchers to this day?and why all objects accelerate to Earth at 32 feet per second.

It explains why the atom is comprised of 8 orbital shells and why the shells fill with electrons the way that they do.

It explains how permanent magnetism works at atomic level, the nature of so-called 'dark matter', the reason why spiral galaxies are spiral shaped, why the centre of the Earth is red-hot, and how the Earth's magnetic field is generated.

It explains how to generate gravity waves to produce unlimited quantities of free energy, and antigravity waves, to produce unlimited supplies of free hydrogen to power cars of the future. And it explains how antigravity waves can be used to cause the molecular disintegration of matter (phasor weapons).

It explains how the 28-day spinning Sun regulates fertility in females, how it determines human behaviour and personality (Astrology) and how it causes global-warming-and-global-cooling.

The Author returns to the beginning of 'time' to explain how the Universe began and reveals the first ever pictures of God, and Jesus, decoded from the treasures of ancient sun-worshipping civilizations.

FUTURESCIENCE is for the general reader with no previous knowledge of Science.


View count: 1
by Carl Frederick Krafft

Pages: 22
Publisher: Borderland Sciences
Year: 1956/1986
ISBN: B0007FFS2I
ISBN: B001UAQRXI

One of Borderland?s trailblazing writers from the 1950?s, physicist and Ether researcher Krafft swept the cobwebs from many minds in the early days with his progressive articles. Here is a selection of his best including: The Antiquity of the Ether Concept; The Existence of an Ether; Further Evidence of an Ether; and Anti-Gravity and Saucer Propulsion.

View count: 1
by Yuri A. Baurov

Pages: 146
Publisher: Nova Science (New York)
Year: 2004
ISBN: 1594540047
ISBN: 978-1594540042

In the monograph, the results of experimental investigations of the global anisotropy of physical space hypothetically caused by the existence of cosmological vectorial potential, a new fundamental vectorial constant associated with a new anisotropic interaction of objects in nature, are presented. The above interaction is distinct from the four existing ones: the strong, weak, electromagnetic, and gravitational interactions. It is shown that the same anisotropic property of the physical space manifests itself with a high degree of reliability (-0.95) in experimental investigations performed with the aid of torsion and piezoresonance quartz balances posed in high-current magnets, in investigations of changes of (-decay rate of radioactive elements as well as in experiments with plasma devices, a system of quartz resonators, and two high-accuracy quartz gravimeter 'Sodin' one of which is with a specially attached magnet.It is also shown that the experimentally detected anisotropic property of physical space reveals itself in the anisotropic distribution of earthquakes above 6 Richter numbers of power (for the spatially immobile Globe), in the distribution of solar flares on the surface of the immobile Sun, in the distribution of pulsars in the Galaxy and possibly in the suggested rotation of the Metagalaxy.

View count: 1
by Peter Kohut

Pages: 148
Publisher: VDM Verlag Dr. M?ller
Year: 2011
ISBN: 3639331044
ISBN: 978-3639331042

A new period of human history is beginning accompanied with a spiritual revolution in thinking and knowledge. Science, mainly theoretical physics, is in a deep crisis as a consequence of a positivistic approach and refusal of dialectical logic as the most appropriate instrunment for fidning the true nature of God and the Universe. The elementary quantum dipole as the basic structural unit of the Universe is discovered. It is a fundamental constituent of any form of matter and interaction and at the same time the holder of elementary unit of space. It represents the relation of anti-poles. The principle of unity is valid - everything is connected with everything else. Every quantum dipole is connected with all others in the Universe. The basic space-time equation of the Universe is derived and the nature of gravity is discovered. All important physical characteristics are detected and calculated. But the physical Universe is only a subordinated aspect of God as the absolute self-consciousness. The main mission of this publication is to search and detect the truth of existence and so offer the best food for our spirit.

