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Anti-gravity



 
 
Anti-gravity is the idea of creating a place or object that is free from the force of gravity. It does not refer to countering the gravitational force by an opposing force of a different nature, as a helium balloon does; instead, anti-gravity requires that the fundamental causes of the force of gravity be made either not present or not applicable to the place or object through some kind of technological intervention.






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Anti-gravity is the idea of creating a place or object that is free from the force of gravity. It does not refer to countering the gravitational force by an opposing force of a different nature, as a helium balloon does; instead, anti-gravity requires that the fundamental causes of the force of gravity be made either not present or not applicable to the place or object through some kind of technological intervention. Anti-gravity is a recurring concept in science fiction
Science fiction

Science fiction is a broad genre of fiction that often involves speculations based on current or future science or technology. Science fiction is found in books, art, television, films, games, theatre, and other media....
, particularly in the context of spacecraft propulsion
Spacecraft propulsion

Spacecraft propulsion is any method used to accelerate spacecraft and artificial satellites. There are many different methods. Each method has drawbacks and advantages, and spacecraft propulsion is an active area of research....
. The concept was first introduced formally as "Cavorite" in H. G. Wells
H. G. Wells

Herbert George Wells , known by his pen name H. G. Wells, was an England author, best known for his work in the science fiction genre. Wells and Jules Verne are each sometimes referred to as "The Father of Science Fiction"....
' The First Men in the Moon
The First Men in the Moon

The First Men in the Moon is a 1901 in literature scientific romance novel by the British author H. G. Wells.'The novel tells the story of a journey to the moon undertaken by the two main protagonists, the impoverished businessman Mr Bedford and the brilliant but eccentric scientist Dr....
, and has been a favorite item of imaginary technology since that day.

In the first mathematically accurate description of gravity, Newton's law of universal gravitation
Newton's law of universal gravitation

Isaac Newton's law of universal gravitation is an empirical physical law describing the gravitational attraction between bodies with mass. It is a part of classical mechanics and was first formulated in Newton's work Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica, first published on July 5 1687....
, gravity was an external force transmitted by unknown means. However in the early part of the 20th century Newton's model was replaced by the more general and complete description encoded in general relativity
General relativity

General relativity or the general theory of relativity is the Geometry Theoretical physics of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1916....
. In general relativity, gravity is not a force in the traditional sense of the word, but the result of the geometry of space itself. These geometrical solutions always cause attractive "forces". Under general relativity, anti-gravity is highly unlikely, except under contrived circumstances that are regarded as unlikely or impossible. The term "anti-gravity" is also sometimes used to refer to hypothetical reactionless propulsion drives based on certain solutions to general relativity, although these do not oppose gravity as such.

There are numerous newer theories that add onto general relativity or replace it outright, and some of these appear to allow anti-gravity-like solutions. However, according to the current widely accepted physical theories, verified in experiments, and according to the major directions of physical research, it is considered highly unlikely that anti-gravity is possible.

Hypothetical solutions


Gravity shields
There are strong reasons to believe that no such substance can exist. Consider the results of placing such a substance under one-half of a wheel on a shaft. The side of the wheel under the substance would have no weight, while the other side would. This would cause the wheel to continually "fall" toward the side under the plate. This motion could be harnessed to produce power for free, a clear violation of the first law of thermodynamics
First law of thermodynamics

In thermodynamics, the first law of thermodynamics is an expression of the more universal physical law of the conservation of energy. Succinctly, the first law of thermodynamics states:...
. More generally, it follows from Gauss's law
Gauss's law

In physics, Gauss's law, also known as Gauss's flux theorem, is a law relating the distribution of electric charge to the resulting electric field....
 that static inverse-square fields (such as Earth's gravitational field) cannot be blocked (magnetism is static, but is inverse-cube). Under general relativity, the entire concept is something of a non-sequitur.

