Electrogravitics

From FusionGirl Wiki
Revision as of 23:23, 13 March 2026 by JonoThora (talk | contribs) (Fix BB equation (V→V²), add Theoretical Foundations section with KK/Li-Torr/Tate/Pais/Heim links, expand See Also)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search
Electrogravitics
Overview
Also Known AsElectrogravity · Biefeld-Brown effect propulsion
DomainHigh-voltage electrostatics · field-gravity coupling
Key EffectBiefeld-Brown effect (asymmetric capacitor thrust)
PioneerThomas Townsend Brown (1920s–1960s)
ApplicationMagneto Speeder · Star Speeder attitude control
Key Parameters
Observed Thrust~1 N/kW (vacuum, high-voltage)
Voltage Range50–300 kV DC
DielectricBarium titanate · metamaterial composites
Supplementary propulsion for Magneto Speeder
⚡️ Electrogravitics - Electrogravitic Tech Electrokinetics - Electrokinetic Tech
🧲 Magnetogravitics - Magnetogravitic Tech Magnetokinetics - Magnetokinetic Tech

Electrogravitics is the study of interactions between high-voltage electric fields and gravitational forces, aiming to generate propulsion or modify gravitational effects through electrical means. Central to the field is the Biefeld-Brown effect: a unidirectional thrust produced by asymmetric capacitors under high voltage that appears to depend on the mass of the system.

In Tho'ra vehicles, electrogravitic systems provide fine attitude control, supplementary lift, and maneuvering thrust for the Magneto Speeder and Star Speeder.

Historical Development

Electrogravitic Research Timeline
Year Event Significance
1918 Nipher experiments First electrical-gravitational interaction measurements
1921–1929 Brown's early work Initial observations of thrust in charged capacitors
1928 British Patent 300,311 First patented "electrostatic motor"
1929 "How I Control Gravity" published Science and Invention — public disclosure
1950s Project Winterhaven US Air Force evaluation of electrogravitic aircraft
1960 U.S. Patent 2,949,550 Brown's electrokinetic apparatus
1965 U.S. Patent 3,187,206 Electrokinetic disk designs, vacuum thrust data [1]
2003 NASA/Podkletnov experiments Gravity impulse generator testing
2018 DARPA Casimir Effect program Funded investigation into vacuum fluctuation forces

Theoretical Basis

The Biefeld-Brown Effect

An asymmetric capacitor (electrodes of different geometry/mass) under high DC voltage produces a net force toward the smaller electrode. The empirical force relationship from the declassified GRG 013/56 report (Project Winterhaven): [2]

where is a material-dependent electrokinetic coupling constant, is capacitance, is applied voltage, and is a geometric asymmetry factor. The V² scaling is consistent with electrostatic energy density and has been independently confirmed. See Biefeld-Brown Effect for full analysis including modern vacuum test results.

For detailed biography, see Thomas Townsend Brown.

Asymmetric Capacitor Force

For an idealized asymmetric parallel-plate capacitor:

where:

  • (vacuum permittivity)
  • = relative permittivity of dielectric
  • = electrode area (m²)
  • = applied voltage (V)
  • = plate separation (m)
  • = gravity-coupling efficiency factor (empirical, ~10⁻⁶ to 10⁻⁴)

For barium titanate dielectric (), , , :

Even with , this yields ~0.5 N — measurable and useful for attitude control.

Vacuum Thrust Measurements

Critical to distinguishing electrogravitics from ionic wind: thrust must persist in vacuum. Brown's 1965 patent data and subsequent NASA-adjacent tests report: [3]

Electrogravitic Thrust Data
Researcher Year Voltage (kV) Medium Thrust (mN) Notes
Brown 1958 50–300 Air 10–110 Asymmetric disk, large ionic wind component
Brown 1965 100+ Vacuum (10⁻⁶ torr) 5–15 Patent 3,187,206 — reduced but nonzero
Tajmar 2004 30–60 Air, N₂, vacuum ~0 in vacuum Attributed all thrust to ion wind
Canning et al. 2004 45 Vacuum 2–4 Asymmetric geometry
Woodward 2012 Various Vacuum Varies Mach effect framework

The vacuum thrust question remains open and contested. The Star Speeder's design accounts for this by using electrogravitics only as supplementary assist, not primary propulsion.