View count: 1
by Harold Aspden

Pages: 78
Publisher: Sabberton Publications
Year: 1975
ISBN: 0850560063
ISBN: 978-0850560060
ISBN: B000NPRFS2

Websites: www.aspden.org peswiki.com/index.php/PowerPedia:Harold_Aspden

This monograph offers a full account of the nature of gravitation. It is shown to be an electrodynamic action due to the disturbance of the vacuum medium by matter. A link with the existence of elementary particles is presented. The approach is verified by the exact evaluation of the constant of gravitation G in terms of the charge-mass ratio of the electron. The masses of the muon, pion and proton are also evaluated in relation to the electron mass. - From the Preface

View count: 1
by Nainan K. Varghese

Pages: 350
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing LLC
Year: 2010
ISBN: 1450556264
ISBN: 9781450556262

Websites: https://www.createspace.com/3428742 www.matterdoc.info

Current knowledge about gravitation is limited only to a part of its dynamic actions on three-dimensional matter bodies. So far, no attempts to discover the nature and real actions of gravitation have succeeded. Primary obstacles in the way of a realistic theory on gravitation are the deep-rooted conviction in 'action at a distance' through empty space and the neglect of static aspects of gravitation.

This book is a compilation from the revolutionary alternative concept described in the prior published book 'Hypothesis on MATTER'. It provides a new and better understanding about the true nature of gravitation.

Gravitation, according to this concept, is a push action by the universal medium on matter. Sole aspect of gravitation, known currently - the gravitational (apparent) attraction between individual matter bodies - is only a byproduct of distinct gravitational actions on separate bodies and it originates from the all-encompassing universal medium rather than from the matter bodies themselves. Main functions of gravitation are creation, conservation and obliteration of 3D matter in the universe. All natural forces are shown to originate from gravitational actions and thus proving that their diversity to be merely an apparent phenomenon. This concept establishes that there is no 'action at a distance' and all natural forces are same.

View count: 1
by Wilhelm Moritz Bauer

Pages: 28
Year: 1983
ISBN: 3900371237

"Uhrenparadoxon: In einem Raumschiff bleibt im Zustand der Schwerelosigkeit eine Pendeluhr stehen, und eine Sanduhr h?rt zu rinnen auf. Daraus folgert niemand, da? die Zeit stehen bleibt. Wenn dagegen eine Atomuhr unter bestimmten ?u?eren Bedingungen eine Gangabweichung zeigt, glaubt man relativistische Mystifikationen des Zeitbegriffs damit in Verbindung bringen zu m?ssen."

Ein Teil dieser Schriften sind an folgender Stelle erh?ltlich:
Werkstatt f?r Dezentrale
Energieforschung e.V.
Pasewaldtstr. 7
14169 Berlin
Tel. 030/8022302

DNB: DKs 84/4902, DBN 89.023491.4


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by Oleg D. Jefimenko

Pages: 384
Publisher: Electret Scientific Company
Year: 2006
ISBN: 091740615X
ISBN: 978-0917406157

Websites: www.as.wvu.edu/coll03/phys/www/OJ/jefimenk.html

Starting with Newton's gravitational theory and considering it as the preeminent but incomplete theory of gravitation, the author develops a fundamentally new gravitational theory with emphasis on gravitational forces, interactions and effects occurring in moving and timed-dependent gravitational systems.

From the Publisher
Newton's theory of gravitation is the grandest and the most enduring physical theory ever created. Today, more than 300 years after it was first conceived, Newton's theory of gravitation is still the basic working theory of astronomers and of all the scientists dealing with space exploration and celestial mechanics. However, Newton's theory of gravitation has serious defects: it is incapable of accounting for certain fine details of planetary motion; it does not provide any information on the temporal aspect of gravitational interactions; it cannot be reconciled with the principle of causality and with the law of conservation of momentum.

This book extends and generalizes Newton's theory of gravitation, makes it free from the above defects, and provides a large variety of methods for calculating gravitational interactions between moving or stationary bodies of all shapes, sizes and configurations.

