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"Impossible" EM space drive?

R

Richard Herring

In message
Benj said:
You STILL don't get it you you?

Mirror, mirror...
You can't prove ANYTHING by quoting
freshman physics texts or the bold assertions on PBS. And to do that
without even reading someone's arguments is the height of fraud. You
are saying in effect,

For an appropriate definition of "in effect", meaning something like
"here comes a fraudulent misrepresentation of what was actually said",
maybe.
"I am proud to say I know absolutely no details
about what this person is claiming, but I do know that I am so smart
and knowledgeable and physics is always so infallible that I don't
need to go any further than my own uninformed opinion to prove that
this won't work!"

Nonsense. Take your strawman arguments elsewhere.

I'm making no claims whatsoever about physics, only about logic. (The
clue is in words like "premise" and "conclusion".)
Note that Timo did this RIGHT. He read the paper. He went in and found
some errors of logic in the proposed theory. And finally even after
doing that he STILL didn't say the thing was "impossible"! He said
you'd have to build it to prove it doesn't work.

I don't think so. What he actually said was this (in Message-ID:

Since there's only one possible answer to that (rhetorical) question, I
don't think the following sentence has quite the implications you'd
like:
especially when followed by this:

[end Timo quote]
In other words Timo
did the SCIENCE. All the rest was people doing faith-based physics.
His conclusion was totally different from yours. Timo said, "Here are
some holes in the suggested theory, but to really test these ideas
you'd have to build it."

No, he said:
You and Uncle Al and some others in effect

There you go with "in effect" again. Al can speak for himself, but I
said nothing like the following:
said, "I really don't know anything about how this device is supposed
to work in detail, but in my opinion it is impossible that it could
work."

Then you should have no difficulty in providing a message-ID for where I
said that, if I actually had.

But of course your strawman is (as usual) a misrepresentation. All I
have said is that it couldn't work _by the method claimed_, because the
claim is logically inconsistent and therefore incoherent.
Timo did science, you did a political discussion.

The difference between what Timo did and what you are trying to say is
like night and day. Don't try to use his work to justify your own
laziness!
And since when are _you_ paying me for my time?
 
G

gabydewilde

Eric cant think

therefor he isn't.
You are claiming that
this device in your opinion is ONLY an ion drive and thus cannot work.
You thus are saying that the discovery of any new principle (like
electrostatic propulsion in a vacuum) without your permission is
"impossible".
Did you notice that there is a subtle difference between "My opinion
is completely correct and everyone else is "wrong"" and the statement
"In my opinion this thing wouldn't work.".  Obviously the only
scientific true test is to put the damn thing in a vacuum and see if
it still produces force.  I see no evidence that your opinion is so
infallible that we should accept it without proof or question.

Oh, but here you are wrong. The blind dogmatic faith driven
preconceived arguments worked for so many years we have to accept it
as empirical truth. Why else MKULTA, why else COINTELPRO?

x-rays are a hoax and so are heavier than air flying machines, heat
engines, radiant solar panels. etc etc all nonsense.

After world war I Germany was a very wealthy country. Hitler didn't
need IBM, Prescot Bush or Henry Ford to help him.

Werner von Braun didn't do any anti gravity research and the
technology was most definitely not moved to the US after the war.

See how easy that was?
1. Nobody from Newton on has the slightest clue what gravity "is".

Just because it's teached to be a forbidden fruitcake in skools
doesn't mean we don't know. It's fringe, quack, pseudo, crank etc Now
look the other way, you.
2. Nobody has the slightest clue what a photon is.

Pro-ton is a name label like New-ton, mega ton, magne-ton, electio-ton
etc
Again lots of very strange mathematics describing truly weird
behavior...

Yes, it's not like I'm telling you anything you didn't know.
..... but no real models
or understanding of what a photon at the fundamental level actually is
doing.

The photon is trying to convince you of it's existence.
3. Because of 1 and 2 above, nobody has the slightest clue if there is
some electrical or electromagnetic connection between gravity and E&M.

Ah ha, but "nobody" suggests you know what everybody knows.

This proves the model does exactly what it was designed for.
In other words could there possibly be SOME way to build a
"electrical" device that generates a localized gravitational field?

