I wouldn't be surprised:pfrit wrote:Not a great deal of accuracy, but http://www.nrao.edu/pr/2003/gravity/icarus wrote:Anybody got a reference to an experimentally observed speed of gravity, c?
http://www.blazelabs.com/f-g-intro.asp
I wouldn't be surprised:pfrit wrote:Not a great deal of accuracy, but http://www.nrao.edu/pr/2003/gravity/icarus wrote:Anybody got a reference to an experimentally observed speed of gravity, c?
I think it does because [if I get it even half right] that the momentum is reacted [by some remote means] to the rest of the cosmos which implies there is a CoG for the cosmos, which in turn implies that you can be travelling towards or away from that CoG, which implies a M-E thruster needs power if you accelerate away from that CoG or generates power if you accelerate towards it. So it seems to me that if you stick an M-E thruster on the edge of a disc, you'd be able to generate power from seemingly nowhere by turning it on when it is heading towards the cosmic CoG, and off when it is heading away from it, and the rotation of the disc would actually increase whilst you are sucking power off of it.GIThruster wrote:M-E physics doesn't conflict with thermodynamics at all. Not sure why you would think that.
Unless you were always travelling on the hyper-spherical surface azimuthally to the CoG of the cosmos ....implies that you can be travelling towards or away from that CoG,
which "mach" are we talking about here? who is hans? and why do i not need to worry about cog?GIThruster wrote:Sorry, Chris. No need to worry about the center of gravity of the universe.
If you want a handle on this stuff, you need to read the papers or at least what the web will say about Mach's Principle.
Not trying to sound patronizing, but there is absolutely no way to understand even the basics of M-E force generators, without having at least a smidgeon of understanding of Mach's Principle.
That is after all, why Woodward has maintained this all needs to be named after Hans Mach.
There is no need for a center of gravity of the universe because the observable universe is always smaller in size than the actual universe, so wherever you go "there you are" at your very own center of gravity of your personal light cone....chrismb wrote:which "mach" are we talking about here? who is hans? and why do i not need to worry about cog?GIThruster wrote:Sorry, Chris. No need to worry about the center of gravity of the universe.
If you want a handle on this stuff, you need to read the papers or at least what the web will say about Mach's Principle.
Not trying to sound patronizing, but there is absolutely no way to understand even the basics of M-E force generators, without having at least a smidgeon of understanding of Mach's Principle.
That is after all, why Woodward has maintained this all needs to be named after Hans Mach.
i could equally read the bible and put my trust in jesus to bestow m-e and free energy upon us, but i'd prefer to think for myself first.
My bad, I meant Earnst Mach, the fellow Einstein named Mach's Principle after. This all concerns his physics--essentially that the property of inertia is the result of gravity, or all the universe's various parts pulling on one another, but chiefly the action of the most distant stars or Far Off Active Mass (FOAM).chrismb wrote:which "mach" are we talking about here? who is hans? and why do i not need to worry about cog?GIThruster wrote:Sorry, Chris. No need to worry about the center of gravity of the universe.
If you want a handle on this stuff, you need to read the papers or at least what the web will say about Mach's Principle.
Not trying to sound patronizing, but there is absolutely no way to understand even the basics of M-E force generators, without having at least a smidgeon of understanding of Mach's Principle.
That is after all, why Woodward has maintained this all needs to be named after Hans Mach.
i could equally read the bible and put my trust in jesus to bestow m-e and free energy upon us, but i'd prefer to think for myself first.
Theory ALWAYS precedes proof.Giorgio wrote:Lord Jesus, please give us some new physics with an experimental proof before the theoretical model instead of the other way around.
That is simply not true, and is a very modern take on science. Science used to be about discovering something, and once a phenomenon is discovered then you'd posit a theory to account for it. Not enough discoveries these days to see that happen, any more.KitemanSA wrote: Theory ALWAYS precedes proof.
As far as we know, to date the M-E doesn't work at all ... they are doing a good job of disproving that it works.The M-E Thruster may work just fine