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Overunity Machines Forum



How to create a monopole magnet!

Started by gravityblock, July 30, 2009, 11:00:33 AM

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0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.

gravityblock

Short answer without the theory:  We need to align the electron's where both their spins are aligned and their rotations are in sync with each other, in order for both their electric and magnetic fields to be additive.


The long answer with the theory:

In a metal, the electron's spins are randomly aligned to have a different spin, thus it has a zero net magnetic field on average.  In a magnet, the electron's are aligned to have the same spin, thus a net magnetic field.  We know the magnetic field is 90 degrees to the electric field.  We know a moving charge induces a magnetic field.  We know a changing magnetic field induces a moving charge.

When the electron's are aligned to have the same spin, this does not mean the electron's magnetic and electric fields are in sync with each other.  Let's say electron A and electron B have the same spin.  Electron A will have an electric field at the 12 and 6 o'clock positions and will have a magnetic field at the 9 and 3 o'clock positions, while Electron B will be electric at the 9 and 3 o'clock positions and be magnetic at the 12 and 6 o'clock positions.  When one electron is electric then the other electron will be magnetic 180 degrees to it.  In this example it is easy to see how the magnetic fields are additive to each other, thus increasing the net magnetic fields.

If you have 3 electron's that are aligned with the same spin, then their electric and magnetic fields will be 120 degrees to each other. 4 electron's would be 90 degrees, 5 = 72, 6 = 60, to infinity.  The electron's electric and magnetic fields being out of sync with each other causes the magnetic field lines to have a return path that is on the other side of the magnet.

We need to align the electron's where both their spins are aligned and in sync with each other.  This will give us a monopole magnet since their would be no return path to the other side.  Since their would be no return path, the electric fields would be additive also.  The monopole magnet is both a gravity and an anti-gravity magnet that will react not only to metals and other magnets, but to all materials.  When the electron's spins are CW and rotations are in sync with each other, then this may be a gravity magnet, it will attract mass.  A CCW spin and rotation in sync, would then be an anti-gravity magnet, it will repel mass.

If this theory is good, then the next question is how to get their electric and magnetic fields to be in sync with each other?


Thanks,

GB
Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, and expecting a different result.

God will confuse the wise with the simplest things of this world.  He will catch the wise in their own craftiness.

gyulasun

Hi,

Perhaps by creating a suitablely oriented static electric field around this woud-be monopole magnet? Or making DC current flow inside in it? Or both? lol

Gyula

gravityblock

Quote from: gyulasun on July 30, 2009, 03:34:43 PM
Hi,

Perhaps by creating a suitablely oriented static electric field around this woud-be monopole magnet? Or making DC current flow inside in it? Or both? lol

Gyula

I've been thinking about your idea.  An external magnetic field is used to align the spins of the electrons as the molten metal slowly cools.  An internal static electric field may align the electrons rotation where they are in sync with each other as the molten metal slowly cools.  This is interesting.

Thanks,


Gb
Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, and expecting a different result.

God will confuse the wise with the simplest things of this world.  He will catch the wise in their own craftiness.

Dave45

Quote from: gravityblock on July 31, 2009, 04:24:26 AM
I've been thinking about your idea.  An external magnetic field is used to align the spins of the electrons as the molten metal slowly cools.  An internal static electric field may align the electrons rotation where they are in sync with each other as the molten metal slowly cools.  This is interesting.

Thanks,


Gb

I believe it was Keely who done this very thing but he subjected the hot metal to vibrations and cooled them slowly in sand.

onthecuttingedge2005

although there may be a theoretical monopole that has never been observed there are ways to produce 'virtual' monopole effects.

if you take a magnet and spin it in 4 planes of angular momentum it would act as a single magnetic field shell at very high velocities of both X,Y,Z,N planes.

I don't know if you can picture it but the magnet would be spinning so fast in XYZN planes that it would become very difficult to see except the very center of the magnets spin axis.

although this does not solve the monopole mystery it would give you something to play around with until it is found.

Jerry ;)