I doubt you would live very long.
"Gravity plating" for a starship if you will.

The stealth bomber ionises the air utilising a strip on it's wings.
It's existence is declassified which means they have something that
makes it look like a toy.

If they didn't they wouldn't be allowed to declassify it.
And given the total lack of knowledge in 1., 2. and 3., it should be
obvious that anyone asserting that such a device is "impossible" is a
clown.

Use your brains Benj, why would people make such enormous effort to
debunk things? It can only be their job or their programming. Either
way they are pretty obvious.

Remember, half the planet is starving so that they can sit on their
fat ass worshiping their LHC.

So when they argue something is safe to ignore they are basically
dismissing peoples lives as some insignificant statistic.

Think Benj, how simple is geothermal energy? How simple is solar? How
simple is wind energy? How simple is wave energy?

And now you think you can convince the liars of antigravity
technology?

Not even a primitive magnetron drive can be allowed.

It's not real because of it not being real and my opinion. It's
fringe, quack, kooky, nutty, and loopsy. Didn't you know?

You are going to stay on this planet till the end of time which is
pretty soon actually.

Ow wait, we didn't want to know about that either right?

lol

____
http://blog.360.yahoo.com/factuurexpress
 
S

Szczepan Bia³ek

Benj said:
2. Nobody has the slightest clue what a photon is. Again lots of very
strange mathematics describing truly weird behavior but no real models
or understanding of what a photon at the fundamental level actually is
doing.

People from optics know that light travel in packets. They know even how
they are long (from Newton rings).
S*
3. Because of 1 and 2 above, nobody has the slightest clue if there is
some electrical or electromagnetic connection between gravity and E&M.

Some know it from Aepinus.
In other words could there possibly be SOME way to build a
"electrical" device that generates a localized gravitational field?

Electrical and gravitational are the same. The field is a math.
"Gravity plating" for a starship if you will.

Plating or screaning is impossible (electric or gravity). Proved
superposition rule tells it.
S*
 
P

Puppet_Sock

That hydrodynamic/electromagnetic analogies work so well suggests that the
proposed device won't work. Waves within a fluid enclosed inside a rigid
container aren't going to make the container move through empty space, are
they?

Careful there Timo. Benj will be in here telling you that you
are not doing science by invoking conservation of momentum
in mechanical systems.
Socks
 
A

Androcles

Szczepan Bia³ek said:
People from optics know that light travel in packets. They know even how
they are long (from Newton rings).
S*

Some know it from Aepinus.


Electrical and gravitational are the same. The field is a math.


Plating or screaning is impossible (electric or gravity). Proved
superposition rule tells it.
S*

Jacoby logic: "I don't know, therefore nobody knows."
 
T

Timo A. Nieminen

You STILL don't get it you you? You can't prove ANYTHING by quoting
freshman physics texts or the bold assertions on PBS.

No, but it's a useful filter to determine what is worth investing more
time on. If it claims to use the principles taught in undergraduate
physics courses, but the results contradict the principles of
undergraduate physics, it's very, very, very likely to be crap.

Invest time if interested or paid. Even a professional or amateur
scientist has no obligation to investigate every outlandish claim - the
amateur's time is limited, and they should pursue thheir own interests,
while the professional may well be supposed to be working on a specific
project for their boss (otherwise, is usually supposed to be trying to
produce something).

It isn't meant to be a proof; it's a simple heuristic which usually works.

So what? Reading the paper and finding errors doesn't prove anything
either. One can come up with a correct result through a series of errors.
One can still claim the device _really works_, despite the supposed theory
behind it being a crock of shit. Since going through the details takes a
lot more time, and still doesn't _prove_ anything, why do it, unless (a)
you're interested in the details, (b) it's your "job" as a peer reviewer,
or (c) a potential investor wants to make sure they might be making a
better investment than spending their money on lottery tickets.
And to do that
without even reading someone's arguments is the height of fraud.

No, it isn't even remotely fraud.