The starting point of the generalization of Newton's theory of gravitation developed in this book is the idea that gravitational interactions are mediated by two force fields: the gravitational field proper created by all masses and acting upon all masses, and the "cogravitational" field created by moving masses only and acting upon moving masses only. In accordance with the principle of causality, the two fields are represented by retarded field integrals, which, for static or slowly-varying gravitational systems, yield the ordinary Newtonian gravitational field.

An immediate consequence of the generalized Newtonian theory of gravitation developed on this basis is that gravitational interactions normally involve at least five different forces associated with velocities, accelerations and rotations of interacting bodies. The effects of these forces are quite remarkable. Some examples: a fast-moving mass passing a spherically-symmetric body causes the latter to rotate; a mass moving with rapidly-decreasing velocity exerts both an attractive and a repulsive force on neighboring bodies; a rotating mass that is suddenly stopped causes neighboring bodies to rotate; planets orbiting the Sun cause a differential rotation of the Sun.

The generalized theory of gravitation is fully compatible with the laws of conservation of energy and momentum. A very important result of this compatibility is the definitive explanation of the process of conversion of gravitational field energy into the kinetic energy of bodies moving under the action of gravitational fields.

The generalized theory of gravitation predicts the existence of gravitation-cogravitational waves and explains how such waves can be generated.

The generalized theory of gravitation also indicates the existence of antigravitational (repulsive) fields and mass formations. A cosmological consequence of such fields and mass formations is a periodic expansion and contraction of the Universe. Another consequence is that the actual mass of the Universe may be much larger than the mass revealed by an analysis of gravitational attraction in the galaxies.

It is natural to compare the various consequences of the generalized theory of gravitation with the consequences of the general relativity theory. In this regard the following three remarks should be made.

First, there are no observable gravitational effects revealed by the general relativity theory that do not have their counterparts in the generalized theory of gravitation.

Second, the generalized theory of gravitation describes a vastly larger number of gravitational effects than those described by the general relativity theory.

Third, numerical values for gravitational effects predicted by the general relativity theory are usually different from the corresponding values predicted by the generalized theory of gravitation; the difference is almost always a consequence of greater complexity and depth of gravitational interactions revealed by the generalized theory of gravitation.

Although this book presents the results of original research, it is written in the style of a textbook and contains numerous illustrative examples demonstrating various applications of the generalized Newtonian theory of gravitation developed in the book.


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by Richard L. Amaroso, Geoffrey Hunter, Menas Kafatos, Jean Pierre Vigier

Pages: 557
Publisher: Springer
Year: 2002
ISBN: 1402008856
ISBN: 978-1402008856

Websites: www.yorku.ca/ghunter

The volume has a unique perspective in that the chapters, the majority by world-class physicists and astrophysicists, contrast both mainstream conservative approaches and leading edge extended models of fundamental issues in physical theory and observation. For example in the first of the five parts: Astrophysics & Cosmology, papers review Bigbang Cosmology along with articles calling for exploration of alternatives to a Bigbang universe in lieu of recent theoretical and observational developments. This unique perspective continues through the remaining sections on extended EM theory, gravitation, quantum theory, and vacuum dynamics and space-time; making the book a primary source for graduate level and professional academics.

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by Bernard Rendle

Pages: 21
Publisher: Modal Research
Year: 1978
ISBN: B0006D1IT8

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by William G. Carnahan

Pages: 96
Publisher: William G. Carnahan
Year: 1979/1983

Websites: adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1979QB341.G7.......

A collection of winning essays in response to competitions sponsored by The Association for Pushing Gravity Reasearch (APGR), this book presents some of the most profound ideas written on gravity in the 1970s and early 1980s.

