Michel Jullian wrote. > > > > IOW, neglect the high velocity stuff (easy to do electronically) > > and look for detection after at least 0.3 seconds delay. > > I don't get it, what's wrong with the volunteers as you call them, aren't > they submitted to gravity too? > Yes, but, discerning a few meters/second subtracted from 100 kilometers/sec Volunteers with millivolt resolution in adjusting decelerating electrodes and all of the artifact fields set up is too complicated for any believable experimental results. > > They can be made as slow as desired using a > decelerating electrode (another grid, which would have to be grounded, so > the photocathode right below this new grid would have to be at a positive > voltage wrt ground) > Too complicated. If there is a gravity repulsion force on any residual electrons after about a 0.3 second wait..... > > What about having two of these tubes end to end but looking opposite ways, > and measuring the difference in the flight times of the fastest electrons? > One could do this once with tube 1 on top, and once with tube 2 on top, to > ascertain the effect is gravitational. > Hard vacuum plumbing and step-ladders don't come cheap. :-)
Fred > > Michel >