An example of fraud would be claiming that you have a design for an EM
drive that works, while knowing that you've fudged the theory to make it
appear it might work, when you know it won't (and I'm not claiming this is
the case here; the errors and omissions may very well be accidental - easy
to make the theory fit when convinced beforehand it should work), and
seeking money from investors that will be used to support your lifestyle,
not development of the device (also something I'm not claiming here;
spending all of the investor money, and then more of your own, on
development of the device is a good sign of sincerity).
Note that Timo did this RIGHT. He read the paper. He went in and found
some errors of logic in the proposed theory.

Which I did because I was interested in the details (electromagnetic
transport of momentum is my job). I didn't think it would take very long.
Doing it while sitting at home drinking coffee meant it didn't even take
time away from annything else I should have been doing.
And finally even after
doing that he STILL didn't say the thing was "impossible"! He said
you'd have to build it to prove it doesn't work.

No. This still wouldn't prove it doesn't work. I said that if anybody
wants to build it, it's up to them. In the context of where it appeared in
the post, take it to mean "build it knowing the theory provided is deeply
flawed".
The difference between what Timo did and what you are trying to say is
like night and day.

No, I just went further into the details. Neither the simple assessment
nor the finding the errors in the details _proves_ anything about whether
or not the device _works_. Neither _proves_ that the theoretical
conclusions are _wrong_. The first simply shows that since A is assumed
in the theory, and the result contradicts A, there must be an error, and
the conclusion is incompatible with the assumptions. The second, finding
errors in the details, simply shows that there is an error, but does not
show that the conclusions are necessarily wrong, or incompatible with the
assumptions (unless one provides a correct derivation, leading to a
different result, which I did partly, but only partly) - this is actually
a _weaker_ result, and only serves to amplify the first conclusion.
Don't try to use his work to justify your own
laziness!

Appropriately prudent with the investment of one's time is not laziness. A
comes up with a list of outlandish ideas. B says "Support them". A comes
back with supposed support full of holes, and B says "Here is a critical
error; go away and come back if you can fix it." What's wrong with that?
Using classical electromagnetic theory to come up with a result
contradicting classical electromagnetic theory is a pretty good sign of a
critical error, even if you don't bother to find out exactly where it is.

You want to suggest it should be investigated "properly" - why don't you
do it?
 
B

Benj

On Oct 6, 5:16 am, Richard Herring <junk@[127.0.0.1]> wrote:
It isn't meant to be a proof; it's a simple heuristic which usually works.

I won't argue with the "usually works" part, but you are putting words
in Herr Herrings mouth here. His (and uncle Al's, and others) words
clearly state that they MEANT it to be taken as a "proof"! And even
worse it's a "proof" of nonsense. To declare that this or that is
"impossible" and then site the laws of physics as "proof" is nonsense.
It only "proves" that the proposed phenomena either doesn't follow
ideas that establishment physics currently holds OR that the person
making the statement does not have a complete grasp of how those laws
should be applied.

Bottom line: "impossible" = nonsense.
So what? Reading the paper and finding errors doesn't prove anything
either. One can come up with a correct result through a series of errors.
One can still claim the device _really works_, despite the supposed theory
behind it being a crock of shit. Since going through the details takes a
lot more time, and still doesn't _prove_ anything, why do it, unless (a)
you're interested in the details, (b) it's your "job" as a peer reviewer,
or (c) a potential investor wants to make sure they might be making a
better investment than spending their money on lottery tickets.

a). If you are making high pronouncements about the viability of the
given paper and it's contents, presumably one has an interest in it.
So if you are interested then spending the time to examine the details
makes sense.

b). Fine, but maybe your "job" is to censor certain subjects from
publication that are not considered "politically correct" for this or
that reason. And even if the review is fair and you are paid to do it,
what does that prove?

c). What is wrong with checking investments?

All these are valid reasons to check a paper in detail. So?
No, it isn't even remotely fraud.