Contents:

  •   3 William G. Carnahan, Conservation Theory Gravitation: Summary
  • 14 William G. Carnahan, Strange Assumptions of Certain Modern (?) Physicists
  • 19 William G. Carnahan, How to Gain Weight adn Vector Accelerations from "Weber's" Stellar Waves (1971)
  • 22 John Kierein, Implications of the Compton Effect Interpretation of Red Shift (1975, 1st Place)
  • 26 John B. Kizer, The case for a Lesagian Theory of Gravitation (1975, 2nd Place)
  • 29 Valyn C. Williams, How to Make Black Holes from Golf Holes
  • 30 John B. Kizer, The Total Gravitational Flux of Free Space (1976, 1st Place)
  • 33 William R. Jones, The Quality of the Ether (1976, 2nd Place)
  • 39 John B. Kizer, Three Arguments on the Nature of Space (1977, 1st Place)
  • 44 John Gribben, Gravity, Tides on the Sun and Climatic Change (1977, 2nd Place)
  • 50 Gary C. Miller, A Search for the Known Properties of Gravitation (1978, 1st Place)
  • 60 John P. Fernandez, The Pushing Mechanism of Gravity (1978, 2nd Place)
  • 64 John P. Fernandez, Cosmological Effects of the New Aether Experiments (1979, 1st Place)
  • 70 Harold Aspden, A Case for Pushing Gravity (1979, 2nd Place)
  • 72 William G. Carnahan, Assorted Material

The assorted material interspersed throughout the book includes correspondence from and to Bill Carnihan, featuring interesting anecdotes from Grote Reber, Michael Kirsch and several others.


View count: 1
by Konrad Rudnicki

Pages: 177
Publisher: C. Roy Keys Inc. (Apeiron)
Year: 2001
ISBN: 0968368964

Websites: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konrad_Rudnicki

Based on papers originally presented at an international conference on Redshifts and gravitation in a relativistic universe, held Sept. 17-20, 1999, Cesena, Italy, this book features essays by Prof. Andre K. T. Assis, Henrik Broberg, Dr. Franco Selleri, Dr. Tom Van Flandern, Dr. Halton C. Arp, Bernard R. Bligh and others.

Editors' Introduction

Fritz Zwicky, the great 20th century astronomer, astrophysicist and theoretical physicist, also dealt with methodology of research, which is considered to be one of branches of the philosophy of science. Zwicky, unlike most philosophers working in this area, not only discussed methods used by others but applied his methodological ideas to a new practical approach in his highly successful scientific research. This approach helped him to discover new objects and new facts. His activity in the fields of the exact sciences and of philosophy in science formed an integral whole. He advocated taking all possible, even exotic hypotheses into consideration, and never adhering only to a single hypothesis. In his Morphological Astronomy he wrote the following words, which should be taken as a fundamental principle in all research:

If rain begins to fall on previously dry areas on the earth, the water on the ground will make its way from high levels to low levels in a variety of ways. Some of these ways will be more or less obvious, predetermined by pronounced mountain formations and valleys, while others will appear more or less at random. Whatever courses are being followed by the first waters, their existence will largely prejudice those chosen by later floods. A system of ruts will consequently be established which has a high degree of permanence. The water rushing to the sea will sift the earth in these ruts and leave the extended layers of earth outside essentially unexplored. Just as the rains open up the earth here and there, ideas unlock the doors to various aspects of life, fixing the attention of men on some aspects while partly or entirely ignoring others. Once man is in a rut he seems to have the urge to dig even deeper, and what often is most unfortunate, he does not take the excavated debris with him like the waters, but throws it over the edge, thus covering up the unexplored territory and making it impossible for him to see outside his rut. The mud he is throwing may even hit his neighbours in the eyes, intentionally or unintentionally and make it difficult for them to see anything at all.

This volume, devoted to the problems of relativity, gravitation and related issues in physics, presents papers delivered and/or discussed during the conference ?Redshifts and Gravitation in a Relativistic Universe? held in Cesena on September 17-20th 1999. In a way, this conference represents a response to Zwicky?s method, outlined above. Its main aim was to serve as a forum for ideas and theories that go against the mainstream of science. Some of the theories are already cast in their final form; some are just rough ideas still undergoing development. Not all of them will prove correct, just as not all of the mainstream theories are wrong. Only reality is an absolute truth, while our theories have only approximate validity. The great German thinker Johann Wolfgang von Goethe wrote: not distinguishing between reality and theory is like not distinguishing between a building and its scaffolding. Theories are tools, not objects of scientific investigation, but indispensable tools. Only a wide variety of tools can enable us to carry out such a complicated task as scientific research.

