gravity

Juha Hartikka: Interdimensional Force Concept

Submitted by esaruoho on

Preliminary version for evaluation 15.04.2001 by Mr. Juha Hartikka, MScTech, Finland.  Update 17.04.2001.



Interdimensional Force Concept


An experimental theory about forces as tensions between different sets of dimensions.

Excerpts from an article written by Brian Desborough entitled "Why I Wrote "They Cast No Shadows""

Submitted by esaruoho on
"Authors of non-fiction books often experience difficulty in acquiring sufficient data to fill a book of normal length. In contrast, the research material acquired by myself over the past three decades has resulted in an overabundance of riches. Consequently, I’ve had to omit much important research material in my book and also shorten some passages."

Eric Laithwaite: RexResearch.com: New Scientist: Eric Laithwaite Defies Newton (14.Nov.1974)

Submitted by esaruoho on
The Professor of Heavy Electrical Engineering at Imperial College London, Eric Laithwaite, highly successful inventor of the linear motor, has entered the sacrosanct domain of the mechanical engineers. And he says "they need me". Last Friday as the piece de resistance of his evening discourse at the Royal Institution he demonstrated a machine that, he claimed, violated gravity and produced lift without any external reaction.

Eric Laithwaite: RexResearch.com: Unidentified magazine; "Laithwaite's Amazing Invention"

Submitted by esaruoho on
Professor Eric Laithwaite, of the Imperial College of Science and Technology, England, has invented an anti-gravity machine! Such a device has been the tool of science fiction writers and the dream of thinkers such as H.G. Wells and Jules Verne, but until now e everyone had dismissed the idea as an impossibility.

Now Professor Laithwaite, who is already famous for inventing the linear induction motor, has demonstrated that his machine actually works. When switched on it reduces its weight!

Eric Laithwaite: The Incredible Genius of Eric Laithwaite - for Rense by Richard Milton

Submitted by esaruoho on
Few people visit the Royal Institution, in London's Albemarle Street, for amusement. There are not many laughs at Britain's second oldest scientific institution, founded in 1799, where Sir Humphry Davy demonstrated his discovery of the elements sodium and potassium and where Michael Faraday discovered electromagnetic induction. It's true there have been some lighter moments in the famous circular lecture theatre, especially since Sir William Bragg introduced Christmas Lectures for Children in the 1920s. But, on the whole, this is stuffed shirt territory.

Eric Laithwaite: RexResearch.com: Anonymous: Unidentified magazine; "Scientist says Invention can Defy Gravity"

Submitted by esaruoho on
London (AP) ~ A British scientist said yesterday he is on the threshold of inventing an antigravity motor that could fly a manned spaceship to the stars using nuclear fuel the size of a pea.

Eric Laithwaite, professor of heavy electrical engineering at London's Imperial College of Science and Technology, said the motor is based on the gyroscope, a rapidly spinning top that defies gravity. Gyroscopes already are used to guide spaceships.

KeelyNET: ROSEN1.TXT: Floyd Sweet's VTA Unit, by Walt Rosenthal

Submitted by esaruoho on
April 2, 1993
ROSEN1.ASC
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This file shared with KeelyNet courtesy of Ray Berry.
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excerpted without permission from:
SPACE ENERGY NEWSLETTER
VOLUME IV, NO. I MARCH 13th, 1993
Editors: Donald A. Kelly, Michael Marino
PO Box 11422
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