In 1948 successful businessman Roger Babson
Roger Babson

Roger Ward Babson , remembered today largely for founding Babson College in Massachusetts, was an entrepreneur and business theorist in the first half of the 20th century....
 (founder of Babson College
Babson College

Babson College, located in Wellesley, Massachusetts , is a private business school that grants all undergraduates a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration....
) formed the Gravity Research Foundation
Gravity Research Foundation

The Gravity Research Foundation, established in 1948 by businessman Roger Babson , was an organization designed to find ways to implement gravitational shielding....
 to study ways to reduce the effects of gravity. Their efforts were initially somewhat "crankish", but they held occasional conferences that drew such people as Clarence Birdseye
Clarence Birdseye

Clarence Frank Birdseye II was an U.S.A. inventor who is considered the founder of the modern frozen food industry....
 of frozen-food fame and Igor Sikorsky
Igor Sikorsky

Igor Sikorsky was born Igor Ivanovich Sikorsky . Sikorsky was a Russian-American pioneer of aviation who designed and flew the world's first multi-engine fixed-wing aircraft, developed the first of Pan American Airways' ocean-conquering flying boats in the 1930s....
, inventor of the helicopter. Over time the Foundation turned its attention away from trying to control gravity, to simply better understanding it. The Foundation disappeared some time after Babson's death in 1967. However it continues to run an essay award, offering prizes of up to $5,000. As of 2007 it is still administered out of Wellesley, Massachusetts
Wellesley, Massachusetts

Wellesley is a town in Norfolk County, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States. The population was 26,613 at the 2000 census. It is best known as the home of Wellesley College and Babson College....
 by George Rideout, Jr., son of the foundation's original director. Recent winners include California astrophysicist George F. Smoot, who later won the 2006 Nobel Prize in physics
Nobel Prize in Physics

The Nobel Prize in Physics is awarded once a year by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. It is one of the five Nobel Prizes established by the will of Alfred Nobel in 1895 and awarded since 1901; the others are the Nobel Prize in chemistry, Nobel Prize in literature, Nobel Peace Prize, and Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine....
.

Unified Field Theory research in WWII
Near the end of WWII the Nazi war effort was turning to ever more outlandish projects to provide a weapon that could turn the tide. One of these was the so-called Nazi Bell, located in an underground mine, with a ring of "heavy duty testing pillars" directly above [5][6](however later research has shown that these were simply supports for a cooling tower)[citation needed]. The device is reported to have been made of two stacked counter-rotating cylinders of mercury with bismuth alloy cores exposed to a high radio-frequency field. The scientists working on the device were trying to create a magnetic monopole based on the first incarnation of Albert Einstein's never-completed Unified Field Theory. Remnants of the testing rig and nearby power station solely used to power it remain to this day, however the Bell itself is gone. In an interview with John Dering, americanantigravity.com claims that SARA, a California-based defense contractor, successfully replicated the Nazi Bell on a small scale but subsequently shelved the project when major sources for funding failed to materialize. However the site also claims that it is likely 'Black Ops' in the US took the Nazi Bell in Operation Paperclip and recently used knowledge gained from it to create a triangular anti-gravity based craft known as the TR-3B. This craft is supposed to work on a mercury plasma accelerated in a toroid and exposed to high radio-frequency fields but manages to negate only 89% of its mass and gravitational force. It is worthy to note that while a gravitational dipole (a bump in the gravity well) is said to be behind these effects it is unexplained as to why mass is also cancelled - but by the same token it has never been explained in conventional physics why gravitational mass and inertial mass are equal.

General relativity research in the 1950s

General relativity was introduced in the 1910s, but development of the theory was greatly slowed by a lack of suitable mathematical tools. Some of these were introduced in the 1950s, and by the 1960s a flowering of general relativity was underway that later became known as the golden age of general relativity
Golden age of general relativity

The Golden Age of General Relativity is the period roughly from 1960 to 1975 during which the study of general relativity, which had previously been regarded as something of a curiosity, entered the mainstream of theoretical physics....
. Although it appeared that anti-gravity was outlawed under general relativity, there were a number of efforts to study potential solutions that allowed anti-gravity-type effects.