In addition, a wide variety of observed phenomena have to be taken into consideration in a properly organized scientific investigation. Some phenomena which are seldom mentioned by others?such as quantization of redshifts?are discussed in this volume.

Some of the papers are presented here in more or less the same form in which they were delivered during the conference. Some were reworked more recently and take a final form different from the presentation. No minutes of the extensive discussion in the conference auditorium or the more lively discussions that continued during breaks and around dinner tables were recorded. In some cases the discussions are reflected in the final shape of the papers. Two of the papers included here were not presented as such during the conference, but their content was mentioned and taken under consideration during the debate. This volume therefore should not be regarded as a formal proceedings of the Cesena Conference, although it does fairly reflect the substance of the event.

In his contribution A.K.T. Assis proposes the principle of physical proportions, according to which all laws of physics can depend only on the ratio of known quantities of the same type. An alternative formulation is that all universal constants of physics (G, c, Planck?s constant, Boltzmann?s constant, etc.) must depend on cosmological or microscopic properties of the universe. There is a discussion of laws satisfying this principle and of other laws which do not follow it, implying that the corresponding theories must be incomplete. The author shows how to implement this principle by means of his theory of Relational Mechanics, as set out in the book of the same title (Apeiron, Montreal, 1999).

The paper presented by H. Broberg is based on the equivalence between gravitation and acceleration, initially suggested by Einstein. This introduces a new geometric approach to quantum gravity, the missing link to unification, extended to a discussion of energy flows in the vacuum as the key mechanism of the gravitational process. His ideas also relate to string theory in a scenario where the extra dimension, representing the ?thickness of the line,? can be allowed to exist from the Planck length up to the Hubble scale.

An alternative picture of the structure of galaxies is proposed in the paper by Marek Biesiada, Konrad Rudnicki and Jacek Syska. The authors discuss the possible explanation of dynamical properties of galaxies with the theory of dilatonic balls using six-dimensional space.

In the paper ?Electromagnetism and Cosmology? by Edward Kapu?cik a rather convincing argument is given that the correct unification of electromagnetism and gravity should start from some elementary and basic proto-fields which are neither electromagnetic or gravitational fields. The presently observed division of fundamental interactions into gravitational and electromagnic must be achieved by constructing composite fields from the proto-fields. In addition to the field equations, the gauge conditions also express physical laws and determine these composite fields. The last statement contradicts the point of view commonly adopted, which treats the gauge fields as auxiliary quantities.

Two papers by F. Selleri show that transformations of space and time between inertial systems exist which are almost empirically equivalent to the Lorentz transformations. They contain a free parameter e1, the coefficient of x in the transformation of time. He shows that Michelson type experiments, aberration, occultation of Jupiter satellites, and radar ranging of planets are insensitive to the choice of e1. An exception is represented by experiments in slowly accelerated frames, e.g., those concerning the Sagnac effect. The best choice emerging from Selleri?s work is where the parameter e1 = 0, i.e., a theory different from Special Relativity.

One of the goals of the Cesena conference was to find common ground among the dissidents beyond their certitude that some mainstream models are wrong. That proved surprisingly difficult, and the discussions showed why?we differed about which fundamental starting points were a valid basis for building models. Should model-building be driven my math or by physics? Are singularities allowed by reality? Can matter and energy be created or destroyed? Must the causality principle be respected? And so forth. One session on the last day of the conference was devoted to a discussion of these points, and we found that no unanimity existed about any of them. That led directly to the contribution by Van Flandern, ?Physics has its Principles,? which attempts to examine several such fundamental principles and show the consequences in each case of making a wrong assumption about its applicability or non-applicability. Whether or not this initial effort brings dissident views closer, it has certainly highlighted the points that must be resolved for any hope of a convergence of models and viewpoints in the future.