Come on Timo! You are a better scientist that that! You are standing
there (sitting there?) telling us that if a peer reviewer rejects a
paper without even reading it, just based on some vague "opinion" that
isn't fraud? How long will you keep that job? (Yeah, I know, it
depends upon how much political suction you've got with those in
authority). And you tell me that if you advise investors on a paper
WITHOUT even reading the paper that this isn't fraud? I hope I never
hire YOU to rate venture capital investments for ME! And it follows
by logical extension that simply declaring a paper to describe things
that are "impossible" without even reading the paper is far from
ethical science. Yet Herring (and now you) seem to be taking that
position. Yikes!
An example of fraud would be claiming that you have a design for an EM
drive that works, while knowing that you've fudged the theory to make it
appear it might work, when you know it won't (and I'm not claiming this is
the case here; the errors and omissions may very well be accidental - easy
to make the theory fit when convinced beforehand it should work), and
seeking money from investors that will be used to support your lifestyle,
not development of the device (also something I'm not claiming here;
spending all of the investor money, and then more of your own, on
development of the device is a good sign of sincerity).

Well yes, that is fraud too. Are you arguing that if you have one type
of fraud it precludes all other types? I thought not.
Which I did because I was interested in the details (electromagnetic
transport of momentum is my job). I didn't think it would take very long.
Doing it while sitting at home drinking coffee meant it didn't even take
time away from anything else I should have been doing.

BINGO! The reason we are discussing this here is that we are ALL
interested in the phenomena to a degree. I have no problem with a
person so uninterested in a suggested phenomena that they don't bother
to examine it in any detail. Where I'm taking exception is when THOSE
people start making hand-waving pronouncements that this or that is
"impossible" when they don't even have enough interest to examine a
few details. Our personal schedules and what our time is worth is
irrelevant. WE determine our interests and act accordingly. However if
you are interested enough to make pronouncements one should be
interested enough to find out what you are talking about. [of
course "should" and what humans routinely do can be two different
things]
No. This still wouldn't prove it doesn't work. I said that if anybody
wants to build it, it's up to them. In the context of where it appeared in
the post, take it to mean "build it knowing the theory provided is deeply
flawed".

Obviously. So your evaluation is important investor information, isn't
it. Obviously any decision to invest time and or money in building and
testing the device is theirs and operates independent of the opinion
of others. And if I'm doing the investing, while I'll take all so-
called advice into consideration, the decision whether or not to
invest is clearly mine. Hence it's up to ME to sort out the clowns who
are asserting that this or that is "impossible" while proudly
proclaiming they have not enough interest to even read the details of
the device in question. My money isn't going to take seriously any
advice that claims this or that is "impossible". Virtually all the
"big" winners in investments had a herd of nay-sayers who judged it
"impossible" without any detailed information to back it up. How
gullible do they think people are?
No, I just went further into the details. Neither the simple assessment
nor the finding the errors in the details _proves_ anything about whether
or not the device _works_. Neither _proves_ that the theoretical
conclusions are _wrong_. The first simply shows that since A is assumed
in the theory, and the result contradicts A, there must be an error, and
the conclusion is incompatible with the assumptions. The second, finding
errors in the details, simply shows that there is an error, but does not
show that the conclusions are necessarily wrong, or incompatible with the
assumptions (unless one provides a correct derivation, leading to a
different result, which I did partly, but only partly) - this is actually
a _weaker_ result, and only serves to amplify the first conclusion.

No, you just didn't go "further" into the details, you actually WENT
into the details. Thus, your opinion had basis in science. Herr
Herring's statements didn't bother with any details. He just parroted
some dogma and proclaimed the device bogus. I would note (and since
you are into E&M you'd know) that his dogma was wrong in that he
asserted that Fields are ALWAYS "conservative" and ignored (or was
ignorant of) non-conservative fields. I even quoted my own dogma from
well-accepted textbooks to demonstrate this and he ignored it.

The bottom line is that you went into details, and came up with viable
conclusions. Others ignored the details and then gave wild untenable
pronouncements based on dogma provably wrong. I call that Night and
Day!

Note that "laziness" has nothing to do with not being interested in
the question. It has to do with not bothering to examine the question
and then making snap pronouncements as if one actually HAD examined it
in detail. The hope obviously being that others will just uncritically
accept your word as an "expert".
Appropriately prudent with the investment of one's time is not laziness. A
comes up with a list of outlandish ideas. B says "Support them". A comes
back with supposed support full of holes, and B says "Here is a critical
error; go away and come back if you can fix it." What's wrong with that?
Using classical electromagnetic theory to come up with a result
contradicting classical electromagnetic theory is a pretty good sign of a
critical error, even if you don't bother to find out exactly where it is.

