Re: [Vo]:Cavitation Weapon

2008-04-14 Thread David Jonsson
the prey. This shrimp is on par with the mantis shrimp which is also highly advanced. David -- David Jonsson Sweden phone callto:+46703000370

Re: [Vo]:Magnetic pressure and magnetic temperature

2008-04-09 Thread David Jonsson
On Wed, Apr 9, 2008 at 7:16 AM, Robin van Spaandonk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: In reply to David Jonsson's message of Wed, 9 Apr 2008 00:35:22 +0200: Hi, [snip] Hi Magnetic pressure is a well known concept. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_pressure It struck me then that other

[Vo]:Magnetic pressure and magnetic temperature

2008-04-09 Thread David Jonsson
On Wed, Apr 9, 2008 at 7:16 AM, Robin van Spaandonk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: In reply to David Jonsson's message of Wed, 9 Apr 2008 00:35:22 +0200: Hi, [snip] Hi Magnetic pressure is a well known concept. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_pressure It struck me then that other

[Vo]:Magnetic pressure and magnetic temperature

2008-04-08 Thread David Jonsson
Hi Magnetic pressure is a well known concept. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_pressure It struck me then that other concepts must be applicable to magnetism too like temperature. And there should also be electric pressure and temperature. The magnetic pressure Pm=B^2/2µ0 shourld vary on

[Vo]:Stimulated nuclear reactions by Claus Rolfs

2008-01-05 Thread David Jonsson
Hi Check http://www.ioppublishing.com/Media/Press%20Releases/press_6762.html and tell me what you think. Is the method similar to the one previously mentioned here with electrostatic methods? David

[Vo]:Laser toner controversy

2007-12-04 Thread David Jonsson
I thought that laser toner was dangerous chemically since they are collected and disposed separately. i investigated and found that this was not the case http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toner The only health risk associated with it is due to its ability to generate static electricity. Putting it in

Re: [Vo]:Laser toner controversy

2007-12-04 Thread David Jonsson
itself. one of those bagless vacuums would work perfect. i created 3 inch sparks to my legs with one of those just using reglular house dust from the static buildup. On Dec 4, 2007 1:51 AM, David Jonsson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I thought that laser toner was dangerous chemically since

Re: [Vo]:Laser toner controversy

2007-12-04 Thread David Jonsson
) and the electrical effect is what brings the dust to the undesired places in the lungs. David On Dec 4, 2007 5:33 PM, Harry Veeder [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: There is concern about toner dust. It is extremely fine and can lodge deep in the lungs. Harry On 4/12/2007 3:51 AM, David Jonsson

[Vo]:Making air receptible to light with plasma

2007-11-11 Thread David Jonsson
Hi I have heard stories of air becoming dark as a result of ionization. The light in the room was absorbed by the plasma. Can someone tell me what kind of plasma this was? I am in need of making air absorbing light or any other practicaly produced radiation at varying degrees. David

Re: [Vo]:Liquid metal

2007-10-16 Thread David Jonsson
from wetting the glass surface. Mercury is certainly toxic, especially long term exposure, but can be safely handled for experiments with the proper precautions. Jones David Jonsson wrote: Hi all Experimenting with Mercury can be rather hazardous. Now with Gaslinstan, liquid down

[Vo]:Liquid metal

2007-10-15 Thread David Jonsson
Hi all Experimenting with Mercury can be rather hazardous. Now with Gaslinstan, liquid down to -19 centigrades, a lot of experiments become possible. Too bad it is still rather expensive. Someone mentioned strange effect when rotating mercury fast. David

[Vo]:Altering plasma recombination time

2007-09-16 Thread David Jonsson
Hi Since relaxation time can be altered I wonder if plasma recombination time can be altered as well. The two effects are similar. Relaxation times can be altered with microwaves. I would really need that. I also need to know how to make plasma around a body with discharges and UV light. The

[Vo]:ArXiv article on shock wave prevention

2007-09-10 Thread David Jonsson
I just submitted this Title: Shock minimized supersonic flight by heating Authors: David Jonsson Categories: physics.flu-dyn Comments: 4 pages, 2 figures, 2 references http://arxiv.org/abs/0709.1418 David

Re: [Vo]:The name vortex-l

2007-07-14 Thread David Jonsson
or a disk, the centre of rotation of a vortex does not structure the phenomena. Harry On 13/7/2007 12:01 PM, David Jonsson wrote: This list was created to address vortex motion. This was probably a misnomer. There is a big difference between vortex motion an rotating motion. A vortex is without