It is claimed the US Air Force also ran a study effort throughout the 1950s and into the 1960s. Former Lieutenant Colonel Ansel Talbert
Ansel Talbert

Ansel Edward McLaurine Talbert was an American aviation journalist. He is well known for his testimony before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee in 1955 after being named as a Communist by journalist Winston Burdett....
 wrote two series of newspaper articles claiming that most of the major aviation firms had started gravity control propulsion research in the 1950s. However there is little outside confirmation of these stories, and since they take place in the midst of the policy by press release
Policy by press release

Policy by press release refers to the act of attempting to influence public policy through press releases intended to alarm the public into demanding action from their elected officials....
 era, it is not clear how much weight these stories should be given.

It is known that there were serious efforts underway at the Glenn L. Martin Company
Glenn L. Martin Company

The Glenn L. Martin Company was an early United States aircraft company founded by aviation pioneer Glenn Luther Martin. The company went through a number of mergers over time and now exists as Lockheed Martin....
, who formed the Research Institute for Advance Study. Major newspapers announced the contract that had been made between Burkhard Heim
Burkhard Heim

Burkhard Heim was a Germany theoretical physics. He devoted a large portion of his life to the pursuit of his unified field theory, Heim theory....
 and the Glenn L. Martin Company
Glenn L. Martin Company

The Glenn L. Martin Company was an early United States aircraft company founded by aviation pioneer Glenn Luther Martin. The company went through a number of mergers over time and now exists as Lockheed Martin....
. Other private sector efforts to master the understanding of gravitation was the creation of the Institute for Field Physics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is a public university research university located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, North Carolina, United States....
, in 1956 by Gravity Research Foundation trustee, Agnew H. Bahnson.

Military support for anti-gravity projects was terminated by the Mansfield Amendment of 1973, which restricted Department of Defense
United States Department of Defense

The United States Department of Defense is the federal department charged with coordinating and supervising all agencies and functions of the government relating directly to national security and the Military of the United States....
 spending to only the areas of scientific research with explicit military applications. The Mansfield Amendment was passed specifically to end long-running projects that had little to show for their efforts.

Negative mass

Under general relativity, gravity is the result of following a geometry caused by local mass-energy. Although the equations cannot produce a "negative geometry" normally, it is possible to do so using a "negative mass". Interestingly, the same equations do not, of themselves, rule out the existence of negative mass.

Both general relativity and Newtonian gravity appear to predict that negative mass would produce a repulsive gravitational field. In particular, Sir Hermann Bondi
Hermann Bondi

Sir Hermann Bondi, Order of the Bath , Fellow of the Royal Society was an Anglo-Austrian mathematics and physical cosmology. He is best known for developing the steady-state theory of the universe with Fred Hoyle and Thomas Gold as an alternative to the Big Bang theory, but his most lasting legacy will probably be his important contributions...
 proposed in 1957 a form of negative gravitational mass that could comply with the strong equivalence principle of general relativity theory and the Newtonian laws of conservation of linear momentum and energy. Bondi's proof yielded singularity free solutions for the relativity equations. In July 1988, Robert L. Forward presented a paper at the AIAA/ASME/SAE/ASEE 24TH Joint Propulsion Conference that proposed a Bondi negative gravitational mass propulsion system.

Every point mass
Point mass

Point mass is an idealistic term used to describe either matter which is infinitely small, or an object which can be thought of as infinitely small....
 attracts every other point mass by a force
Force

In physics, a force is that which can cause an object with mass to change its velocity. Force has both Euclidean_vector#Length of a vector and Direction , making it a Vector quantity....
 pointing along the line
Line (mathematics)

In geometry, a line is a Curvature curve. When geometry is used to model the real world, lines are used to represent straight objects with negligible width and height....
 intersecting both points. The force is proportional
Proportionality (mathematics)

In mathematics, two quantity are called proportional if they vary in such a way that one of the quantities is a constant multiple of the other, or equivalently if they have a constant ratio....
 to the product
Product (mathematics)

In the a mathematics, a product is the result of Multiplication, or an expression that identifies divisors to be multiplied. The order in real number or complex number numbers are multiplied has no bearing on the product; this is known as the Commutativity of multiplication....
 of the two mass
Mass