Not quite. This device made the claim (which you investigated in some
detail) that it was RELATIVITY that caused the results to contradict
classical electromagnetic theory! The fact that the paper ALSO
included some classic electromagnetic theory doesn't disprove
anything. There was no assertion that classic EM theory contradicted
itself. (even though some times it does! :) And using an argument
that isn't even right (the non-existence of non-conservative fields)
on top of an admission that one has no knowledge of the details of the
theory certainly doesn't place the conclusions of that argument in a
very credible light.
You want to suggest it should be investigated "properly" - why don't you
do it?

Because I get to decide how I spend my time. But... and this is the
KEY element here... I am NOT making wild pronouncements about how this
device is "impossible" and "can't work" or "violates all we know about
physics"
etc. I am also not making "crank" pronouncements that the device DOES
work or that it represents a "new physics" either! So since I have
not investigated it "properly" and for that matter have not personally
gone through the paper in detail personally as you have, I am not
about to make high pontifications as to whether or not this device is
"impossible". Only a "proper" investigation can shed light on that. I
certainly can have an "opinion" on it. And I can tell others of my
"opinion" but it's only that. And as you know opinions are like
assholes. But as soon as I assert that my opinion represents some kind
of "proof" then I am the asshole.

And that, I assert, is still the difference between you and Herr
Herring. Night and Day.

Cheers.
 
T

Timo Nieminen

On Oct 6, 5:16 am, Richard Herring <junk@[127.0.0.1]> wrote:
It isn't meant to be a proof; it's a simple heuristic which usually works.

I won't argue with the "usually works" part, but you are putting words
in Herr Herrings mouth here.

I suggest you go back and (re-)read the actual thread - if you are basing
your posts on your memory of the thread, your memory appears to be flawed.
a). If you are making high pronouncements about the viability of the
given paper and it's contents, presumably one has an interest in it.
So if you are interested then spending the time to examine the details
makes sense.

The few-sentences statement that the proposal doesn't appear viable, so
one isn't interested in looking at the details is an indication that one
is interested enough to look at the details?
b). Fine, but maybe your "job" is to censor certain subjects from
publication that are not considered "politically correct" for this or
that reason.

There are many topics sensitive enough so that the parties concerned might
well consider political correctness. Gender/race differences, some
historical topics, etc. What topics in physics present such danger?
Climate modelling results - in conflict with each other, and various
political claims - get published, and the researchers don't lose their
jobs. Cold fusion stuff gets published, and the researchers don't lose
their jobs. There's a steady trickle of various heretical physics papers
in the mainstream journals.
And even if the review is fair and you are paid to do it,
what does that prove?

Paid? To review? I wish!

If the review is fair, and the review says the paper is crap, doesn't that
suggest that the paper is crap?
c). What is wrong with checking investments?

Nothing. Why imply that there is?
All these are valid reasons to check a paper in detail. So?

Yes, that was my point (well, except for the "censorship" nonsense, which
is one of your favourite hobby-horses).

_You're_ the one insisting that people (apparently other than yourself)
look at the details. I see you didn't provide any further reasons why they
should.
Come on Timo! You are a better scientist that that! You are standing
there (sitting there?) telling us that if a peer reviewer rejects a
paper without even reading it, just based on some vague "opinion" that
isn't fraud? How long will you keep that job?

Given that peer reviewers generally aren't paid, the worst that will
happen is that they get fewer papers sent to them to review. Papers do get
rejected without being read in detail; sometimes this is appropriate,
sometimes not.
And you tell me that if you advise investors on a paper
WITHOUT even reading the paper that this isn't fraud?

No, I don't tell you that.

Do you really have no sensible argument? Do you really have to resort to
deliberately lying and distorting for rhetorical effect (or trolling
effect)? If you have a real point to make, make it, or **** off.
BINGO! The reason we are discussing this here is that we are ALL
interested in the phenomena to a degree.

Yet you avoid discussing the phenomenon, and spend your time and words
insulting the other correspondents, lying about what they said, etc. Your
usual habits, it seems.