Many physicists point to the proper functioning of the International Atomic Time system (TAI) in order to support the postulate of Special Relativity Theory about the one-way isotropy of light velocity in every inertial system, which has never been demonstrated. Contrary to this view, Manaresi demonstrates that the proper functioning of the TAI system does not imply the one-way isotropy of light on the moving Earth. This means that the second postulate of Special Relativity still remains merely conventional.

Astronomical observations show that some fundamental cosmic properties come in discrete values. The ratio of observed properties, such as redshift or mass, for example, yields a ubiquitous factor of 1.23. In the paper by A. and J Rub?i? and H. Arp in this volume the properties of fundamental particles such as leptons and quarks are examined. The surprising result is that they also obey this ?quantization? rule. While there is no current explanation, these empirical results point to similar physical laws which extend from the smallest to the largest entities in the universe. This may lead to a physical understanding of redshift quantization.

A very straightforward paper by K. Rudnicki, W. God?owski and A. Magdziarz presents a statistical elaboration of a very small sample of objects within the Iwanowska lines of galaxies and globular clusters. It shows that globular clusters, even located together with galaxies on the same lines, do not show redshift periodisation, whereas the galaxies do show the periodisation.

B. Bligh starts with some basic notions of thermodynamics to expose some of the errors made by cosmologists. Thermodynamic calculations require an energy balance. He then presents calculations on the Hot Big Bang Theory using data provided by cosmologists. The results are presented in a table and graphs which show that the Big Bang Theory cannot be true. Mr. Bligh also explains that thermodynamic calculations are most easily done with the aid of a temperature-entropy diagram for hydrogen, a method that is demonstrated in detail in his book The Big Bang Exploded!

Lastly, the paper by Cardone and Mignani deals with a problem that has been the subject of long-standing debate in the literature, namely the possibility of a breakdown of local Lorentz invariance (a subject revived in recent years, e.g., by S. Coleman, S.L. Glashow and R. Jackiw). In their paper, Cardone and Mignani report the preliminary positive results of an experiment which seems to evidence a DC voltage across a conductor induced by the static magnetic field of a coil. This intriguing finding ought, of course, to be confirmed by further independent tests, aimed at excluding possible gravitational effects, among the other things.

Apeiron Review


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by Charles Lane Poor

Pages: 14
Year: 1926
ISBN: B0008BI8NW

Websites: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Lane_Poor

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by Thierry De Mees

Pages: 32
Publisher: Thierry De Mees
Year: 2011


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Is not everything settled with Gravitomagnetism, the analogy of electromagnetism for gravity, with which I explained the formation of disk galaxies without dark matter, the shape of supernova and hourglass stars, and many other phenomena? Is there more to be told?

In this little booklet, I show that one of the parameters that are used to define the Sun's dynamics can be expressed by the other parameters. In other words, the Sun's gravity is defined by its angular velocity and its radius.

This amazing property finds its origin in the way how particles interact, and the way how I expect that all kinds of forces work: by a Coriolis effect between particles.

Henceforth the calculus of the Gravitational Constant is possible.

Linked to this phenomenon is the expansion of spinning objects, like the Earth, the Sun and the stars. This occurs by gravity as well, and this can be explained by both the Gravitomagnetic as the Coriolis approach.

Discover in the next few pages how these new gravitational realities take form.


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by Pari Spolter

Pages: 260
Publisher: Orb Publishing Co.
Year: 1994
ISBN: 0963810758
ISBN: 978-0963810755

