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Photon question?

Started by stevensrd1, May 27, 2011, 07:19:01 PM

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CompuTutor

Quote from: gravityblock on May 29, 2011, 06:19:19 AM
Ed did refer to creating lots of light with his generator, in his book titled "magnetic currents", and he did experiment with glass bottles.

Consider the dissectible capacitor vid,
after inner and outer plates are removed,
it becomes clear the charge is in the dielectric (glass...).

What if the plates are what is not needed, when it comes to light?

Reference:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ckpQW9sdUg

IotaYodi

QuoteWhat if the plates are what is not needed, when it comes to light?
Interesting thought.  Glass is naturally negative and has sodium. Wonder if molten glass could be charged up while forming.
What I know I know!
Its what I don't know that's a problem!

Hope

Quote from: gravityblock on May 28, 2011, 02:01:36 PM
Please note:  Everything highlighted in "bold" is a reference link.

Light is a bipolar force with both an attractive and repulsive component that can be controlled.  The discovery was made by splitting infrared light into two beams that each travel on a different length of silicon nanowire, called a waveguide. The two light beams became out of phase with one another, creating a push, or repulsive force, with an intensity that can be controlled; the more out of phase the two light beams, the stronger the force.  So, after we use the bipolar force of light, then the two beams could strike a solar panel for additional energy.  Please note, this bipolar force is at the nano-scale level.  I don't see why we can't amplify the light from the sun with a parabolic dish, then split the high intensity light beam at the focal point into two beams to increase the bipolar force of light so it can be used at the macro-scale level.

The Faraday effect causes left and right circularly polarized waves to propagate at slightly different speeds, a property known as circular birefringence. Since a linear polarization can be decomposed into two circularly polarized components, the effect of a relative phase shift, induced by the Faraday effect, is to rotate the orientation of a wave's linear polarization.  This can also be used to polarize and cause two light beams to become out of phase with each other in addition to the wave-guides.  I don't see why they both can't be used together to cause the two light beams to become more out-of-phase with each other to generate a stronger repulsive force.

An optical diode, is an optical component which allows the transmission of light in only one direction. It is typically used to prevent unwanted feedback into an optical oscillator, such as a laser cavity. The operation of the device depends on the Faraday effect (which in turn is produced by magneto-optic effect), which is used in the main component, the Faraday rotator.  A Faraday rotator is an optical device that rotates the polarization of light due to the Faraday effect, which in turn is based on a magneto-optic effect.

The Faraday rotator works because one polarization of the input light is in ferromagnetic resonance with the material which causes its phase velocity to be higher than the other.

The polarization dependent isolator, or Faraday isolator, is made of three parts, an input polarizer (polarized vertically), a Faraday rotator, and an output polarizer, called an analyzer (polarized at 45 degrees)

Light traveling in the forward direction becomes polarized vertically by the input polarizer. The Faraday rotator will rotate the polarization by 45 degrees. The analyzer then enables the light to be transmitted through the isolator.

Light traveling in the backward direction becomes polarized at 45 degrees by the analyzer. The Faraday rotator will again rotate the polarization by 45 degrees. This means the light is polarized horizontally (the rotation is sensitive to direction of propagation). Since the polarizer is vertically aligned, the light will be extinguished.

It might seem at first glance that a device that allows light to flow in only one direction would violate Kirchhoff's law and the second law of thermodynamics, by allowing light energy to flow from a cold object to a hot object and blocking it in the other direction, but the violation is avoided because the isolator must absorb (not reflect) the light from the hot object and will eventually re-radiate it to the cold one.  There may be a simple solution to this, "Optical wave-guiding using thermal gradients across homogeneous liquids in microfluidic channels".

The above publication describes the design and operation of a liquid-core liquid-cladding (L2) optical waveguide composed of a thermal gradient across a compositionally homogeneous liquid flowing in a microfluidic channel at low Reynolds number. Two streams of liquid at a higher temperature (the cladding) sandwich a stream of liquid at a lower temperature (the core). This temperature difference results in a contrast in refractive index across the width of the channel that is sufficient to guide light. The use of a single homogeneous liquid in this L2 system simplifies recycling, and facilitates closed-loop operation. Furthermore, with radiative and inline heating of the liquids, it should be possible to reconfigure this optical system with considerable flexibility.

Liquids, such as water, can be used as a waveguide for light. The solar death ray can do the heating of the liquids needed for this optical thermal gradient waveguide. By using two waveguides of a different length, then the two light beams will become out-of-phase with each other to create a repulsive force that can be controlled.

An alternative to using a parabolic dish, the Double Cylindrical Point Focus Principle (DCPF) could be used as an antenna.

If a person is creative, then the above concept could be designed and tested.

GB

This answers many things to me.....thank you thank you thank you.
As wavelength decay happens, elements change from one form to another to another and so on.  This may just mean that all elements have ALL the same duality and all the same characteristics in respect to each other but displayed differently due to their atomic makeup acting in respect to magnetic displacements. John Hutchinson (the unique) shows us what happens when two energies combine, the elements magnetic fields disrupt and repel its like atoms.  We have the key to gravity now.
So what will we do with this knowledge?  We can build a formula to chart reactions and learn how to manipulate matters.  What a threshold we are standing at!  LOL! If we think about using this on electric fields we can make it suddenly repel the charges that normally are attracted to each other.  Instantaneously we have great movement of each atom against the next, then we can turn off this disruption and the charge will once again move back together.  TaDA!!!  Solid state power generation.

Hope

Corning Gorilla Glass contains aluminum and has partials that can be charged and then aligned.

mscoffman


If you split light equally into two different beams you get half the
total energy in each beam. The interesting thing is if you combine
them and control their phase they can be made to create an
interference pattern. The interference pattern states that you are
combining waves. While the equation for photoreceptors says
you are combining packets (of EMF). This isn't resolved but the
dichotomy is accepted in quantum mechanics - the difference
between our macroscopic world view and nanoscopic regimes.

---

A laser - Light Amplification through the Stimulation of Emission
of Radiation, is caused by the synchronous reset of the electrons
around a ionized (pumped) matter due to other light already in
the optical cavity. These phase syncronous beams build up
until they overflow their cavity and their external beams do
not diverge as they do in a r^2 emf chaotic sphereical radiator.


---

A glass lens has a difference in the index of refraction that depends
on the color (frequency) of the light going though them, so color
collaminated lenses have a composition that varies through their
volumes. This can be done well in expensive lenses or done poorly,
and is very important in astronomy. Also fluoridated glass can be
used as a non-linear optical frequency multiplier either as
optical frequency doubler or tripler.

---

If you want an effect that "blows my/your mind" look at a UV
phosphorescent orange color such as that of a emergency
sign with the sun reflecting on it, over a distance with a pair
of binoculars. There becomes an orange haze around the
color area object the consistency of which seems defy
scientific explanation, completely inconsistent with any
other distortion in the rest of the image.


:S:MarkSCoffman