In physical science, mass refers to the degree of acceleration a body acquires when subject to a force: bodies with greater mass are accelerated less by the same force....
es and inversely proportional to the square
Square (algebra)

In algebra, the square of a number is that number multiplication by itself. To square a quantity is to multiply it by itself.Its notation is a superscripted "2"; a number x squared is written as x?....
 of the distance between the point masses: where:
  • ' is the magnitude of the gravitational force between the two point masses,
  • G is the gravitational constant
    Gravitational constant

    The gravitational constant, denoted G, is an empirical physical constant involved in the calculation of the gravitation between objects with mass....
    ,
  • m1 >0 is the (negative) mass of the first point mass,
  • m2 >0 is the mass of the second point mass,
  • r is the distance between the two point masses.


Negative mass also seems to suffer from problems similar to the gravity shield. Forward pointed out that a negative mass will fall toward "normal" matter as normal , while normal mass will fall away from the negative matter. Forward noted that two similar masses, one positive and one negative, placed near each other will therefore accelerate in the direction of the line between them, away from the negative mass. Notice that because the negative mass acquires negative kinetic energy
Kinetic energy

The kinetic energy of an object is the extra energy which it possesses due to its motion. It is defined as the mechanical work needed to accelerate a body of a given mass from rest to its current velocity....
, the total energy of the accelerating masses remains at zero.

The Standard Model
Standard Model

The Standard Model of particle physics is a theory of three of the four known fundamental interactions and the elementary particles that take part in these interactions....
 of particle physics, which describes all presently known forms of matter, does not permit negative mass. Cosmological dark matter
Dark matter

In astronomy and physical cosmology, dark matter is Hypothesis matter that is undetectable by its emitted electromagnetic radiation, but whose presence can be inferred from gravity effects on visible matter....
 (and possibly dark energy
Dark energy

In physical cosmology & astronomy dark energy is a hypothetical form of energy that permeates all of space and tends to increase the Hubble's law....
) may consist of particles outside the Standard Model whose nature is unknown; however their mass is ostensibly known - since they were postulated from their gravitational effects, which are positive..

Fifth force

Under general relativity any form of energy couples with spacetime to create the geometries that cause gravity. A longstanding question was whether or not these same equations applied to antimatter
Antimatter

In particle physics, antimatter is the extension of the concept of the antiparticle to matter, where antimatter is composed of antiparticles in the same way that normal matter is composed of particles....
. The issue was considered solved in 1957 with the development of CPT symmetry
CPT symmetry

CPT symmetry is a fundamental Symmetry in physics of physical laws under transformation s that involve the inversions of electric charge, parity and time simultaneously....
, which demonstrated that antimatter follows the same laws of physics as "normal" matter, and therefore has positive energy content and also causes (and reacts to) gravity like normal matter.

For much of the later quarter of the 20th century, the physics community has been involved in an attempt to produce a unified field theory
Unified field theory

In physics, a unified field theory is a type of field theory that allows all of the fundamental forces between elementary particles to be written in terms of a single field ....
, a single physical theory that explains the four fundamental forces: gravity, electromagnetism, and the strong and weak nuclear forces. Scientists have made progress in unifying the three quantum forces
Grand unification theory

Grand Unification, grand unified theory, or GUT refers to any of several very similar unified field theory or models in physics that predicts that at extremely high energies , the electromagnetic, weak nuclear, and strong nuclear forces are fused into a single unified field....
, but gravity has remained "the problem" in every attempt. This has not stopped any number of such attempts being made, however.

Generally these attempts tried to "quantize gravity" by positing a new particle, the graviton
Graviton

In physics, the graviton is a hypothetical elementary particle that mediates the force of gravity in the framework of quantum field theory. If it exists, the graviton must be Mass in special relativity and must have a spin of 2 ....
, that carried gravity in the same way that photon
Photon

In physics, the photon is an elementary particle, the quantum of the electromagnetic field and the basic unit of light and all other forms of electromagnetic radiation....
s (light) carry electromagnetism. Simple attempts along this direction all failed, however, leading to more complex examples that attempted to account for these problems. Two of these, supergravity
Supergravity

In theoretical physics, supergravity is a field theory that combines the principles of supersymmetry and general relativity. Together, these imply that, in supergravity, the supersymmetry is a local symmetry ....
 and supersymmetry
Supersymmetry

In particle physics, supersymmetry is a symmetry that relates elementary particles of one Spin to another particle that differs by half a unit of spin and are known as superpartners....
, both required the existence of an extremely weak "fifth force" that coupled together several "loose ends" in quantum theory. As a side-effect, both theories also posited that antimatter would be affected by this fifth force in a way similar to anti-gravity, being repelled from mass. Several experiments were carried out in the 1990s to measure this effect, but all failed.