THE NEXUS MAGAZINE, pages 4-5, December 1996-January 1997. I am writing to thank you for reviewing a book called "Gravitational Force of the Sun," by Dr. Pari Spolter, in NEXUS, June-July 96 (vol. 3, no.4). I bought the book to find out how to calculate the gravitational force of celestial bodies, for a project I'm working on, thinking it would be a well-understood and thoroughly documented area of research beyond controversy-more fool I! Dr. Spolter exposes the fundamental mathematical errors in both Einsteinian and Newtonian theory with such elegance and ease that even a mathematical recalcitrant like myself was inspired to recall my high-school mathematics (last used in anger 20 years ago!) to follow her working out. No, I am not making this up: I voluntarily engaged in strenuous mathematics for my own enjoyment! "Gravitational Force of the Sun" is very focused. Dr. Spolter successfully knocks the pins from under two great, unchallenged theories of science by reviewing the original documents that Newton wrote and examining the mathematics and assumptions that Einstein and Newton used. I have seldom before read a more thorough hatchet job. She must be a relentless researcher with prodigious memory and intellect. The book is not negative. Dr. Spolter shows Kepler's contributions to be far greater than I previously suspected (Kepler's work is the foundation she builds her work on), and what she tears down she rebuilds. With this book I can go forward in my project: without it I would be doomed to failure. Thank you, Dr. Spolter, and thank you, NEXUS. Regards, Paul M., Sydney, NSW, Australia.

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by

Pages: 81
Publisher: The-Origin Foundation, Inc.
ISBN: 0-9777782-2-3

Websites: www.The-Origin.org
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OUTLINE  Index

 

Section 1  1

Introduction  1

Optics  2

            Speed  3

            Refraction  4

            Diffraction  7

            Reflection  9

            Interference  9

            Polarization  9

Section 2  10

U-waves  10

            Gravitation, U-wave Flow, and the Affect of Matter  10

            U-waves in Matter  10

U-waves In Optics  12

            Refraction  12

            Diffraction  13

Gravitational U-wave Management Methods  16

            Prism Deflecting  16

            X-Ray Focusing  16

            Slit Focusing  18

            X-ray Crystallography  18

            Crystal Deflecting  19

            Focused  Deflecting  Considerations  22

Section 3  24

U-wave Deflection Caused by U-wave Slowing  24

Quantifying the U-wave Deflection in Light Diffraction  25

Using  these  Slit  Diffraction  Results  for  A  Gravitation  Deflector  29

Section 4  31

A  Cubic  Crystal  Deflector  31

Earth  Overall  Gravitation  vs.  Earth  Surface  Light  Source  32

A  Practical  Problem  in  Implementing  the  Cubic  Crystal  Deflector  37

Section 5  39

Objectives  of  Gravitic  Applications  39

            Gravitic Levitation and Acceleration  40

            Energy  40

            Gravitic Power Generation  41

            Gravity Management Means for These Applications  42

General Design Considerations Affecting Gravitic Applications  42

            Force and Acceleration  42

            Passenger and Cargo in Gravitic Transportation Vehicles  43

Conclusion  44

Appendix A  46

U-wave Concentrations  46

            The Ambient U-Wave Flow  46

            The Incoming Gravitational U-Wave Flow  53

Conclusion and Ratios  55

Appendix B  54

            The Exact Submultiple of Interatomic Spacing Issue  54

            Temperature Variation  55

            Thermal Vibrations and Black Body Radiation  56

            The Random Distribution Solution to the Crystal Tilt  57

            Precision and Errors  60

            Preliminary Design Summary  60

Appendix c  62

            Output Power Calculations  62

            Design Considerations  64

                        Configuration  64

                        The Working Fluig  65

                        The Gravitic Deflector  66

            Gravitic Power Generation Compact Cases 66          

Appendix d  69

The  Experiments  In  General  56

Requirements  for  the  Cubic  Crystal  Deflector  56

Experiment #1 – Demonstration  of  Gravitation  Reduction  57

Comments  Bearing  on  the  Project  57

Experiment #2 – Controlled  Local Gravitation  Reduction  with  a  Cubic
       Crystal  Deflector  58

Experiment #3 – Energy   from  the  Gravitational Field  59

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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by

Pages: 81
Publisher: The-Origin Foundation, Inc.
Year: 2011
ISBN: 0-9777782-2-3

Websites: www.The-Origin.org

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by Tom Bearden

Pages: 178
Publisher: Tesla Book Company
Year: 1991
ISBN: 0914119079
ISBN: 978-0914119074