Re: [Vo]:The name vortex-l

2007-07-14 Thread David Jonsson
On 7/14/07, Harry Veeder [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On 14/7/2007 9:20 AM, David Jonsson wrote: My teacher in fluid mechanics Sten Herlitz taught us that a vortex was rotation free. He showed a movie showing that the small parts of the fluid did not rotate. This is what I was referring

Re: [Vo]:Wind tunnel history from NASA

2007-07-13 Thread David Jonsson
Do you know if anyone used experiments with heating in wind tunnels? David On 7/12/07, Jed Rothwell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: See: http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/SP-440/contents.htm This is a good summary. They had better wind tunnels in Europe prior to 1908 than I realized.

Re: [VO]: Spy vs. Spy

2007-07-13 Thread David Jonsson
On 7/12/07, R.C.Macaulay [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Howdy Vorts, Reading the MSN story describing how Google earth can give defense secrets away and how much info on military secrets is easily obtained on the web ... Effectively there are not any military secrets anymore. Lidar/radar

[Vo]:The name vortex-l

2007-07-13 Thread David Jonsson
This list was created to address vortex motion. This was probably a misnomer. There is a big difference between vortex motion an rotating motion. A vortex is without rotation. Rotational motion is on the other hand full of special phenomena. I think a lot of the confusion and mysticism is the

Re: [Vo]: Size of the electron

2007-06-30 Thread David Jonsson
hope Gmail won't distort it. (When do we get the promised TeX extensions of HTML?) David The mass of the electron as an electromagnetic effect by David Jonsson, Uppsala , Sweden Take a look at the equation

Re: [Vo]:Magnetic pressure and tension speed of change, magnetic shock waves

2007-06-29 Thread David Jonsson
On 6/29/07, Jones Beene [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: David Jonsson wrote: If someone knows about such experiments please send me references. The leading expert in this field is Friedwardt Winterberg, now a professor at U. Nevada, Reno. Most of his publications are in the German Language

Re: [Vo]:Magnetic pressure and tension speed of change, magnetic shock waves

2007-06-29 Thread David Jonsson
there is google. And a google search for: Magnetic shock wave Winterberg returns 164 hits, including such jewels as IMPLOSION OF A DENSE PLASMA BY HYPERVELOCITY IMPACT but I do not have time this morning to write you a dissertation -- so you will have to take it from there ... ;-) David Jonsson wrote: On 6

[Vo]:Magnetic pressure and tension speed of change, magnetic shock waves

2007-06-28 Thread David Jonsson
Hi Magnetic pressure and tension are somewhat established concepts. They can be imagined as a lot of small magnets, like bar magnets, lined up in the same direction and equally spaced parallel and perpendicular to their direction, like this - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

[Vo]:Space tractors seem ineffective

2007-06-18 Thread David Jonsson
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0509595 The article says that a 20 metric tonnes heavy space vehicle should be used as a gravity pull on asteroids to move them from dangerous orbits. Wouldn't it be better to ram the asteroid or use dielectric influence to achieve forces on it? Gravity seems so

[Vo]:Forces in refraction effects

2007-04-23 Thread David Jonsson
I am really disappointed at Wikipedia users for not having anything on the Fizeau effect. It is intuitive and logical. Anyway I wonder if there is a force on a transparent medium as a beam enters it from a region of lower refractive index. Since the beam is slowed down I just assume there would

Re: [Vo]: CD with 300 Multiphysics Presentations

2007-04-05 Thread David Jonsson
The problem is that Comsol Multiphysics costs like $10 000. Has anyone here worked with free FEM software like OpenFEM or FOI Edge? David On 4/5/07, OrionWorks [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I'm forwarding the following link to Vortex. Electrochemistry and Electrostatics and Magnetostatics are

[Vo]: Constructing ideal aircraft cross sections

2007-04-01 Thread David Jonsson
The cross section of a fast flying machine should not be constant. It should vary in a way to minimize dispersion in the motion of the air. Someone here on the list could probably design a proper form. The problem is not very different from electrical or optical signal design where dispersion is

