Fran:
I’ve always had a prob with the whole time-dilation/relativistic effects thing…
my gut tells me that this is what might be ‘perceived’ by us and our
instruments, and the physics community had to ‘fit’ data to a theoretical
framework; another contributing factor is that the ZPField was not a
consideration as the Relativity theory was growing up… There are quite a number
of papers building on the ZPF/quantum vacuum and having some success in
explaining relativistic observations in a more classical framework.
Thus, I think my original suggestion is still a decent physical model; that
the ground-state of an atom in a Casimir cavity will spontaneously drop to a
‘sub-ground-state’ energy level when it enters the cavity; the narrower the
cavity, and the electron will settle into a sub-sub-sub-ground state. Where
does that energy go??? Only two places possible; either into the ZPF, or if
conditions are right, one might get it to transfer to the walls of the
cavity??? In the latter case, there is the possibility of making use of that
energy… Upon exiting the cavity, it will likely ‘absorb’ E from the now normal
ZPF background… So there’s your energy conversion device: flowing hydrogen
atoms thru a series of sequential Casimir cavities with non-casimir dimensions
inbetween the Casimir cavities. A very crude representation is:
narrowchannel=Widechannel=narrowchannel=Widechannel=narrowchannel=Widechannel=narrowchannel=
The narrow channels have conducting sides (a reqmt of Casimir cavities) and are
rcving the electron’s energy as it assumes a sub-ground state, and the
nonconducting wide channels allow the electrons to absorb energy from the ZPF
and jump back to their normal ground state. No atoms are consumed in this
process; all one needs is some way to keep the atoms flowing and transporting
them back to the ‘entrance’…
-Mark Iverson
From: Frank Roarty [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, August 04, 2013 5:20 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [Vo]:Irh energy upon exiting caviy
Terry. I disagree with your assumption that an irh atom can carry negative
energy out of the cavity.. the resonant relationship with virtual particles is
proportional to casimir geometry or lack thereof in the unbroken isotropy
outside the cavity where vacuum pressure only changes at gravitational square
law or velocities approaching C. I do see the energy becoming transportablevia
a covalent bond or this ionic bond using irh as a heavy electron... anything
that traps the redundant ground state from freely transitioning like it
apparently does in the atomic state..hence the need we have discussed here on
vortex previously the need for asymmetry..using atomic hydrogen to attain the
redundant state when suppressed by geometry is not enough.you must somehow pin
the orbital low so the differential can be carried away to an area with a
different suppression level where the differential can be exploited to do
work.. nondirectional tasks like discounting thermal thresholds for reversible
chemical reactions being best suited to this self assembly.