General-relativistic "warp drives"

There are solutions of the field equations of general relativity which describe "warp drives" (such as the famous Alcubierre metric) and stable, traversable wormholes. This by itself is not significant, since any spacetime geometry is a solution of the field equations for some configuration of the stress-energy tensor
Stress-energy tensor

The stress-energy tensor is a tensor quantity in physics that describes the density and flux of energy and momentum in spacetime, generalizing the stress of Newtonian physics....
 field (see exact solutions in general relativity
Exact solutions in general relativity

In general relativity, an exact solution is a Lorentzian manifold equipped with certain tensor which are taken to model states of ordinary matter, such as a fluid, or classical classical field theory such as the electromagnetic field....
). General relativity does not constrain the geometry of spacetime unless outside constraints are placed on the stress-energy tensor. Warp-drive and traversable-wormhole geometries are well-behaved in most areas, but require regions of exotic matter
Exotic matter

Exotic matter is a hypothetical concept of particle physics. It covers any material which violates one or more classical conditions or is not made of known Baryon....
; thus they are excluded as solutions if the stress-energy tensor is limited to known forms of matter (including dark matter and dark energy).

Breakthrough Propulsion Physics Program

During the close of the twentieth century NASA
NASA

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration is an agency of the Federal government of the United States, responsible for the nation's public list of space agencies....
 provided funding for the Breakthrough Propulsion Physics Program
Breakthrough Propulsion Physics Program

The Breakthrough Propulsion Physics Program is a research program which was funded from 1996 through 2002 by NASA, in the hope of studying various proposals for "revolutionary" methods of spacecraft propulsion which would require breakthroughs in physics before they could be realized, hence the name....
 from 1996 through 2002. This program studied a number of "far out" designs for space propulsion that were not receiving funding through normal university or commercial channels. Anti-gravity-like concepts were investigated under the name "diametric drive".

Empirical claims and commercial efforts


Anti-gravity devices are a common invention in the "alt" field, often requiring a completely new physics framework in order to work. Most of these devices rather obviously do not work, and are often parts of grander conspiracy theories
Conspiracy theory

A conspiracy theory alleges a coordinated group is, or was, secretly working to commit illegal or wrongful actions, including attempting to hide the existence of the group and its activities....
. However there have also been a number of commercial attempts to build such devices as well, and a small number of reports of anti-gravity-like effects in the scientific literature. As of 2007 none of them are widely accepted by the physics community.

Gyroscopic devices

H W Wallace Force Field Figure 4
Gyroscope
Gyroscope

A gyroscope is a device for measuring or maintaining orientation , based on the principles of angular momentum. The device is a spinning wheel or disk whose axle is free to take any orientation....
s produce a force when twisted that operates "out of plane" and can appear to lift themselves against gravity. Although this force is well understood to be illusory, even under Newtonian models, it has nevertheless generated numerous claims of anti-gravity devices and any number of patented devices. None of these devices have ever been demonstrated to work under controlled conditions, and have often become the subject of conspiracy theories as a result.

Perhaps the best known example is a series of patents issued to Henry William Wallace, an engineer at GE Aerospace in Valley Forge PA, and GE Re-Entry Systems in Philadelphia. He constructed devices that rapidly spun disks of brass
Brass

Brass is any alloy of copper and zinc; the proportions of zinc and copper can be varied to create a range of brasses with varying properties. In comparison, bronze is principally an alloy of copper and tin....
, a material made up largely of elements with a total half-integer nuclear spin. He claimed that by rapidly rotating a disk of such material, the nuclear spin became aligned, and as a result created a "gravitomagnetic" field in a fashion similar to the magnetic field created by the Barnett effect
Barnett Effect

The Barnett effect is the magnet of a ferromagnetic body when spun on its axis. The magnetization occurs parallel to the axis of spin. It was first reported by S....
.