[Vo]: RAM - radar absorbing materials

2007-02-11 Thread David Jonsson
Hi I am trying to concieve how RAM works. As far as I can see it has to be some molecule having its vibrational spectrum in the radar domain. This can explain why the radar waves are being absorbed. But how is the energy depleted and taken away from the material? Without energy going away the

Re: [Vo]: Re: Energy *Violations* using *standard* physics

2007-02-01 Thread David Jonsson
I see retarded and advanced gravity fields as energy violations in standard physics. David

[Vo]: Repelling Casimir effect

2007-01-30 Thread David Jonsson
On Wikipedia we ca read Further research has shown that, with materials of certain permittivityhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permittivityand permeability http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permeability, or with a certain configuration, the Casimir effect could be made repulsive instead of attractive,

[Vo]: d'Alemberts paradox in super fluids

2007-01-15 Thread David Jonsson
With superfluidity the chanche to test d'Alembers paradox exist. Check the paradox for exapmle here http://ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonlyres/Mechanical-Engineering/2-016Fall-2005/AFFB22E3-DD6D-4560-966D-5FA20515560B/0/2005reading5.pdf Jean Le Rond d'Alembert (1717-1783) performed a series of experiments

Re: [Vo]: rocketry question

2007-01-15 Thread David Jonsson
On 1/15/07, thomas malloy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: David Jonsson wrote: The problem with this kind of thrusters is that energy is lost in waves, specifically shock waves, since the exhaust is so fast relative to the surrounding air. Maybe magnetism can be used to minimize this. Imagine

Re: [Vo]: rocketry question

2007-01-14 Thread David Jonsson
They tried something like this driven by fission but the design was abandoned when president Kennedy observed a demonstration. Kennedy could have been contaminated by radioactivity. The problem with this kind of thrusters is that energy is lost in waves, specifically shock waves, since the

Re: [Vo]: Re: Going Van de Graaff

2006-12-23 Thread David Jonsson
It does not seem like a good article.on Wikipedia. When direct current http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_current is pumped through the tether, it exerts a force against the magnetic field, and the tether accelerates the spacecraft. Should read as When direct current

Re: [Vo]: Bohr model and hydrinos (was Re: New Hydrino page posted)

2006-12-16 Thread David Jonsson
Hi Change permittivity €0 and you will get a different orbit. David On 12/16/06, Michel Jullian [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Indeed Robin, as you wrote some time ago, the small radii of the hydrinos (shrunken H atoms) if they exist would facilitate the close encounters required for fusion.

Re: [Vo]: Mitigating Global Warming

2006-12-16 Thread David Jonsson
The error here is that the buoy is asumed to be so small that it will not affect the wave. There will be reflection of energy if the buoy is too stiff. Another problem is that the entire setup will be displaced sideways by the wave. David On 12/16/06, Terry Blanton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

[Vo]: Strange clouds in Libya

2006-12-03 Thread David Jonsson
Check this http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8z=9ll=26.904926,18.138428spn=1.726681,2.790527t=hom=1 It looks like transparent volcanoes but is more likely clouds. What makes the clouds look like this? Could it be some radiation from the underlying volcano? David

Re: [VO]:OT: Mega-tsunamis are more common..

2006-12-03 Thread David Jonsson
A friend said it could be engineered. He called it elementary weapons. They were first tested in the Volga region with wind speed of 500 km/h. I understand it so that they alter permittivity of space and thus make gravity nonconservative. This causes motion in the air. The Russians have a

Re: [Vo]: Stealthy Cloak

2006-11-08 Thread David Jonsson
On 11/8/06, Stephen A. Lawrence [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Since this particular scheme currently works only in the radar range, we need to look at how radar works -- it doesn't see silhouettes, and what's more it doesn't use ambient radiation. Rather, it shines a flashlight beam on the target

Re: [Vo]: Stealthy Cloak

2006-10-24 Thread David Jonsson
This is just an example of an electrodynamic fact. See for example C. F. Bohren, Am. J. Phys. 51, 323 (1983). http://scitation.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normalid=AJPIAS510400032301idtype=cvipsgifs=yes If you don't have access to that file you can check Beardens copies

[Vo]: Smokerings in vacuum

2006-08-15 Thread David Jonsson
HiCheck theese photos and tell me if there could be a white smokering coming out in the upper right.http://www.newphys.se/Endeavour_smokering/David

Re: [VO]: 300mS ball lightning

2006-07-02 Thread David Jonsson
Better here with movieshttp://www.ipp.mpg.de/ippcms/eng/presse/pi/05_06_pi.htmlDavid

