Bill Beaty writes:
>
> On Tue, 11 Apr 2006, Frederick Sparber wrote:
>
> > This primer implies that the ether will squish out, and require more
> > potential V to store more energy which will squish out more ether,and
so on
> > if coefficient K keeps dropping ? :-)
>
> I don't know.   Isn't the ether supposed to be fairly rigid?
>
> :)
>
According to this paper on the "Polarizable Vacuum (ether) by Hal Puthoff
it's not as rigid as concrete.  :-)

http://www.earthtech.org/publications/PV_Found_of_Physics.pdf

The physics lecture doesn't treat  delta K * eo increase or decrease, but, 
Hal does.

 http://www1.gantep.edu.tr/~koc/EP331Lecture/emtlec7.pdf

Fred
> >
> > http://www1.gantep.edu.tr/~koc/EP331Lecture/emtlec7.pdf
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: Frederick Sparber
> > To: vortex-l
> > Sent: 4/11/2006 5:47:04 AM
> > Subject: Re: Does A Voltage Alter The Ether?
> >
> >
> > A parallel-plate vacuum capacitor with  Capacitance C = K*eo * Area/s
> >
> > stores an energy  W = V^2 * K*eo*Area/2s newton-meters (or joules) (K =
1)
> >
> > with the plate to plate Force  F  = W/s  newton-meter/meter = newton
> >
> > Does the field E = V/s  change the value of K to more
> > or less than 1 (unity) ?
> >
> > IOW, does it create a low pressure "bubble" in the ether at
> > high energy densities between the plates?
> >
> > Detectable Index of refraction change?
> >
> > Thanks in Advance.
> >
> > Fred
>
> (((((((((((((((((( ( (  (   (    (O)    )   )  ) ) )))))))))))))))))))
> William J. Beaty                            SCIENCE HOBBYIST website
> billb at amasci com                         http://amasci.com
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>



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