I am also “skeptical” but not willing to totally discount it just yet.. too many similarities between superconducting, fractal meta antennas and all the recent comments regarding the Dirac sea / ZPE / entanglement/ spooky action at a distance / spins cancelling 1D singlets, ect, ect… even the anomalous energy claims can be viewed as employing this same sort of linkage to a non physical dimension to unbalance normal physics and provide a caveat to COE. IMHO normal energy balance can be exploited when one set of the reactants is undergoing Lorentzian transformation which is what must occur if you push anything physical into a different dimension because the remaining material still seeks an “opposite and equal reaction in 3D” or even thru field linkage just “pushing” against something we perceive as non physical like virtual particles that are outside of our normal 3D [which is what I envision Casimir and London forces based upon by modifying vacuum pressure/density they extend or shorten the window of VP intersecting with our 3D]. I did note there wasn’t any claim of FTL comm rate which would also be expected if this method bypasses the inverse square law for radiation. Fran
From: David Roberson [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Wednesday, May 07, 2014 1:03 AM To: [email protected] Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:Vector Potential Wave Radio I am skeptical of this one James. It has always amazed me how a tsunami can travel at hundreds of miles per hour across the open sea while normal sea waves move much slower. Something of a similar nature might occur with electromagnetic waves as far as I know. Could this system work in a similar fashion with radio waves? Lets see the evidence that these guys have really found something new and not just another method of viewing the same old phenomena. Dave -----Original Message----- From: James Bowery <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> To: vortex-l <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Sent: Wed, May 7, 2014 12:52 am Subject: [Vo]:Vector Potential Wave Radio New Radio Wave Requires No Transmitter Power!<http://www.lbagroup.com/blog/new-radio-wave-requires-no-transmitter-power/> McMaster Professor Natalia Nikolova and her husband Robert ZimmermanMcMaster research engineer Professor Natalia Nikolova, and her husband Robert Zimmerman, have verified the existence of a new type of radio wave called the Vector Potential Wave. This wave was first predicted in 1880 by British mathematician James Clerk Maxwell, but had never been directly detected until this summer here on McMaster campus in the Communications Research Lab>. Dr. Nikolova comments, “One of the most enigmatic predictions of Maxwell was his concept of the magnetic vector potential. Until recently most engineers believed it was only a mathematical concept with no physical reality. Now, more than 125 years later, we have realized a magnetic vector potential detector which allows measuring the wave at any distance from a microwave antenna.” Nikolova and her husband have been working on this development nearly 2 years. Zimmerman feels that the new discovery will ultimately lead to radio and television transmissions which do not require energy. On a more fundamental level, he added, “Maxwell was correct all along.” The novelty of the discovery is that while the transmission requires very little energy, the reception of the wave requires that an active battery operated receiver be used. This is distinct from usual AM radio transmissions, where much energy is radiated by the transmitter, and the receiver can be a ‘crystal set’ with no battery. The detector developed by the research team is a plasma device looking like a fluorescent tube which displays super-conducting properties for radio signals. Nikolova is quick to add, “The device is at room temperature but acts like a superconductor, as predicted by Fritz London in 1930.” Nikolova and Zimmerman plan on submitting their results this week to the research journal The Physical Review of the American Physical Society. Zimmerman is a former Director of Engineering of LBA Technology<http://www.lbagroup.com/technology/index.php>.