Hayasaka and Takeuchi had reported weight decreases along the axis of a right spinning gyroscope. Tests of their claims by Nitschke and Wilmath yielded null results. A few years later, recommendations were made to conduct further tests.

Thomas Townsend Brown's gravitator

During the 1920s Thomas Townsend Brown
Thomas Townsend Brown

Thomas Townsend Brown was an United States physicist....
, a high-voltage experimenter, produced a device he called the "gravitator" which he claimed used an unknown force to produce anti-gravity effects by applying high voltages to materials with high dielectric
Dielectric

A dielectric is a nonconducting substance, i.e. an Insulator . The term was coined by William Whewell in response to a request from Michael Faraday....
 constants. Although it was claimed that the device operated outside of working mass
Working mass

Working mass is a mass against which a system operates in order to produce acceleration. All acceleration requires an exchange of momentum, which can be thought of as the "unit of movement"....
, Brown abandoned this work and moved on to produce a series of successful high-voltage devices in the following years.

The Biefeld-Brown effect nevertheless lives on. A 1956 analysis by the Gravity Research Group and by a technical writer, under the pen name of Intel (1956), claimed the Biefeld-Brown effect was the primary theory tested by the aerospace firms in the 1950s. It has remained a constant theme in the UFO field, and has recently been a topic of some discussion in this field under the name lifter
Ionocraft

An ionocraft or ion-propelled aircraft, commonly known as a lifter, is an electrohydrodynamic device to produce thrust in the air, without requiring any combustion or moving parts....
s. There appears to be a general understanding that the lifters require a working mass, air specifically (ion wind
Ion wind

Ion wind, ionic wind, or coronal wind is a stream of ionized fluid generated by a strong electric field. Francis Hauksbee, curator of instruments for the Royal Society of London, made the earliest report of electric wind in 1709....
), and that they do not demonstrate new physics.

Gravitoelectric coupling

The Russian researcher Eugene Podkletnov
Eugene Podkletnov

Dr Yevgeny Podkletnov is a Russian engineer, formerly affiliated with the Materials science Department at the Tampere University of Technology, Finland, who is best known for his controversial work on a so-called gravity shielding device....
 claims to have discovered experimenting with superconductors in 1995, that a fast rotating superconductor reduces the gravitational effect. All attempts of different physicists were in vain to reproduce Podkletnov's results.

In 1989, Ning Li, of the University of Alabama in Huntsville
University of Alabama in Huntsville

The University of Alabama in Huntsville is a state-supported, state university, coeducational university, located in Huntsville, Alabama, Alabama, United States....
 theoretically demonstrated how a time dependent magnetic field could cause the spins of the lattice ions in a superconductor to generate detectable gravitomagnetic and gravitoelectric fields. In 1999, Li and her team appeared in Popular Mechanics
Popular Mechanics

Popular Mechanics is an United States magazine devoted to science and technology. It was first published January 11, 1902 by H. H. Windsor, and has been owned since 1958 by the Hearst Corporation....
, claiming to have constructed a working prototype
Prototype

A prototype is an original type, form, or instance of something serving as a typical example, basis, or standard for other things of the same category....
 to generate what she described as "AC Gravity." No further evidence of this prototype has been offered.

Recent progression

The Institute for Gravity Research of the Göde Scientific Foundation has tried to reproduce different experiments which allegedly show an antigravity effect. All attempts to observe an antigravity effect have been unsuccessful. The foundation has offered a reward of one million Euros for a reproducible antigravity experiment.

Tajmar et al (2006 & 2007 & 2008)

A paper by Martin Tajmar
Martin Tajmar

Martin Tajmar is a research scientist and project manager in the Space Propulsion group at Austrian Research Centers. He has research interests in new space propulsion systems, and possible connections between gravity and superconductivity....
 et al in 2006 claims detection of an artificial gravitational field around a rotating superconductor, proportional to the angular acceleration of the superconductor. A subsequent paper claims to explain the phenomenon in terms of the nonzero cosmological constant. Neither the experimental results nor the theoretical explanation are widely accepted.

