Heres what a PHD has to say about the "Philadelphia Experiment" >>> J. F. Corum, Ph.D
Dear all,
please come to :-
http://people.clarityconnect.com/webpages2.../teslapage.html
and scroll down till you reach this :-
Tesla's Egg of Columbus, Radar Stealth, the Torsion Tensor, and the "Philadelphia Experiment," by K. L. Corum, J. F. Corum, Ph.D., and J. F. X. Daum, Ph.D., 1994. 94 pp. Illustrated.
By calculation, the magnetic field required to reduce a ship's radar reflection to less than 1 percent at L-Band (1.5) Ghz is in excess of 15,0000 A/m. Fields of this magnitude would appear to fulfill the requirements of a "Philadelphia Experiment" by creating green mist and cavities in salt water as well as magnetophosphenes and Purkinje patterns in humans, particularly if driven at frequencies in the range of 10-125 Hz, as was available from synchronous generators on WWII electric-drive ships. The authors “offer this little study in the spirit of an engineer and some physicists having some fun, looking at published statements, attempting to stay within the bounds of engineering technical propriety, and saying, ‘What if?’” $15.
I really really hate to ask this but, does anyone have a spare 15 bucks to see what this PHD's papers has to say about the Phil Experiment ?
I think it would make a very very interesting read since it touches bits n pieces on time travel ...
Do enjoy yourself ...
Dear all,
please come to :-
http://people.clarityconnect.com/webpages2.../teslapage.html
and scroll down till you reach this :-
Tesla's Egg of Columbus, Radar Stealth, the Torsion Tensor, and the "Philadelphia Experiment," by K. L. Corum, J. F. Corum, Ph.D., and J. F. X. Daum, Ph.D., 1994. 94 pp. Illustrated.
By calculation, the magnetic field required to reduce a ship's radar reflection to less than 1 percent at L-Band (1.5) Ghz is in excess of 15,0000 A/m. Fields of this magnitude would appear to fulfill the requirements of a "Philadelphia Experiment" by creating green mist and cavities in salt water as well as magnetophosphenes and Purkinje patterns in humans, particularly if driven at frequencies in the range of 10-125 Hz, as was available from synchronous generators on WWII electric-drive ships. The authors “offer this little study in the spirit of an engineer and some physicists having some fun, looking at published statements, attempting to stay within the bounds of engineering technical propriety, and saying, ‘What if?’” $15.
I really really hate to ask this but, does anyone have a spare 15 bucks to see what this PHD's papers has to say about the Phil Experiment ?
I think it would make a very very interesting read since it touches bits n pieces on time travel ...
Do enjoy yourself ...