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ScienceDirect - Technol Rep Tohoku Univ ... - Garryck Osborne

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NICK COOK 233<br />

testimony. Each test had been very short, lasting on average of around a<br />

minute.<br />

It seemed very much as if the scientists had been trying to "tune" the<br />

Bell, much as you would a radio set.<br />

"Get it right and you've got a very interesting piece of hardware,"<br />

Marckus had told me, "get it wrong and all you've got is some expensive<br />

junk."<br />

Sixty-two scientists shot dead by the S S told both of us that the Bell<br />

tests had to have been at least partially successful.<br />

It had been the same with Schauberger's machine. The air molecules<br />

whirling around within it had been spun into such a state of superexcitement<br />

that something very strange seems to have happened.<br />

Compounded by collisions of electrons and protons—"the building<br />

blocks of atoms," as Callum Coats had called them—the result had been<br />

the creation of a vortex—a torsion field—similar to the Bell's, only<br />

without the electromagnetic component.<br />

This was no ordinary "twister" in a three-dimensional sense, but a<br />

coupling device to the zero-point field—a pump, if you will—that not<br />

only acted as a conduit for its infinite source of energy, the seething mass<br />

of fluctuations, but had combined with an aerodynamic lift component<br />

and the Coanda Effect to produce lévitation.<br />

If, as Puthoff and others were suggesting, gravity and inertia were<br />

component forces of the zero-point field, along with electromagnetism,<br />

then the vortex/torsion field was also responsible for interacting with the<br />

zero-point field's gravity and inertia properties. Tune the machine right<br />

and you could manipulate them.<br />

Manipulate the inertia of an object and you removed its resistance to<br />

acceleration. Put in space and it would continue to accelerate all the way<br />

up to light-speed—and maybe even beyond.<br />

Manipulate the local gravity field around an object and you could get<br />

it to levitate.<br />

Both of these pathways to "advanced propulsion" were being explored<br />

within NASA's Breakthrough Propulsion Physics initiative.<br />

But here was the truly wild part. The vortex, Marckus said, wasn't<br />

a three-dimensional phenomenon or even a four-dimensional one. It<br />

couldn't be. For a torsion field to be able to interact with gravity<br />

and electromagnetism it had to be endowed with attributes that went<br />

beyond the three dimensions of left, right, up and down and the fourthdimensional<br />

time field they inhabited; something that the theorists for<br />

convenience sake labeled a fifth dimension—hyperspace.

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