Subquantum Kinetics Model

Paul LaViolette's subquantum kinetics provides an alternative framework via reaction-diffusion equations describing subquantum etheric fluxes: [4]

where represent subquantum particle concentrations whose gradients influence gravitational potential. This model predicts that electric field polarization of matter creates a gravitational dipole moment.

Casimir-Electrogravitic Interface

The Casimir force between conducting plates:

shares mathematical structure with electrogravitic force expressions. At nanoscale separations, Casimir and electrogravitic effects may be manifestations of the same vacuum physics:

The DARPA Casimir Effect program (funded 2018+) investigates this overlap for potential propulsion applications.

Engineering Implementation

Magneto Speeder Integration

The Magneto Speeder uses electrogravitic arrays for:

  • Attitude control: 8 asymmetric capacitor panels (4 dorsal, 4 ventral) provide roll/pitch/yaw torques
  • Supplementary lift: During hover, electrogravitic lift reduces load on magnetogravitic drive by 5–15%
  • Vibration damping: High-frequency voltage modulation counteracts mechanical oscillations

System specifications:

  • Voltage: 100 kV DC (variable)
  • Dielectric: Barium titanate / metamaterial composite
  • Total array mass: ~25 kg
  • Power consumption: ~500 W continuous
  • Estimated supplementary thrust: 10–50 N (attitude) / up to 200 N (emergency boost)

Star Speeder Integration

The Star Speeder uses refined electrogravitic systems for:

  • Artificial gravity: Crew comfort during transit (combined with magnetogravitic fields)
  • Precision docking: Sub-millimeter positioning control
  • Radiation field shaping: Modifying local field geometry to deflect charged particles

Cross-Disciplinary Applications

Electrogravitics Across Disciplines
Discipline Key Equation Role
Electrostatics (Coulomb) Basis for charge-induced asymmetric force
General Relativity Metric modification by electric field energy
QED Virtual photon polarization in strong E-fields Enhanced gravity coupling mechanism
Aerospace Thrust calculation for capacitor arrays
Plasma Physics Ionic wind: Disambiguation from true electrogravitic effects
HV Engineering Dielectric breakdown: Material limits on achievable voltages
Materials Science Piezoelectric: Advanced dielectric development

Theoretical Foundations

The electrogravitic effect, if real, connects to several theoretical frameworks:

Theoretical Chain Supporting Electrogravitics
Framework Connection Status Page
Kaluza-Klein Unification EM and gravity are unified in 5D → electric fields necessarily produce gravitational effects Established theory (1921) Kaluza-Klein Unification
Gravitoelectromagnetism Weak-field GR produces Maxwell-like gravity equations Confirmed by Gravity Probe B Gravitoelectromagnetism
Li-Torr theory Superconductor Cooper pairs amplify gravitomagnetic coupling by ~10¹¹× Peer-reviewed (1991) Ning Li
Tate Experiment Cooper pair mass anomaly (84 ppm) — possible gravitomagnetic coupling evidence Experimental fact (1989) Tate Experiment
Pais Effect Navy patent for HEEMFG vacuum polarization → inertial mass reduction Speculative (2018) Pais Effect
Heim Theory 8D metric predicts gravitophoton forces from rotating EM fields Speculative Heim Theory

The distinction between electrogravitics (high-voltage, Biefeld-Brown lineage) and magnetogravitics (rotating mass/superconductor, Li-Torr lineage) is important: they use different physical mechanisms but both aim to couple electromagnetic and gravitational fields.

See Also

References

  1. Brown, T.T. (1965). "Electrokinetic Apparatus." U.S. Patent 3,187,206.
  2. Aviation Studies (International) Ltd. (1956). "Electrogravitics Systems." GRG 013/56. Gravity Research Group, London.
  3. Tajmar, M. (2004). "Biefeld-Brown Effect: Misinterpretation of Corona Wind Phenomena." AIAA Journal 42(2), 315–318.
  4. LaViolette, P.A. (2008). Secrets of Antigravity Propulsion: Tesla, UFOs, and Classified Aerospace Technology. Bear & Company. ISBN 978-1591430780.