If I were writing a sci-fi story, I'd say that Podkletnov is either a
(time-traveller/alien) who published that report so as to spur humanity
towards the development of anti-gravity without completely disrupting (the
timeline/the prime directive.)   

If were a news reader, I'd say that Podkletnov is a crank who has snookered
us all.

JDG
  http://slate.msn.com/?id=2072733


Feeling Antigravity's Pull
Can NASA stop the apple from falling on Newton's head?
By Adam Rogers
Posted Friday, October 18, 2002, at 8:30 AM PT 


"Don't call it antigravity research," Ron Koczor pleads. He's a physicist
at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., and he's
talking about a project he's been working on for almost a decade. "Call it
'gravity modification.' 'Gravity anomalies.' Anything but antigravity.
That's a red flag."

 
When people find out that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
has researchers working on sci-fi stuff like antigravity�or rather,
"gravity modification"�the red flags do indeed start waving. Reputable
scientists like Koczor earn polite disdain from colleagues (or worse, from
funders of research). But truth's truth: NASA has been studying the
manipulation of gravity for at least 10 years, as have nongovernment
researchers.

NASA began its work after a Russian physicist named Evgeny Podkletnov
published an article in the peer-reviewed journal Physica C in 1992.
Podkletnov claimed that a device built around a superconductor and a magnet
could shield an object from gravity. The trick, he said, was to make a
superconducting disc about a foot in diameter, chill it, levitate it over
magnets�a nifty property of superconductors is that they repel magnetic
fields�and set it revolving like a compact disc. Podkletnov said an object
placed above that contraption lost 0.3 percent of its weight. The object
itself didn't change. Rather, gravity's effect on it lessened. 

If that effect could be harnessed and strengthened, the aerospace industry
would be upended. Vessels bound for space wouldn't have to ride atop
massive, barely controlled explosions. All the energy human beings expend
moving things around, from cargo to cars, could be reduced or eliminated.
And post-Einsteinian physics would have to be rewritten to explain what the
hell was going on. Podkletnov called the effect "gravitational force
shielding," and even in the absence of a good theory to explain the
phenomenon, other researchers took notice. "Because his experiment and
results were published in a peer-reviewed, scientific journal, that gave it
a level of credibility," Koczor says.

After Podkletnov published his article, it took NASA until 1999 to figure
out how to make a large, thin superconducting disc. Ceramic
high-temperature superconductors are brittle as cheap china, and the discs
kept shattering. Once they solved that problem, NASA paid Columbus,
Ohio-based SCI Engineered Materials $650,000 to build the entire apparatus.
But Podkletnov had called for a disc with two layers, one superconducting
and one not, and SCI didn't solve that engineering challenge until last
year. Then they hit another roadblock. The disc wouldn't spin. SCI
engineers stuck a rotor through the disc's center to turn it mechanically,
but Podkletnov specified 5,000 revolutions per minute. SCI's device barely
pulls 30 rpm.

Why not just ask Podkletnov how to build the thing? SCI brought him over to
consult a couple of years ago, to little avail. "His excuse basically was
that he was a ceramics physicist, not an electrical or mechanical engineer,
and other people built the device for him," Koczor says. "Draw your own
conclusions. All I know is, if I were a principal investigator on something
like this, I would know the size and thread-depth of every screw in the
damn thing. But you know, the Europeans and the Russians, they're
different. They're much more, 'this is your job and this is my job.' So
it's plausible that he didn't know the details." It might not matter. SCI's
contract is ending, and Koczor's budget to explore "way-out physics" is
spent. He hasn't got the money to actually test the device even if it did
meet Podkletnov's specs.

But researchers outside NASA are working on the problem, too. This summer
Nick Cook, a writer for Jane's Defence Weekly, reported that aerospace
giant Boeing was pursuing antigravity research. Boeing denied it. "We are
aware of Podkletnov's work on 'anti-gravity' devices and would be
interested in seeing further development work being done," said a company
statement. "However, Boeing is not funding any activities in this area at
this time." Note Boeing's use of the Clintonian present tense. They never
contacted Jane's to ask for a correction, Cook says. Meanwhile, British
aerospace company BAE Systems says it's keeping an eye on the research, and
that it had once funded its own antigravity project, Greenglow. 

Unfortunately, Cook strains his own credibility somewhat. A couple of weeks
after his Jane's piece appeared, Cook's book on antigravity research, The
Hunt for Zero Point, came out. In it, he claims that the Nazis built an
antigravity device during World War II. Its absence from present-day
science, Cook says, implies a vast "black" world of secret antigravity
aircraft that might explain the UFOs people see over Area 51. He's a
careful investigative reporter, but once you start talking about UFOs and
Nazi antigravity you're not far from hidden tunnels under the White House
full of lizard-men disguised as Freemasons.

Even without Nazis, there are plenty of reasons to doubt Podkletnov. My
e-mails to the account listed on his recent articles (not peer-reviewed)
went unanswered. Even more problematic, I can't find the institution he
lists as his affiliation in Moscow. "Eugene always expressed his worries
that others could copy his work, although as far as I know he never applied
for a patent," Giovanni Modanese, a collaborator of Podkletnov's at the
University of Bolzano in Italy, wrote in an e-mail (using a Western version
of Podkletnov's first name). "Nonetheless, at the scientific level if one
wants a confirmation by others and a successful replication, one must give
all the necessary elements." Well, yeah. Modanese says that the current
version of the device, now called an "impulse gravity generator," is
simpler and could be built "by a big-science team of people expert in
superconductivity." A Boeing spokesperson didn't respond to follow-up
questions. So, either there's nothing going on here, or it's an X-File.

And the science? Ten years is a long time to go without replication.
Combine that with Podkletnov's cagey behavior and it's enough to make even
sci-fi geeks like me lose hope. But like the core of any good conspiracy,
antigravity research has the ring of plausibility. One of the outstanding
problems in physics and cosmology today involves the existence of so-called
dark matter and dark energy. They're by far the main constituents of matter
in the universe, and nobody knows what they're made of�researchers have
only inferred their existence from gravitational effects. Coming up with a
new theory of how gravity works might explain that, though it'd be a
scientific revolution on a par with relativity. "Changing gravity is in the
cards," says Paul Schechter, an astronomer at MIT. "But so far no one's
been able to do better than Einstein." Still, Einstein worked in a lowly
patent office. Ron Koczor works for NASA.


_______________________________________________________
John D. Giorgis         -               [EMAIL PROTECTED]
People everywhere want to say what they think; choose who will govern
them; worship as they please; educate their children -- male and female;
 own property; and enjoy the benefits of their labor. These values of 
freedom are right and true for every person,  in every society -- and the 
duty of protecting these values against their enemies is the common 
calling of freedom-loving people across the globe and across the ages.
                -US National Security Policy, 2002
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