posted on Dec, 20 2004 @ 03:07 AM
From what I've seen, Gravity is more of an effect as opposed to some actual thing. Like a very complicated form of centripetal motion or centrifugal
motion. Where you have to think of a huge wash of electrons desperately trying to reduce their orbits over their super heated parent atoms. Heat
something it expands, cool something it contracts. So, as the core is super heated an pressurized and then rapidly spun, the electrons are spun
outward and away, but they must still maintain some sort of orbit no matter how far out they are. Example, heat a magnet and the field disappears or
did it? The field may be weaker just simply because the force was sent further out over a larger area and can no longer be detected. Cool it off,
and presto, it returns. Now, really cool it down, and the force falls in on itself and will do wierd things like superconducting.
I say all this, after observing a strange effect from some university science experiment on TV. They had a huge magnet at some lab. A large round
one on its side, probably about 6-7 feet in diameter. With a 3 inch hole in its center. Not sure what their experiment was supposed to be, but one
of the students put an object in that hole while the magnet was on and it went into a free fall. The object floated in the center. They put a spider
and frog in there, and both became weightless while in the center of this giant magnet. Neither was harmed. I guess they blew off their main
experiment to explain this new effect. Nothing was super cooled, so it wasn't like those levitation, anti-gravity experiments you see.
I believe the magnet was powerful enough to cancel the effect of gravity or electron wash within that hole and cause a free fall. Its field created a
bubble strong enough for a tiny area to be free of gravity, or those particles responsible for it which are orbiting in and out of the core, like a
vacuum tube is sealed from the atmosphere.
This thing this guy made probably just amplifies the surrounding energy to cause weird effects. However, based on what I've observed, you might
could isolate an area with multiple units and fold a field in on itself. What that does is anybody's guess. If you're brave enough to try it, get
it on video and show us if you live.