Again, if you want to discuss science, do so. If you just want to troll,
**** off.
 
D

David L. Jones

Eric cant think

therefor he isn't.


Oh, but here you are wrong. The blind dogmatic faith driven
preconceived arguments worked for so many years we have to accept it
as empirical truth. Why else MKULTA, why else COINTELPRO?

x-rays are a hoax and so are heavier than air flying machines, heat
engines, radiant solar panels. etc etc all nonsense.

After world war I Germany was a very wealthy country. Hitler didn't
need IBM

Actually, he did:
http://www.ibmandtheholocaust.com/

Thomas Watson even got a medal from Hitler for his efforts.

Dave.
 
B

Benj

Do you really have no sensible argument? Do you really have to resort to
deliberately lying and distorting for rhetorical effect (or trolling
effect)? If you have a real point to make, make it, or **** off.

I HAVE made it. OVER AND OVER AND OVER AGAIN! And it just flies right
over your stupid head. All you know how to do is shill for the
establishment, twist all reason into political spin and throw chaff
into the wind. Even when you are RIGHT, you still won't even admit
you did the right thing and still defend clowns trying to do a quick
snow job on every one.

I gave you credit for being right. And I stick by it because it's
truth. But I sure don't condone your usual assholey attitude and
defense of people who wouldn't know the scientific method if it bit
them on the ass.

I now return you to your "important" job of building better ways to
kill your fellow humans.

And I don't have to "**** off" because this is usenet and it
represents something you oppose: Free Speech! And I will continue to
say what I wish right up until those in power finally succeed in
shutting it down! (So far .alt groups are the first to go)
 
E

Eric Gisse

The TT Brown drive is of interest in the following way. In air the TT
Brown drive is basically an Ion wind device (you can buy one over at
the Sharper Image) with enough wind it could fly a light glider.  The
fringe story is that the TT Brown device ALSO works in hard vacuum.
The reason it is fringe is because that is /wrong/. Ion drives without
an ion source tend to not work.

What is "wrong" is you. You have assumed the device is ONLY an ion
drive. Clearly in some cases it would work as one. But the claim has
also been made that it works in a hard vacuum. You are claiming that
this device in your opinion is ONLY an ion drive and thus cannot work.

The device in the OP is a wickedly inefficient EM drive that operates
off momentum transfer of the fields. Whether it will actually work or
not, I don't know. The ion wind style devices are lifter devices which
use the air as the driving medium. Neither of these will work for shit
in vacuum.
The fringe claims it works in a vacuum which obviously means in that
mode it would not be an ion drive. [Actually it could be, but would
have to use it's own material rather than surrounding gas for ions]
You thus are saying that the discovery of any new principle (like
electrostatic propulsion in a vacuum) without your permission is
"impossible".

Did I say that? Learn to read.

[snip rest of whining based on watching star trek]
 
G

gabydewilde

I HAVE made it. OVER AND OVER AND OVER AGAIN! And it just flies right
over your stupid head. All you know how to do is shill for the
establishment, twist all reason into political spin and throw chaff
into the wind. Even when you are RIGHT, you  still won't even admit
you did the right thing and still defend clowns trying to do a quick
snow job on every one.

Well, it worked for mcdonalds?
I gave you credit for being right.

ah ha ha
And I stick by it because it's
truth. But I sure don't condone your usual assholey attitude and
defense of people who wouldn't know the scientific method if it bit
them on the ass.

I prefer my own method.

First I have an idea,

Then I think about it.

Then I keep it to myself.
I now return you to your "important" job of building better ways to
kill your fellow humans.

ah, ha ha ha
And I don't have to "**** off" because this is usenet.

Exactly, but I'm afraid telling people to **** off is the main goal
people try to work twards.

