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<blockquote data-quote="DoctorZ" data-source="post: 154781" data-attributes="member: 1035"><p><span style="font-size: 15px"><strong> Gravitational field generator </strong></span></p><p>In recent years a number of highly respected research groups have become <a href="https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn2611-antigravity-research-on-the-rise.html" target="_blank">involved</a> in anti-gravity research, including NASA, the European Space Agency and Boeing.</p><p></p><p>The research usually involves rotating superconducting discs of some kind but nothing has come of the work so far. In fact, the researchers involved have all ended up disappearing from view with their tails between their legs.</p><p></p><p>So a patent from the <a href="http://www.arcs.ac.at/home_en.html%22" target="_blank">Austrian Research Centers (ARC)</a> based in Vienna, that also covers generating a gravitational field using a rotating superconducting disc needs to be treated with some caution.</p><p>ARC is a government-backed but privately-owned research institute focusing on applied science. It solves problems for industry and turns blue skies thinking into potentially profitable ideas. So it has some authority behind it.</p><p></p><p>But the ideas in this patent are uncomfortably familiar. It says that Einstein's theory of relativity predicts the existence of a very weak force known as the gravitomagnetic effect. So far so good. It then goes on to shakier ground by suggesting that various theorists have predicted that a rotating superconducting disc can somehow magnify this force by many orders of magnitude (more than 30 orders of magnitude if you believe these theorists). If this is correct, and it remains very doubtful, and you could harnessed the effect, then you have a gravity machine on your hands. The unique twist in ARC's design is that the superconducting disc must spin around two different axes simultaneously.</p><p></p><p>It never pays to categorically rule out exotic ideas but don't hold your breath to see the results of this one. What the ARC seems to have missed is that very precise measurements of rapidly rotating superconducting objects have already been carried out on board a NASA spacecraft called <a href="http://einstein.stanford.edu/%22" target="_blank">Gravity Probe B</a>, which was launched in 2004. This was designed specifically to measure the gravitomagnetic effect. If it were 30 orders of magnitude bigger than expected, I think they would d have told us by now.</p><p></p><p>page link :<a href="https://www.newscientist.com/blog/invention/2007/08/gravitational-field-generator.html" target="_blank">New Scientist Invention Blog: Gravitational field generator</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DoctorZ, post: 154781, member: 1035"] [SIZE=4][B] Gravitational field generator [/B][/SIZE] In recent years a number of highly respected research groups have become [URL='https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn2611-antigravity-research-on-the-rise.html']involved[/URL] in anti-gravity research, including NASA, the European Space Agency and Boeing. The research usually involves rotating superconducting discs of some kind but nothing has come of the work so far. In fact, the researchers involved have all ended up disappearing from view with their tails between their legs. So a patent from the [URL='http://www.arcs.ac.at/home_en.html%22']Austrian Research Centers (ARC)[/URL] based in Vienna, that also covers generating a gravitational field using a rotating superconducting disc needs to be treated with some caution. ARC is a government-backed but privately-owned research institute focusing on applied science. It solves problems for industry and turns blue skies thinking into potentially profitable ideas. So it has some authority behind it. But the ideas in this patent are uncomfortably familiar. It says that Einstein's theory of relativity predicts the existence of a very weak force known as the gravitomagnetic effect. So far so good. It then goes on to shakier ground by suggesting that various theorists have predicted that a rotating superconducting disc can somehow magnify this force by many orders of magnitude (more than 30 orders of magnitude if you believe these theorists). If this is correct, and it remains very doubtful, and you could harnessed the effect, then you have a gravity machine on your hands. The unique twist in ARC's design is that the superconducting disc must spin around two different axes simultaneously. It never pays to categorically rule out exotic ideas but don't hold your breath to see the results of this one. What the ARC seems to have missed is that very precise measurements of rapidly rotating superconducting objects have already been carried out on board a NASA spacecraft called [URL='http://einstein.stanford.edu/%22']Gravity Probe B[/URL], which was launched in 2004. This was designed specifically to measure the gravitomagnetic effect. If it were 30 orders of magnitude bigger than expected, I think they would d have told us by now. page link :[URL="https://www.newscientist.com/blog/invention/2007/08/gravitational-field-generator.html"]New Scientist Invention Blog: Gravitational field generator[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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