From: Earl Wajenberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 29 Jul 2002 10:38:40 -0500
Subject: News from the fringe: Antigravity

Boeing tries to defy gravity

An anti-gravity device would revolutionise air travel Researchers at the
world's largest aircraft maker, Boeing, are using the work of a
controversial Russian scientist to try to create a device that will defy
gravity.

The company is examining an experiment by Yevgeny Podkletnov, who claims
to have developed a device which can shield objects from the Earth's
pull.

Dr Podkletnov is viewed with suspicion by many conventional scientists.
They have not been able to reproduce his results.

The project is being run by the top-secret Phantom Works in Seattle, the
part of the company which handles Boeing's most sensitive programmes.

The head of the Phantom Works, George Muellner, told the security
analysis journal Jane's Defence Weekly that the science appeared to be
valid and plausible.

Rotating disc

Dr Podkletnov claims to have countered the effects of gravity in an
experiment at the Tampere University of Technology in Finland in 1992.

The scientist says he found that objects above a superconducting ceramic
disc rotating over powerful electromagnets lost weight.

The reduction in gravity was small, about 2%, but the implications - for
example, in terms of cutting the energy needed for a plane to fly - were
immense.

Scientists who investigated Dr Podkletnov's work, however, said the
experiment was fundamentally flawed and that negating gravity was
impossible.

Research explored

But documents obtained by Jane's Defence Weekly and seen by the BBC show
that Boeing is taking Dr Podkletnov's research seriously.

The hypothesis is being tested in a programme codenamed Project Grasp.

Boeing is the latest in a series of high-profile institutions trying to
replicate Dr Podkletnov's experiment.

The military wing of the UK hi-tech group BAe Systems is working on an
anti-gravity programme, dubbed Project Greenglow.

The US space agency, Nasa, is also attempting to reproduce Dr
Podkletnov's findings, but a preliminary report indicates the effect
does not exist.


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