Here, it's not related but fun to reed.

http://cpdlt.mae.ufl.edu/WEAV.htm
WEAV Pictures

http://www.foxnews.com/americasnewsroom/
America's Newsroom, Fox News Channel

http://www.technobahn.com/news/2008/200807101514.html
Technobahn, Japan

http://www.paulharvey.com
Paul Harvey Show

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=worlds-first-flying-saucer
Scientific American

Panoroma%20Italy%20PA28_2008.pdf
Panoroma Italy

http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2008/07/01/2290727.htm?site=science&amp;topic=latest
ABC Science, Australia

http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2008/06/23/flying-saucer-uav.html
Headline News, Discovery Channel

http://www.cienciakanija.com/2008/0...na-un-platillo-volante-propulsado-por-plasma/
Más Allá de la Ciencia Spanish Magazine

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-06/18/content_8393662.htm
China View - Sci Tech

http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90781/90879/6432706_txt.html
People's Daily Online

http://grenzwissenschaft-aktuell.blogspot.com/2008/06/professor-erfindet-fliegende-untertasse.html
German Free Net

national-spacegrant-org.pdf
National Aeronautics and Space Administration

AURION_MISSION__University_Of_Florida_Professor_Designs_Plasma.pdf
Aurion Mission

http://cnews.ru/news/line/index.shtml?2008/06/16/305161
C-News, Russia

http://www.popularmechanics.com/blogs/science_news/4269027.html
Popular Mechanics

http://www.worldofnews.com/view-1711925.html
World of News

http://www.onlineamd.com/news.cfm?id=803&amp;inpub=inAMD
Aerospace Manufacturing and Design

http://astrobio.net/news/index.php?name=News&amp;file=article&amp;sid=2772
Astrobiology Magazine

http://www.space-travel.com/reports...signs_Plasma_Propelled_Flying_Saucer_999.html
Space Travel

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...signs_a_flying_saucer/articleshow/3124425.cms
Times of India

http://www.livescience.com/technology/080612-plasma-saucer.html
LiveScience

http://in.news.yahoo.com/ani/200806...an-origin-scientist-designs-plas-f32bc39.html
Yahoo News India

http://www.alligator.org/articles/2008/06/12/news/campus/080612_saucer.txt
The Independent Florida Alligator

http://national.spacegrant.org/news/other.html
National Council of Space Grant Directors

http://www.aerospaceonline.com/article.mvc/University-Of-Florida-Professor-Designs-Plasm-0001
Aerospace Online

http://news.ufl.edu/2008/06/11/flying-saucer/
Ground Breaking Research News

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/06/080611135049.htm
Science Daily

http://esciencenews.com/articles/20...fessor.designs.plasma.propelled.flying.saucer
e! Science News

http://www.physorg.com/news132405698.html
PhysOrg

http://wn.com/plasmaaccelerator
World News

http://www.global-report.com/hongkong/?l=en&amp;a=281746
Global Report - Hong Kong

http://technology.newscientist.com/...d-flying-saucer.html?feedId=online-news_rss20
Article in The New Scientist

newyorktimes_topics-circled.pdf
New York Times

http://www.gizmowatch.com/entry/plasma-powered-ufos-in-your-backyard/
Gizmo Watch

http://highddl.net/engineer-aims-to-create-plasma-powered-micro-air-vehicle/9290/
High Download Internet News List

http://www.engadget.com/2008/05/09/engineer-aims-to-create-plasma-powered-micro-air-vehicle/
Engadget
 
R

Richard Herring

Timo said:
16 am, Richard Herring <junk@[127.0.0.1]> wrote:
It isn't meant to be a proof; it's a simple heuristic which usually works.

I won't argue with the "usually works" part, but you are putting words
in Herr Herrings mouth here.

Oh, the irony.
I suggest you go back and (re-)read the actual thread - if you are basing
your posts on your memory of the thread, your memory appears to be flawed.
Thank you.
 
A

Aetherist

I don't think Newton IS wrong. Momentum is alway a vector, energy is not.
If I have two equally energetic masses who's vectors are, intially in
opposing directions. Assuming that we imparted this energy as vectors at
the same time the the net momentum to the imparting device is zero.

The question is, how do we dissapate the kinetic energy. In the
description I provided, one side 'impacts' the rod stop with the rigid
plumger transfering all the plunger's energy (thus momentum) into
the rod stop along the line of travel. On the other end the cotton
acts to dissapate (randomize the plunger's momentum) into other
directions reducing the amount that is transfered back along the
original direction. In both cases, total momentum and energy is
conserved, just that some of the momentum at one end does not remain
coherrent.

