Sunday, July 21, 2013

Creating Gravity (Part 3)

(Extracted from: The Science Behind Alien Encounters)

Recall from the last installment, Podkletnov’s work led to the development of a “Gravity Impulse Generator.” According to him, the apparatus consists of a quartz glass cylinder (1.5m long and 1m diameter) which can be evacuated, or filled with gas. The magnetic field associated with the outer coil is used to guide, or contain, the discharge. Protruding into the right end of the cylinder is a tube containing liquid gas (N or He) used to refrigerate a charged Yttrium barium copper oxide (YBCO) superconductor compound with a composite crystal structure (YBa2Cu3O7). This is a superconducting emitter (cathode) with a 2-Layer YBCO construction. Once the temperature of the YBCO emitter is cooled to superconducting conditions, the inner electric coil is used to produce a magnetic field within it. Through the opposite end of the cylinder, a target electrode (anode) is introduced. A high voltage pulse of the order of several million volts is applied for several milliseconds to the emitter which is a stationary superconducting target. A gravity impulse several microseconds long is ejected from the target end of the apparatus. These gravitational waves exit in a coherent, non-diverging beam. Podkletnov has measured the speed of the impulse to be about 64 times the speed of light. He indicates this wave is capable of exerting tremendous force on anything in the beam path yet there is no opposing reaction on the apparatus. It is possible to generate a gravitational field impulse strong enough to punch a hole in a metal plate placed near the outlet. If the discharge rate is too high the gravity pulse has even damaged their equipment.





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