Read Secrets of Antigravity Propulsion Online

Authors: Ph.D. Paul A. LaViolette

Tags: #New Science

Secrets of Antigravity Propulsion (39 page)

Lazar’s diagram of the reactor depicts a conical structure at the bottom of the chamber that he identifies as the element 115 fuel source, which he says is made up of a stack of thin wafers.
In view of the element 115 fiasco, much of what he has described about the reactor should be discounted.
If there was such a microwave-emitting structure in the reactor chamber, it would be better construed as a solid-state oscillator similar to an IMPATT or Gunn diode.
Its enclosing hemispherical chamber and capping waveguide tube would then form the microwave amplifier duct.

We might guess this crystal oscillator was made of a material dense enough that it could give an unsuspecting person the impression that it was in fact made of an element having an atomic weight of 115.
For example, recall from chapter 4 the disclosure by black-project engineers of the development of very dense, radar-absorbing materials containing uranium.
Lazar says he was not involved in measuring the atomic mass of the material he worked with but only correlated the data taken by others who reportedly worked on the project before him.
These data, then, could have been “cooked” to give Lazar the impression that he was discovering something with an atomic weight of 115.
The trick apparently worked, because he wholeheartedly believed them.

Lazar commented that when the reactor was bench-tested with its waveguide tube removed and he was allowed to place his hand over its mouth, he could feel the pressure of the field, which he described as being similar to the repulsion one feels when two like poles of a magnet are brought together.
He said that they also played around with the repulsion field by bouncing golf balls off it.
The force that he refers to sounds very much like what Tesla says he felt from the radiant energy shocks discharged from his magnifying transmitter.
Podkletnov also says that he was able to feel the repulsive field generated by the momentary discharges of his gravity impulse beam.
However, both Tesla and Podkletnov were feeling the repulsive force of sawtooth-shaped waves produced by electron shock discharges.
Subquantum kinetics predicts that if these were positron shock discharges, they should instead have produced an attractive force.
If anything, Lazar’s hand should have been sucked into the reactor if it was actually emitting positron discharges.
His positron pulse claim is, in my opinion, misinformation that he is perhaps unwittingly disseminating.

To continue the story, Lazar said the gravity wave (i.e., microwave emission) generated in the reactor was piped into three “gravity amplifiers” (i.e., microwave amplifiers) located in the lower compartment of this vehicle, each amplifier measuring 2 feet in diameter and 4 feet in length (figure 9.6).
These were equally spaced from one another in a triad arrangement and could be swiveled to aim in any direction.
He said the gravity wave (electromagnetic microwave) from the reactor was of too low an amplitude to be effective for propulsion and that it became amplified in the gravity amplifiers into waves powerful enough to propel the craft.
Each of these gravity amplifiers would emit a microwave beam downward, which was used to buoy the craft upward.
The craft would sit on these beams and tend to bounce around on them in a flight mode he referred to as the “omicron configuration.”
He said the disc would move forward by focusing one or more of the beams behind it, which would cause the craft to fall forward.

More specifically, Lazar said the gravity amplifiers achieve their lifting force by sending out a microwave beam, the Gravity A wave, toward the Earth’s surface and by phase-shifting this wave relative to the microwave propagating up from the Earth, which he termed the “Gravity B wave.”
His description sounds a lot like that for a microwave phase-conjugate resonator, although described in very vague terms.
In other words, his outgoing Gravity A wave would correspond to the outgoing phase-conjugate microwave beam and his incoming Gravity B wave would correspond to the incoming ground-reflected probe beam, which would actually consist of microwaves that had previously originated from the disc’s microwave generator (its reactor).
The energy in outgoing A wave would be locked in phase with the incoming ground-reflected B wave and would eventually retrace the B wave’s scattering path back to the beam’s ground target point and then back to the vehicle’s central source oscillator.
As in the Project Skyvault craft, these incoming and outgoing beams would be focused by some sort of microwave lens.

Figure 9.6.
One of the gravity amplifiers.
Based on Robert
Lazar’s description.
(After P.
Potter)

Clearly, considering the controversy surrounding the veracity of Lazar’s statements, it is difficult to pick out fact from fiction.
All we can say is that many features that he describes bear a strong resemblance to the Project Skyvault technology.
Moreover, we are compelled to accept that the Sport Model or something like it exists since many people claim to have seen from a great distance some sort of unusual levitating craft being test-flown in the vicinity of Area 51.
Consequently, to understand how this craft might work, it makes more sense if we disregard the gravity wave mumbo jumbo and reframe Lazar’s dialogue in terms of what is already known about microwave phase conjugation.

The gravity amplifier would be the equivalent of the mixer diode cavity in the Skyvault vehicle.
Like the Skyvault mixer cavity, each such amplifier is reportedly energized by microwaves from the craft’s central microwave source, that is, its reactor and waveguide resonator.
Provided that each gravity amplifier contains a polarized dielectric medium, these piped-in microwaves would serve as pump beams, which would interact with the probe beam entering the amplifier (Lazar’s gravity B wave) to generate a holographic grating pattern in the dielectric.
The pump beams would then interact with the dielectric’s grating pattern to produce an outgoing microwave beam that would be the phase conjugate of the incoming probe beam.
In describing the amplifiers, Lazar makes no mention of any internal dielectric but does say they contain a series of plates.
Perhaps these are dielectrics.