Eureka!

I found the description of this.

http://jnaudin.free.fr/html/hbimp35.htm
 
G

gabydewilde

 Eureka!

 I found the description of this.

 http://jnaudin.free.fr/html/hbimp35.htm

Not sure if he was for real but some nasa person kept saying it
existed but he wasn't allowed to talk about it. My design ended his
frustration and he said "THERE YOU HAVE IT COMPLETELY OPEN SOURCE!"
after that everyone lost interest. hahahaha

http://gabydewilde.googlepages.com/gdewilde-anti-gravity

acceleration has a reaction force
deceleration has a reaction force

If a mass accelerates in one direction then decelerates while moving
back both reaction forces point in the same direction.

But more importantly,
"With financial institutions continuing to fail on Wall Street,
Hollywood has experienced what one economist called "The worst crisis
ever for celebrity wealth." According to statistics obtained
exclusively by Dateline Hollywood, the average A-list celebrity stock
portfolio has fallen 35% this week, with some stars losing as much as
72% of their wealth. "
http://www.datelinehollywood.com/dateline_hollywood/2008/09/celebrity-stock..html

O noes!!

____
http://blog.360.yahoo.com/factuurexpress
 
F

Frank Raffaeli

Not sure if he was for real but some nasa person kept saying it
existed but he wasn't allowed to talk about it. My design ended his
frustration and he said "THERE YOU HAVE IT COMPLETELY OPEN SOURCE!"
after that everyone lost interest. hahahaha

http://gabydewilde.googlepages.com/gdewilde-anti-gravity

acceleration has a reaction force
deceleration has a reaction force

If a mass accelerates in one direction then decelerates while moving
back both reaction forces point in the same direction.

But more importantly,
"With financial institutions continuing to fail on Wall Street,
Hollywood has experienced what one economist called "The worst crisis
ever for celebrity wealth." According to statistics obtained
exclusively by Dateline Hollywood, the average A-list celebrity stock
portfolio has fallen 35% this week, with some stars losing as much as
72% of their wealth. "http://www.datelinehollywood.com/dateline_hollywood/2008/09/celebrity...

O noes!!

____http://blog.360.yahoo.com/factuurexpress

I built the apparatus in figure 2 in 1979 ... it didn't work.
 
G

gabydewilde

I built the apparatus in figure 2 in 1979 ... it didn't work.

hi Frank,

Nice to hear you build something like this.

Some questions:

1) What kind of transmission did you use?

2) How fast did it spin?

3) What made you give up?

Thanks,

Most versions I've seen lack thrust by lack of mass rpm's and other
engineering limitations. But they are enormously efficient from a
power consumption point of view.
 
K

krw

[email protected]>, [email protected]
says...
Explain "efficiency".
Not sure if he was for real but some nasa person kept saying it
existed but he wasn't allowed to talk about it. My design ended his
frustration and he said "THERE YOU HAVE IT COMPLETELY OPEN SOURCE!"
after that everyone lost interest. hahahaha

http://gabydewilde.googlepages.com/gdewilde-anti-gravity

acceleration has a reaction force
deceleration has a reaction force

Acceleration is the the same as deceleration, with a negative sign
(acceleration has either, use both and you'll see why it doesn't
work).
If a mass accelerates in one direction then decelerates while moving
back both reaction forces point in the same direction.

I assume you mean "moving back" = returning to the original
position. How does this work? You can't accelerate in one
direction and then decelerate in the other (with no acceleration in
between.
But more importantly,
"With financial institutions continuing to fail on Wall Street,
Hollywood has experienced what one economist called "The worst crisis
ever for celebrity wealth." According to statistics obtained
exclusively by Dateline Hollywood, the average A-list celebrity stock
portfolio has fallen 35% this week, with some stars losing as much as
72% of their wealth. "
http://www.datelinehollywood.com/dateline_hollywood/2008/09/celebrity-stock.html

So you think they're ripe for picking? Go fer it.
 
I agree it is possible to biuld it. will it work absolutely. now here come the nitty gritty is it effecient probaly not. I have a saying if all the project's paper work to get to the moon can be stacked we could climb there.
 
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