Anti-gravitational effects demonstrated using a Van De Graaf generator
- From: franklinhu@xxxxxxxxx
- Date: 29 Jan 2007 22:57:33 -0800
I have done an experiment to demonstrate anti-gravitational effects
using only a Van De Graff generator. My theories of gravity indicate
that gravity is caused nothing more than strong positive electric
field generated by the Earth. It does this because all bodies of mass
have a slight charge displacement toward the positive. If this is
true, then the Earth is nothing more than a positively charged ball.
Anything which is sufficiently positively charged should be repelled
from the surface of the Earth and anything negatively charged should
be attracted.
A Van De Graff generator provides an easy method of generating
positive and negative charges. As a test object, I used the lightest
thing I could find which is a soap bubble generated by a hand held
bubble generator. I elevated myself on an insulating platform and
touched the positively charged dome of the generator to positively
charge myself and my bubble machine. I then released the bubbles.
If my theory is correct, the positively charged bubble should rise
against the positive field generated by the Earth. The result of this
simple experiment was that some of the bubbles did in fact rise up to
the ceiling instead of dropping to the floor! This is anti-gravity at
work - the ability to levitate objects against the pull of gravity. I
made sure the bubble machine was as far away from the generator as
possible, so as to not be influenced by the field generated by the Van
De Graff generator.
As a control, I turned everyting off and grounded myself. I ran the
bubble machine again and verified that all of the bubbles dropped to
the ground and none behaved like the ones that went to the ceiling.
As a further test, I measured how long it took for the bubbles to drop
to the floor. It took about 10 seconds. My theory also predicts that
if you charge something negatively, it will be attracted more strongly
to the Earth - or super gravity. I reversed the terminals on my Van De
Graff generator and held on to the negative generating terminal and
repeated the experiment. The result was that the bubbles dropped
significantly faster when negatively charged - about 7 seconds to
drop.
The implications of this simple test cannot be underestimated. If I
can put enough positive charge on a soap bubble to make it rise
against the pull of the Earth, then it should be theoretically
possible to lift anything off of the Earth if you can charge it with a
sufficiently high positive charge. Not only will it lift off, but it
will accelerate or fall 'up' with no further input of energy. It will
be repelled off the Earth by the repulsion of similar charges. This
could make space travel and flying cars routine.
Now, just how this simple observation could have gone unnoticed for so
long is beyond me. I welcome your comments on the discovery of this
simple anti-gravitational effect.
-fhugravity
.
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