Lazar’s gravity amplifiers, then, most likely function as phase-conjugate resonators that allow microwaves from the craft’s central microwave source to self-amplify and create powerful soliton faser beams between the craft’s mixer diodes and the ground.
Provided that the microwaves consist of sawtoothlike shock discharge waveforms, as one may infer from Lazar’s description, the soliton beams should create a repulsive force both on their ground surface target and on the craft, which would tend to buoy the craft upward.

Lazar makes a number of statements concerning the nature of gravity that seem to be nonsense and that some have had issues with.
47
For example, he contends that the two gravity waves the craft phases relative to each other to obtain its propulsion, the Gravity A and Gravity B waves, are actually the results of two very different types of gravity.
He identifies the Gravity A wave with the strong nuclear force, the very short-range force that binds protons and neutrons together in the atomic nucleus, and claims that only through the element 115-to-116 antimatter reaction is it possible to release this in the form of a traveling wave having a specific wavelength in the microwave frequency range.
He identifies the Gravity B wave with the gravitational force of standard physics, that is, the field that causes celestial bodies to attract one another.

However, to suggest there are two types of gravity and to identify one of them with the strong force sounds absurd, even to the most open-minded of physicists.
The idea has no basis in standard physics, nor is such a concept compatible with subquantum kinetics.
In subquantum kinetics, nuclear binding arises because nucleons have wavelike electrostatic potential fields in their cores that interlock with one another when the particles are in close proximity, that is, close enough to form an atomic nucleus.
This subquantum kinetics model of the strong force has been confirmed by particle-scattering experiments.
48
Lazar, however, offers no experimental evidence to support his odd theory of gravity except vague references to the operation of a flying saucer kept in the supersecret S-4 test facility.
Considering that one key aspect of his theory has now been disproved, his claim that the Gravity A wave is produced by the spontaneous positron decay of element 116, we may conclude that his gravity wave theory should not be taken seriously or, at least, we should regard it as disinformation that was purposely disseminated by black-project security staff.
Along these same lines, we may safely disregard Lazar’s statements that the Gravity A wave entering the craft’s gravity amplifiers bends space around the disc as it becomes amplified.

Lazar claims that gravity, as observed in nature, which he refers to as the Gravity B field, is in essence electromagnetic and that it specifically involves oscillations in the microwave range.
This again is nonsense, apparently interjected to create confusion.
The Earth’s gravitational field does not oscillate at microwave frequencies.
If it did, this would have been widely known to the physics community, since various gravity wave antenna experiments have been conducted over the past thirty-five years, and if we include Brown’s gravitoelectric detectors, this work would date back more than seventy years.
Lazar’s assertion of the Gravity B wave being electromagnetic in character and oscillating at microwave frequencies would make better sense if it was not part of the Earth’s natural gravity field, but instead consisted of gravity microwaves that originated from the craft itself; that is, if they radiated from its central reactor, or wave amplifier unit, and then reflected from the ground and happened to return to the craft.
Lazar reports that before beginning work on the Sport Model, he was allowed to watch a demonstration of it taking off, ascending about 30 feet, moving to the left and right, and then returning to the ground.
He says that just prior to and during its liftoff, it gave off a hissing sound similar to that coming from the coronal discharge from a high-voltage line.
Its bottom gave off a blue glow, which he says was due to air atoms being excited by the craft’s electromagnetic emissions.
Again, these characteristics seem to suggest a field propulsion technique similar to the one used in Project Skyvault.

Lazar relates that the gravity wave generators operate in two modes—the omicron and delta configurations.
In the omicron configuration, mentioned earlier, one or more generators (microwave mixers) are directed downward to form a supporting beam for the craft (see figure 9.7a).
In the delta configuration (see figure 9.7b), all three beams are intersected at a distant location to achieve propulsion relative to that intersection region, which measures on the order of a meter in diameter.
The beams then are said to develop an attractive force, rather than a repulsive force, which causes the craft to suddenly jump to that location.
Lazar maintains that the beams gravitationally warp space-time at the intersection zone and that the resulting warping is what pulls the spacecraft toward that point.
Here it seems he relies on standard general relativity concepts while pursuing an unusual theory of gravitation that has nothing to do with general relativity.
His critics, however, rightly contest that if space-time was indeed warped at that distant location to the extent Lazar claims, every other object in the vicinity of that intersection zone should also be suddenly sucked in, as though toward a miniature black hole, which would result in a major collisional catastrophe.
So again we encounter a baloney factor that appears to cast a shadow over the whole matter.
Also, note that Lazar does not invoke general relativity concepts in explaining the beam repulsion effect produced in the omicron configuration, probably because standard general relativity theory does not allow gravitational repulsion.

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