Wednesday, 15 June 2022

Lifters, Antigravity of the American Physicist Townsend Brown

Thomas Townsend Brown (March 18, 1905 – October 27, 1985) was an American inventor whose research into odd electrical effects led him to believe he had discovered a connection between strong electric fields and gravity, a type of antigravity effect.

 

Working in his home lab, Brown developed an electrical device he called a "gravitor" or "gravitator", consisting of a block of insulating or dielectric material with electrodes at either end. He received a British patent for it in November 1928. In demonstrations, Brown would mount the unit as a pendulum, apply electrical power, causing the unit to move in one direction.

 

In 1929 Brown published "How I Control Gravity", in Science and Invention, where he claimed these devices were producing a mysterious force that interacted with the pull of gravity. He envisioned a future where, if his device could be scaled up, "Multi-impulse gravitators weighing hundreds of tons may propel the ocean liners of the future" or even "fantastic 'space cars'" to Mars.

 

Brown spent the rest of his life working in his spare time, and sometimes in funded projects trying to prove his ideas on electricity's effect on gravity.

 

Although most people disagree with Brown’s ideas, there is no logical explanation for gravity in mainstream physics. This video explains the gravitational force as a secondary force to the EM force with the characteristics of three-dimensional space arising with the exchange of photon energy forming the Inverse Square Law of electromagnetic and gravitational fields.

 

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