Websites: www.cheniere.org/sales/online-store.htm

Bearden does an excellent job of describing scalar technology at least the theory aspect. This book is written in the attempt to bring scientists and EE closer to the truth on what is missing in physics to unify the three fields: QM,GR,EM (what Einstein was trying to do but failed to achieve Bearden explains why). I would recommend this to everyone but only those who are truly interested in physics, Tesla, Einstein, & perhaps technology would find this work to be of much helpful knowledge. For myself personally, Bearden has showed me the path that no one has done before. For myself coming from a Tesla background Bearden goes a step further and describes how physics was side tracked and how to get back on the right track through the many many references that is cited, all coming from a man that devoted his life for science. This book is a must for the pioneer in physics. -- Shane M Gillespie, amazon


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by Thierry De Mees

Pages: 205
Publisher: Thierry De Mees
Year: 2011


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In this book, I study the motion laws of masses where no direct mutual contact occur, but only the gravitation-related fields. We will discover a second field of gravitation, called cogravitation field, or gravitomagnetic field, or Heaviside field, or what I prefer to call Gyrotation, which form a whole theory, completing the classic gravitation theory to what we could call the Gyro-gravitation Theory.

A model is developed by the use of mass fluxes, in analogy with energy fluxes. By this model the transfer of gravitational angular movement can be found, and by that, the fundament for an analogy with the electromagnetic equations. These equations will allow us to elucidate an important number of never earlier explained cosmic phenomena.

Extract:

"Within a few pages we will be aware of the reason why our solar system is nearly flat, and why some galaxies are flat as well with in the centre a more spherical bulge. Furthermore we will know why the galaxy becomes spiralled, and why some galaxies or clusters  get strange matrix shapes. And a simple calculation will make clear why the stars of flat galaxies have approximately a constant speed around the centre, solving at the same time the ?dark mass? problem of these galaxies.

We will also get more insight why the spirals of galaxies have got so few windings around the centre, in spite of the elevated age of the galaxy. Moreover we will discover the reason for the shape of the remnants of some exploding supernovae. When they explode, the ejected masses called remnants, get the shape of a twin wheel or a twin lobe with a central ring.

Next, some calculations concerning certain binary pulsars follow, these are sets of two stars twisting around each other.

We get an explanation for the fact that some fast spinning stars cannot disintegrate totally, and also a description of the cannibalization process of binary pulsars: the one compact star can indeed absorb the other, gaseous star while emitting bursts of gasses at the poles.

An apparent improbable consequence of the Gyrotation theory is that mutual repulsion of masses is possible. We predict the conditions for this, which will allow us understanding how the orbit deflexion of the planets goes in its work.

Furthermore we will bring the proof that Gyrotation is very similar to the special relativity principle of Einstein, allowing a readier look on how the relativity theory looks like in reality. The conclusions from both, Gyrotation Theory and Relativity Theory are however totally different, even somehow complementary, but not always recognised as such by the scientific world.

Also more detailed calculations for fast spinning stars, black holes, their orbits and their event horizons are calculated. "


View count: 1
by Tom Bearden, Eike Mueller

Publisher: Tesla Book Company
Year: 1985



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by Arnold G. Gulko

Pages: 39
Publisher: Vortex Unlimited
Year: 2003

View count: 1
by Walter C. Wright

Publisher: Carlton Press / Hearthstone
Year: 1979
ISBN: 0806212632
ISBN: 978-0806212630
ISBN: B000QAAPWM

Websites: www.keelynet.com/gravity/wright.htm

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Scientists (176)

Research Scientist
Antigravity, Superconductivity, Bose-Einstein Condensate
Solana Beach CA
Aerospace Engineering, inventor
Unification, Gravity, Quantum Mechanics, Physical Explanation of Physics
Rapid City SD
Electronics R&D Lab Technician
Gravity, Genesis, Matter-Energy Continuum, Relativity, Electricity, Magnetism, Light

Books (167)

Pages: 112
Publisher: Shanty Press
Year: 1983