I intend over the next couple/few/many months to make a few to more than a few videos on this topic. The goal will be that the experiments can all be replicated with very small monetary outlay and/or a trip to the hobby shop. I don’t think I’ve ever said any thing like this on this forum before so I will just say I think this sort of information may be somewhat important or at least interesting to people. Practically speaking, a lot of what Bruce DePalma and Eric Laithwaite spoke of, after percolating in my mind for a year or two, apparently finished brewing and seems to make perfect sense to me. Secondly, there are lots of spinning things, planets, electrons and photons spin or so I am told, etc. A spinning thing if moving in a line will trace out a sine wave and I am also told there are myriad such waves unseen all around us. You can see and hear and feel in your fingers and arms, however, the reactions of a larger spinning thing. A spinning thing will under certain circumstances follow Newton’s laws of motion and under other circumstances will not. The interplay of the different behaviors might be practically applied towards different ends. Also the non-intuitive behavior of spinning things has either a parallel in or maybe is even an expression of the relationship between the unseen forces of electricity and magnetism.
This post will just be an intro and outline however over time we should be able to explain and demonstrate the concepts behind, though likely not build working models with toy store parts,both DePalma’s and Laithwaite’s successful approaches to massless propulsion. We will show that inertial mass is anything but constant and changes based on rotation, the change in mass however is “anisotrophic”. When I first read DePalma I thought he was just being unnecessarily complicated and perhaps obtuse in using that term, “How can you be so obtuse?” (obscure line from the movie the Shawshank Redemption). However, anisotrophic change in mass perfectly and concisely describes what is going on. Bizarre as it sounds what it appears to me is that approached from one plane, a spinning object has, within the confines of how fast it can rotate and how fast it can precess, an inertial mass approaching infinity, approached from another plane it seems to have zero mass. Regarding the second point, we (I guess I am using the Royal we here unless or until others get on board) will show a mass moving from point A to point B with zero registered force. I did that about a year and half ago and it took nearly just as long for it to sink in what I had actually seen. This also obviates, in such conditions, relativity, not just the fancy-pants 20th century goboldy gook, but the stuff that Galileo was talking about. Unless I am mistaken, it is the equivalent of getting in an elevator, there is no force felt by you when the elevator moves but nonetheless you go up 20 floors. We will also show how precession and “forced precession” are simply the same phenomena, that one just occurred to me a week or so ago as well. Well that’s it until I actually can put some stuff together and make some videos. Safe to say there is no immediate practicality to any of this but it is something sort of at the level of asking what are the physical rules of this creation we are here to enjoy. Don’t know when I’ll get around to the videos hopefully not too long from now, but to maybe whet people’s interest and to get to the heart of the matter a question to ask is the following. If you have a beachball spinning in the air in front of you (say it is a pretty heavy beachball) can you now simultaneously spin it in another axis so it is spinning in two axes at the same time? You can but it doesn’t behave at all the way one might expect and on closer examination shows a lot of other non-intuitive behavior as well. It should be intuitive, I live in this place, but you just don’t encounter it that often day-to-day, hence Newton’s incomplete laws, even though there are very many very large (planets, stars) and very small (photons, protons) spinning things. There is the expression, "no need to reinvent the wheel", it turns out we don't yet understand the wheel and it has mightily held back science.
Ciao
This post will just be an intro and outline however over time we should be able to explain and demonstrate the concepts behind, though likely not build working models with toy store parts,both DePalma’s and Laithwaite’s successful approaches to massless propulsion. We will show that inertial mass is anything but constant and changes based on rotation, the change in mass however is “anisotrophic”. When I first read DePalma I thought he was just being unnecessarily complicated and perhaps obtuse in using that term, “How can you be so obtuse?” (obscure line from the movie the Shawshank Redemption). However, anisotrophic change in mass perfectly and concisely describes what is going on. Bizarre as it sounds what it appears to me is that approached from one plane, a spinning object has, within the confines of how fast it can rotate and how fast it can precess, an inertial mass approaching infinity, approached from another plane it seems to have zero mass. Regarding the second point, we (I guess I am using the Royal we here unless or until others get on board) will show a mass moving from point A to point B with zero registered force. I did that about a year and half ago and it took nearly just as long for it to sink in what I had actually seen. This also obviates, in such conditions, relativity, not just the fancy-pants 20th century goboldy gook, but the stuff that Galileo was talking about. Unless I am mistaken, it is the equivalent of getting in an elevator, there is no force felt by you when the elevator moves but nonetheless you go up 20 floors. We will also show how precession and “forced precession” are simply the same phenomena, that one just occurred to me a week or so ago as well. Well that’s it until I actually can put some stuff together and make some videos. Safe to say there is no immediate practicality to any of this but it is something sort of at the level of asking what are the physical rules of this creation we are here to enjoy. Don’t know when I’ll get around to the videos hopefully not too long from now, but to maybe whet people’s interest and to get to the heart of the matter a question to ask is the following. If you have a beachball spinning in the air in front of you (say it is a pretty heavy beachball) can you now simultaneously spin it in another axis so it is spinning in two axes at the same time? You can but it doesn’t behave at all the way one might expect and on closer examination shows a lot of other non-intuitive behavior as well. It should be intuitive, I live in this place, but you just don’t encounter it that often day-to-day, hence Newton’s incomplete laws, even though there are very many very large (planets, stars) and very small (photons, protons) spinning things. There is the expression, "no need to reinvent the wheel", it turns out we don't yet understand the wheel and it has mightily held back science.
Ciao
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