Posted on 09/08/2001 1:05:48 PM PDT by Paul_E_Ester
By Bradley Perrett
LONDON (Reuters) - The U.S. military may have conducted serious research into anti-gravity based on Nazi studies, a top defense journalist suggests in a new book.
In ``The Hunt for Zero Point,'' journalist Nick Cook says, based on a decade's research, he believes by the 1950s the U.S. was seriously working on anti-gravity ``electrogravitics'' technology, which would lift and propel vehicles without wings or thrust.
``I feel intuitively that some vehicle has been developed, particularly given that there is this wealth of scientific data out there, and the Americans have never been slow to pick up on this sort of science,'' Cook, the aerospace consultant for Jane's Defense Weekly, told Reuters in an interview.
Cook uncovered reports and sightings of a Nazi research device that had been hidden in a remote part of Poland, where it had apparently been supplied with great quantities of electricity -- which an electrogravitic experiment would require.
Curiously, barely a hint of such Nazi research appeared after the war, suggesting that whoever captured it -- probably the United States -- immediately stamped it ``secret,'' he said.
Cook noted that, as a respected expert, he is risking his reputation by writing seriously about a technology associated with UFOs, which most scientists dismiss as science fiction embraced by ``hocus-pocus'' believers.
The United States is known to have a huge budget for so called ``black projects,'' because it spends more on defense than can be accounted for by adding up the value of public programs.
Cook admitted he cannot produce a conclusive case. But that is the nature of black projects, in which even the workers usually have no idea what they are working on.
In 1947, amid the early craze of UFO reports, an air force general reported on the possibility of the United States building disc-shaped objects with extreme rates of climb and maneuverability but without noise or evident propulsion.
In the mid 1950s electrogravitics was the subject of a few press reports, including one that described work by most of the United States' major defense contractors, Cook reported.
And then it all went quiet -- just as stealth technology suddenly disappeared from view in the mid 1970s, only to re-emerge as operational aircraft in the late 1980s.
Academic papers on the subject have mysteriously disappeared from libraries.
There is still no firm evidence that electrogravitics is more than science fiction. Civilian scientists and amateurs have experimented with it, and while some have reported success, no one seems to have reproduced their results to prove that it works.
And to think I always was under the impression that it's the spaceature of curvetime.
Dang.
Narration to accompany clip: "Say, Bob........some game last night, eh? Hey.........why you goin' this way? Shortcut, you saaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
I guess he didn't tell anybody else. I'm smart, but no Einstein. What does what you said mean?
Bingo. Science has no explanation for electricity, magnetism, and gravity. It can predict their occurrences and measure them, but has no way of explaining what exactly they are.
Or some such BS.
Now ask him where the highest point of gravity would be. You'd think that it would be in the opposite direction of gravitational pull, ie; away from the earth, starting at the center of the earth. So theoreticly, you'd weigh a lot more standing two inches from the earths core even though there isn't enough mass between you and the core to make a difference.
However, if there is a graviton type particle/wave/wavelet, the focus of said particle would originate at the focal point ie; the center. The effect would propagate like all other observed forms of radiation with the effect thinning out over distance from origin.
Podkletnov and others are working on this as we speak.
They are working on gravity. Give 'em some time.
Jeez, you don't think the world is flat do you?
Actually, Einstein published his theory of Gravitation. That's what his "General Theory of Relativity" is about.
In science, things are exactly what can be measured/determined about them. For example, an electron is a particle with certain mass, charge, spin, and quantization potential properties belonging to a class of particles known as leptons. That is exactly what "they are." To ask for more goes into the realm of philosophy and metaphysics. The latter realm is generally unproductive and unreliable, imho.
Their effects are well known. Exactly what they ARE is matter of considerable conjecture and disagreement.
If you knew even half of what you think you know, I'd still give my cat 3-1 odds in a game of "stump the dummy" in a head-to-head match.
What is blue? No, not the wavelength. The color itself. Exactly what is it?
Go ahead and fiddle with your sliderule, Poindexter. Take all the time you need.
This question is probably more usefully directed to an expert in human perception, which I am not. But I'll take a crude stab at it, since it arises from the physical world. Blue is name people give to a mental image which we would assign to a category known as color. It arises from the interaction of an photon of a limited range of frequencies with the eye as processed by the brain.
Things can exist as independent entities (matter and energy), as our perceptions, or as pure theoretical constructs. Science uses all three categories, but focuses on what can be known about the first.
While were at it, Bruce, perhaps you could tell me what "number" is. Is it similar to an electron? or "blue"?
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