http://www.thestar.com/Business/article/300042

Turning physics on its ear

Feb 04, 2008 04:30 AM
Tyler Hamilton
Energy Reporter

Thane Heins is nervous and hopeful. It's Jan. 24, a Thursday
afternoon, and in four days the Ottawa-area native will travel to
Boston where he'll demonstrate an invention that appears – though he
doesn't dare say it – to operate as a perpetual motion machine.

The audience, esteemed Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor
Markus Zahn, could either deflate Heins' heretical claims or add
momentum to a 20-year obsession that has broken up his marriage and
lost him custody of his two young daughters.

Zahn is a leading expert on electromagnetic and electronic systems. In
a rare move for any reputable academic, he has agreed to give Heins'
creation an open-minded look rather than greet it with outright
dismissal.

It's a pivotal moment. The invention, at its very least, could
moderately improve the efficiency of induction motors, used in
everything from electric cars to ceiling fans. At best it means a way
of tapping the mysterious powers of electromagnetic fields to produce
more work out of less effort, seemingly creating electricity from
nothing.

<more>

And a second article:

http://www.thestar.com/Article/300041

Reply via email to