Shankar V Narayanan: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 15:22, 17 July 2026
Shankar V. Narayanan | |
|---|---|
| Shankar V. Narayanan | |
| Born | November 23, 1947 |
| Residence | Bangalore, Karnataka, India |
| Nationality | Indian |
| Known for | Alternative Clean Energy Resourcing |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Free Lance |
Shankar V. Narayanan (born November 23, 1947) is an Indian electrical engineer based in Bangalore, Karnataka, India. He is an independent researcher known for his advocacy of Space Vortex Theory and its proposed application to alternative clean-energy generation.
Biography
Narayanan graduated in science and subsequently in electrical engineering. His career consisted largely of field work, which gave him exposure to electrical power distribution, industrial applications, power generation, and a range of oil and gas refineries.
Work
Narayanan describes a long-standing interest in understanding nature from what he calls the core of creation, an interest that drew him toward classical physics. He has stated that some explanations offered by modern physical theories were, in his view, difficult to reconcile with common sense, which led him to seek an account grounded in classical physics.
He has aligned his work with Space Vortex Theory (SVT), a framework developed by the Indian engineer Paramahamsa Tewari that treats space as a dynamic medium and attempts to derive matter and energy from vortex motion of that medium. Narayanan regards SVT as offering new findings and clarity that he considers absent from mainstream physics, and he has attributed the theory's limited acceptance in part to its rejection by established journals. His own contributions are presented as preliminary submissions intended for critical review, and he has framed the subject as one with substantial scope for further development by other scholars.
Narayanan's ideas fall outside the scientific mainstream and have not been established through peer-reviewed publication or independent experimental confirmation.
External links
- Tewari.org — reference site for Space Vortex Theory