In July 2007, Graham et al of the , New Zealand, reported results from an attempt to test the same effect with a larger rotating superconductor. They report no indication of any effect within the measurement accuracy of the experiment. Given the conditions of the experiment, the Canterbury group conclude that if any such 'Tajmar' effect exists, it is at least 22 times smaller than predicted by Tajmar in 2006.

However, the last sentence of their paper states Our experimental results do not have the sensitivity to either confirm or refute these recent results. It must be pointed out Tajmar has since abandoned his theory but the outcome of his experiments still stands as shown in . Moreover, the discrepancy between the mass of Cooper pairs first measured in superconductors by Janet Tate et.al is a long-standing discrepancy. In , New Scientist, 2006-11-11 Janet Tate is quoted as saying The measurement has remained unexplained for the last 20 years. The discrepancy still remains unexplained and so do the anomalies reported in 2007 within the classical torques of the . Thus, we cannot yet rule out a gravito-magnetic effect. Tajmar's experiments need to be vindicated elsewhere.

Conventional effects that mimic anti-gravity effects


  • Magnetic levitation
    Magnetic levitation

    Magnetic levitation, maglev, or magnetic suspension is a method by which an object is levitation with no support other than magnetic fields....
     suspends an object against gravity by use of electromagnetic
    Electromagnetism

    Electromagnetism is the physics of the electromagnetic field, a field which exerts a force on Elementary particles with the property of electric charge and which is reciprocally affected by the presence and motion of such particles....
     forces. While visually impressive, gravitation itself functions normally in such devices. Various alleged anti-gravity devices may in reality work by electromagnetism
    Electromagnetism

    Electromagnetism is the physics of the electromagnetic field, a field which exerts a force on Elementary particles with the property of electric charge and which is reciprocally affected by the presence and motion of such particles....
    .


  • A tidal force
    Tidal force

    The tidal force is a secondary effect of the force of gravity and is responsible for the tides. It arises because the gravitational force exerted on one body by a second body is not constant across its diameter....
     causes objects to move along diverging paths near a massive body (such as a planet
    Planet

    A planet , as 2006 definition of planet by the International Astronomical Union , is a celestial body orbiting a star or Stellar evolution#Stellar remnants that is massive enough to be rounded by its own gravity, is not massive enough to cause thermonuclear fusion, and has cleared the neighbourhood of planetesimals....
     or star
    Star

    A star is a massive, luminous ball of Plasma that is held together by its own gravity. The nearest star to Earth is the Sun, which is the source of most of the energy on Earth....
    ), producing effects that seem like repulsion or disruptive forces when observed locally. This is not anti-gravity. In Newtonian mechanics, the tidal force is the effect of the larger object's gravitational force being different at the differing locations of the diverging bodies. Equivalently, in Einsteinian gravity, the tidal force is the effect of the diverging bodies following different paths in the negatively curved
    Curvature

    In mathematics, curvature refers to any of a number of loosely related concepts in different areas of geometry. Intuitively, curvature is the amount by which a geometric object deviates from being flat, or straight in the case of a line , but this is defined in different ways depending on the context....
     spacetime around the larger body.


  • Large amounts of normal matter can be used to produce a gravitational field that compensates for the effects of another gravitational field, though the entire assembly will still be attracted to the source of the larger field. Physicist Robert L. Forward
    Robert Forward

    Robert Lull Forward, commonly known as Robert L. Forward, was an United States physicist and science fiction writer. His fiction is noted for its scientific credibility, and uses many ideas developed during his work as an aerospace engineer....
     proposed using lumps of degenerate matter
    Degenerate matter

    Degenerate matter is matter which has such very high density that the dominant contribution to its pressure rises from the Pauli exclusion principle....
     to locally compensate for the tidal forces near a neutron star
    Neutron star

    A neutron star is a type of compact star that can result from the gravitational collapse of a massive star during a Type II supernova, Type Ib and Ic supernovae supernova event....
    .


