Goal
Generate extremely strong electromagnetic fields for defense shielding, asteroid deflection, inertia cancellation, and purported over-unity energy production.
Problem
Need for high-energy power generation, protective electromagnetic shields, rapid asteroid deflection, and propulsion without aerodynamic drag.
Concept Summary
The invention spins a plasma inside a spherical array of piezoelectric ceramic shells doped with radioactive material. The rotating plasma and stimulated Mossbauer effect are claimed to release coherent gamma rays, producing electromagnetic fields of unprecedented intensity (10^... to 10^... watts per square meter). The field allegedly creates a quantum vacuum around the device, allowing it to negate aerodynamic/hydrodynamic forces and reduce inertial mass, enabling antigravity and over-unity energy output.
Principles
- Plasma dynamics
- Piezoelectric ceramic actuation
- Radioactive doping
- Mossbauer effect
- Quantum vacuum generation
- High-frequency electromagnetic wave emission
Scientific Domains
Materials
- Piezoelectric ceramic
- Radioactive isotopes
- Ionized plasma
- Room-temperature superconducting materials (claimed)
Mechanisms of Action
- Spinning plasma to induce strong electromagnetic fields
- Stimulating coherent gamma-ray emission via the Mossbauer effect
- Creating a quantum vacuum that reduces inertial mass
Energy Sources
Applications
- Military defensive shielding
- Asteroid deflection
- Propulsion for hybrid aerospace/underwater craft
- Energy generation (over-unity claim)
Claimed Performance
Field strengths per square meter of 10^... to 10^... watts (ten septillion to one hundred octillion watts); ability to deflect asteroids, generate impenetrable defensive shields, and cancel inertial mass.
Experimental Evidence
Patent documents assert operability; Navy officials claim the device is operable; a telephone interview (July 10 2018) was presented as evidence, but no quantitative data or independent replication is provided.
Limitations
- No peer-reviewed experimental data
- Patents rejected for lack of utility and operability
- Reliance on speculative physics (quantum vacuum, Mossbauer-induced gamma emission)
- Potential hazards from radioactive materials and extreme electromagnetic fields
Red Flags
- Over-unity power claims without quantitative evidence
- Patent rejections citing inoperability
- Use of radioactive materials in the core design
- Absence of independent replication or peer-reviewed validation