Re: [VO]:Re: Is Spacetime a Superfluid

2006-07-02 Thread David Jonsson
I would say space time is a super fluid since there is no viscosity in it. Mass could then be derived as deduced mass in this fluid. Maybe there is a small viscosity in it since there is a relation between mass and luminosity. Has anyone ever observed vortex or rotation motion in a

Re: History of Electrostatic motors

2006-05-19 Thread David Jonsson
Hi Interesting. What about including applications where the rotor (not necessarily rotating) is air? This is what the so called lifter is, right? Since even vacuum can have fields I think it would even be possible to have the rotor in vacuum. David

Re: Gravitomagnetic Field Quantified

2006-03-26 Thread David Jonsson
On 3/24/06, Frederick Sparber [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I don't think we are very far apart on the issue,David. The Displacement Current in any particle I = C *dV/dtwhere C = eo * wavelength (hc/E) sets up an enormous B field. Another approach is I = q*f where f = c/wavelength = 19.7

Re: Gravitomagnetic Field Quantified

2006-03-24 Thread David Jonsson
This comes from lack of understanding of basic electromagnetic field theory. Quoted: Just as a moving electrical charge creates a magnetic field, so a moving mass generates a gravitomagnetic field A moving electric charge creates a magnetic field which is the same as an inertial force. For an

Re: Electrostatic cooling

2005-12-31 Thread David Jonsson
On 12/31/05, Michael Foster [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: David Jonsson wrote: This effect can not be so unknown as some say. The inventor even says the effect is unknown. http://www.rexresearch.com/blomgren/blomgren.htm I think it is easy. Thermal motion causes the charges to emit

Electrostatic cooling

2005-12-30 Thread David Jonsson
This effect can not be so unknown as some say. The inventor even says the effect is unknown. http://www.rexresearch.com/blomgren/blomgren.htm I think it is easy. Thermal motion causes the charges to emit radiation. David

Atmospheric electric polarization

2005-12-21 Thread David Jonsson
I read in vortex-l many years ago about the atmosphere on Jupiter or Saturn being electrically polarized. The author said that ions were more attracted by gravity than electrons. It is also known on earth that there is an electric field of 90-150 V/m. Is it caused by the same effect? I am

Re: Secrets of bee flight revealed

2005-12-09 Thread David Jonsson
This is not very new news. To any motion to which a wave can be associated there can be a combination of incoming and outgoing waves. In science the incoming waves are cancelled with the motive that there aren't any sources to supply this incoming wave. If the bee can not produce enough energy to

ShockWave Power Reactor™

2005-12-09 Thread David Jonsson
Hi all How does this thing work? http://www.hydrodynamics.com/product_pics.htm Does it excite water in some way? David

Ramsauer effect in cold fusion

2005-11-15 Thread David Jonsson
Hi I wonder if the Ramsauer effect has been investigated as causing the particles to mix with other particles to get them so close as to cause nuclear reaction. David

Torque on planets from retarded gravity potentials

2005-09-05 Thread David Jonsson
Hi Check this. David -- _*A simple and approximate method to determine the gravitational torque between two astronomical bodies.*_ _Introduction_ Bodies in space rotate slower the farther away from each other they are. Look at Sun Mercury

Re: Langmuirs paradox and ZPE

2005-08-07 Thread David Jonsson
On 7/30/05, Robin van Spaandonk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: In reply to David Jonsson's message of Wed, 27 Jul 2005 11:17:16 +0200: Hi, [snip] Hi I wonder if ZPE can be involved in the distribution of thermal motion of low density plasmas. These distributions are found to be of Maxwellian

Langmuirs paradox and ZPE

2005-07-27 Thread David Jonsson
Hi I wonder if ZPE can be involved in the distribution of thermal motion of low density plasmas. These distributions are found to be of Maxwellian type even when collisions are too few to maintain the distribution. This is called the Langmuir paradox. I wonder if ZPE, or any other radiation, can

I am back with wavedrag reduction!

2005-01-17 Thread David Jonsson
I have been off since 2002 when my old email address [EMAIL PROTECTED] expired. Now I am back with this 1 GB big mailbox so I think I can manage the flow of emails. My current focus is cancellation of airdrag, specifically wavedrag. Input on that topic is welcome. I will go down working parttime

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