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Scalar Waves?
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<blockquote data-quote="Chrisvaughan" data-source="post: 102759" data-attributes="member: 6753"><p>Hi everyone, new here and this is my first post. I've always been super interested in time travel and the concepts surrounding it.</p><p></p><p>Scalar waves are an unused portion of Maxwell's wave function that hertz removed from the equations because they did represent detectable waves. They mathematically exist at a right angle to the electromagnetic wave function in Maxwell's equation. They also assume the existence of aether, which has been debunked.</p><p></p><p>However it is true that Tesla experimented heavily with scalar waves as a means to transmit energy wireless-ly and based his single line transmission patent on it.</p><p></p><p>Townsend brown used it to explain his bifield brown effect and electrogravitics.</p><p></p><p>Today we know it as electrostatics and it is better described as a charge difference between two surfaces as apposed to a standing scalar wave. You have to remember that until the 1950's and Richard Feynman's path integral formulation, things were either a classical straight line (action principle) or a wave. Electrostatics are a field that was described as a standing wave hence the term scalar wave, it had no forward motion but still had lines of force like an amplitude. Magnets also used to be described in this way.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Chrisvaughan, post: 102759, member: 6753"] Hi everyone, new here and this is my first post. I've always been super interested in time travel and the concepts surrounding it. Scalar waves are an unused portion of Maxwell's wave function that hertz removed from the equations because they did represent detectable waves. They mathematically exist at a right angle to the electromagnetic wave function in Maxwell's equation. They also assume the existence of aether, which has been debunked. However it is true that Tesla experimented heavily with scalar waves as a means to transmit energy wireless-ly and based his single line transmission patent on it. Townsend brown used it to explain his bifield brown effect and electrogravitics. Today we know it as electrostatics and it is better described as a charge difference between two surfaces as apposed to a standing scalar wave. You have to remember that until the 1950's and Richard Feynman's path integral formulation, things were either a classical straight line (action principle) or a wave. Electrostatics are a field that was described as a standing wave hence the term scalar wave, it had no forward motion but still had lines of force like an amplitude. Magnets also used to be described in this way. [/QUOTE]
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