  • Ionocraft
    Ionocraft

    An ionocraft or ion-propelled aircraft, commonly known as a lifter, is an electrohydrodynamic device to produce thrust in the air, without requiring any combustion or moving parts....
     has been claimed to defy gravity, while in fact they use a special type of Electrohydrodynamic thruster
    Electrohydrodynamic thruster

    EHD thruster stands for electrohydrodynamic thruster. This is the general and most appropriate term used for high voltage devices that propel air or other fluids, to achieve relative motion between the propulsion device and the propelled fluid....
     that use the Biefeld–Brown effect
    Biefeld–Brown effect

    The Biefeld?Brown effect is an effect that was discovered by Paul Alfred Biefeld and Thomas Townsend Brown . The effect is more widely referred to as electrohydrodynamics or sometimes electro-fluid-dynamics, a counterpart to the well-known magneto-hydrodynamics....
     to hover in the air. They do not function in a vacuum.


See also

  • Gravitational interaction of antimatter
    Gravitational interaction of antimatter

    The gravitational interaction of antimatter with matter or antimatter has not been conclusively observed by physicists. While the overwhelming consensus among physicists is that antimatter will attract both matter and antimatter at the same rate matter attracts matter , there is a strong desire to confirm this experimentally....
  • Artificial gravity
    Artificial gravity

    Artificial gravity is a simulation of gravitation in outer space or free-fall. Artificial gravity is desirable for long-term space travel for ease of mobility and to avoid the adverse health effects of weightlessness....
  • Burkhard Heim
    Burkhard Heim

    Burkhard Heim was a Germany theoretical physics. He devoted a large portion of his life to the pursuit of his unified field theory, Heim theory....
  • Exotic matter
    Exotic matter

    Exotic matter is a hypothetical concept of particle physics. It covers any material which violates one or more classical conditions or is not made of known Baryon....
  • Heim Theory
    Heim theory

    Heim theory is a collection of ideas about the fundamental laws of physics proposed by Burkhard Heim, and further developed by Walter Dr?scher and Jochem H?user.....
  • Searl Effect Generator
    Searl Effect Generator

    The Searl Effect Generator , invented by John Searl, is claimed to be an "open system energy converting device" which is "capable of converting ambient sources of energy to electrical power"....
  • Hutchison effect
  • Dean drive
    Dean drive

    The Dean drive is a device intended to be a reactionless drive that was invented by Norman L. Dean. Dean claimed that it was able to generate a uni-directional force, in violation of Newton's laws of motion....
  • The spindizzy
    Spindizzy

    The spindizzy is the nickname given to a fictional anti-gravity device invented by James Blish for his series Cities in Flight. The full name for the device is the Dillon-Wagoner Graviton Polarity Generator, though Senator Bliss Wagoner admits that he loathes the name 'for obvious reasons'....
     drive in the science fiction
    Science fiction

    Science fiction is a broad genre of fiction that often involves speculations based on current or future science or technology. Science fiction is found in books, art, television, films, games, theatre, and other media....
     novels of James Blish
    James Blish

    James Benjamin Blish was an United States author of fantasy fiction and science fiction. Blish also wrote literary criticism of science fiction using the pen-name William Atheling Jr....
  • Electrostatic levitation
    Electrostatic levitation

    Electrostatic levitation is the process of using an electric field to lift a electric charge object and counteract the effects of gravity. It was used, for instance, in Robert Millikan's oil drop experiment and is used to suspend the gyroscopes in Gravity Probe B during launch....
  • Magnetic levitation
    Magnetic levitation

    Magnetic levitation, maglev, or magnetic suspension is a method by which an object is levitation with no support other than magnetic fields....
  • Apergy
    Apergy

    Apergy is a fictitious form of anti-gravity energy described by Percy Greg in his sword and planet novel Across the Zodiac.It is also used by John Jacob Astor IV in his 1894 science fiction novel, A Journey in Other Worlds....


External links

  • , a NASA paper debunking a wide variety of gyroscopic (and related) devices