Anatoly E. Akimov
Anatoly E. Akimov | |
|---|---|
| Nationality | Russian |
| Known for | Torsion field theory and the "physical vacuum" concept |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Physics (torsion field theory) |
| Institutions | International Institute of Theoretical and Applied Physics, Russian Academy of Natural Sciences |
Anatoly E. Akimov (born 1938) was a Russian researcher known as a leading proponent of "torsion field" theory. He is listed in The Worldwide List of Dissident Scientists.
Work
Akimov directed research on models of the physical vacuum and on applied "torsion" technologies, working closely with theoretical physicist Gennady I. Shipov, whose "Theory of the Physical Vacuum" provided the mathematical framework. He was associated with the International Institute of Theoretical and Applied Physics of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences.
In writings such as "Torsion Fields and Their Experimental Manifestations," Akimov proposed that torsion fields, generated by the spin or rotation of matter, can carry information at a distance without transferring energy, and he described attempts to detect such fields and to build torsion-based generators and communication devices.
Reception
Torsion field theory is regarded as pseudoscience by the mainstream scientific community. In 1998 the Presidium of the Russian Academy of Sciences established a Commission to Combat Pseudoscience and the Falsification of Scientific Research, whose members, including physicist Eduard Kruglyakov, publicly criticized Akimov's torsion-field program and its use of state funding.