Difference between revisions of "A Theory of Electrogravitics"

From Natural Philosophy Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Imported from text file)
 
(Imported from text file)
Line 11: Line 11:
 
==Abstract==
 
==Abstract==
  
General relativity fails to predict a connection between electric and gravitational fields, a fact which Einstein himself found troubling. While certain unified field theories do predict a unification of the fields, this is supposed to take place only at very high energies (in excess of tens of trillions of electron volts). However, experiments carried out by T. Townsend Brown, Paul A. Biefeld, and others, suggest that electric and gravitational fields may be strongly connected at voltages as low as 105eV. If true, this would indicate that standard field theories are seriously flawed.[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
+
General relativity fails to predict a connection between electric and gravitational fields, a fact which Einstein himself found troubling. While certain unified field theories do predict a unification of the fields, this is supposed to take place only at very high energies (in excess of tens of trillions of electron volts). However, experiments carried out by T. Townsend Brown, Paul A. Biefeld, and others, suggest that electric and gravitational fields may be strongly connected at voltages as low as 105eV. If true, this would indicate that standard field theories are seriously flawed.
 +
 
 +
[[Category:Scientific Paper|theory electrogravitics]]
  
 
[[Category:Relativity]]
 
[[Category:Relativity]]

Revision as of 10:03, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
Title A Theory of Electrogravitics
Author(s) Paul A LaViolette
Keywords electrogravitics, subquantum kinetics
Published 1993
Journal Electric Spacecraft Journal
Number 8
Pages 33-39

Abstract

General relativity fails to predict a connection between electric and gravitational fields, a fact which Einstein himself found troubling. While certain unified field theories do predict a unification of the fields, this is supposed to take place only at very high energies (in excess of tens of trillions of electron volts). However, experiments carried out by T. Townsend Brown, Paul A. Biefeld, and others, suggest that electric and gravitational fields may be strongly connected at voltages as low as 105eV. If true, this would indicate that standard field theories are seriously flawed.