eColon : THE MagaBlog
Emergency September 11
Edition ( ! )
Time-Sensitive Information :
Best if used by 9-10-2001
Broken News :--
" D " Is For ...
d'Angelo : Interatomic Motor // Daraio : Sonic Bullets /
Dardik : SuperWave Cold Fusion // Davalos : Electroporation vs
Cancer //
Davey : Sonic Resonance Boiler // Davidovitch :
Electro-Orthodontia // Davidovitz : Geopolymers // Davis
: Non-Inductive Resistor //
Dean : Inertial Drive // DeKreuk : Water Purification // DeLand
: Frost Guard // DeLouise : Airplane // Denne : Wireless Motor
//
&c ... PLUS :
An Inter-Demental Breakthrough !
Do You Dare Enter -- ? --
The World of Null-D
You are Visitor # since 14
August 2015
" D " Is
For ...
* D'ANGELO, Padre
Antonio : Interatomic Ion
Motor ~ Patented
by a Jesuit priest, & demonstrated to generate many
times more power than input (1928).
Free
Energy you can Believe in :
He would Inquisition you, but not unnecessarily
Lie ...
* DARAIO,
Chiaro : Sonic Bullets
~ Novel system generates powerful
nonlinear pulses w/ applications in non-invasive
surgery, weapons, &c.
* DARDIK : SuperWave Cold Fusion ~ Proven CF, "as seen on TV" ( 60
Minutes, Apr. 20 '09 ).
* DAVALOS, Rafael & RUBISKY, Boris :
Irreversible ElectroPoration vs Cancer ~ Pulsed
electricity kills cancer without harm
to healthy cells; article &
patents.
* DAVEY, Peter : Sonic Resonance Boiler
~ Simple design boils water,
apparently defies laws of physics.
* DAVIDOVITCH,
Zeev : Electro-Orthodontia ~ Straighten
teeth in 1/2 time with electric
stimulation.
*
DAVIDOVITS,
Joseph : Geopolymers ~ Mineral
polymers superior to concrete/cement; allegedly
the Great Pyramids of Egypt were built by pouring
dissolved limestone. Biography, articles, patents.
* DAVIS,
Richard : Non-Inductive
Resistor ~ Moebius loop resistor
is non-inductive, non-reactive,
maintains the time constant, can be
folded into any shape. Most useful for
UHF.
*
DEAN : Inertial Drive
~ The
famous "Dean Drive", patented, demonstrated, now
dormant. &: Dean Drive ( II )
* DeGEUS,
Arie : Zero Point Energy
Generators ~ Energy plus transmutations. He was apparently
suicided for this.
* DE KREUK :
Nereda Water Purification ~ Aerobic granular sludge
purifies water in 1 reactor in 1/4 of the space for
30% less energy used by conventional methods.
* DeLAND : Frost Guard ~ A simple electroculture method to
prevent frost damage to crops.
* DeLOUISE, Joseph : 'DaVinci Vision' Airplane
~ Psychic dream-inspired design
reinvents & flies itself. ( Note the
similarity to CARR : Coanda Effect Internal
Wing )
Budda-Budda !! Takka-Takka !! Vip ! Ping ! Pow ! Bang ! Wham
! Bam ! Blam !
* DENNE : Planar Wireless Motor ~ "The most significant improvement
in electromagnetic machine design in 150 years" --
patterned laminations replace copper wire.
* DePALMA, Bruce : N-Machine ~ Development of the Faraday
Unipolar Dynamo as a free energy generator: (1)
"Extraction of Electrical Energy Directly from
Space: The N-Machine"; (2) "Gravity & The
Spinning Ball Experiment"; (3) "Understanding the
Dropping of the Spinning Ball Experiment". See also KINCHELOE & TEWARI
& TROMBLY...
* DePALMA,
Bruce : Equivalence Engine ~ From
the inventor of the N-Machine : the Sinusoidal Torque
Generator -- "A torsion pendulum excited at the nodal
point. Power is taken from the end in motion".
* DePINHO, Ronald :
Age Reversal ~ Stunning effect
achieved by control of
telomerase gene.
* Desalination Patents ~
Potable water from saline.
* DeSEVERSKY,
Major : Ionocraft ~ The famous Ionocraft, propelled by
the ion wind effect ( Nowadays called 'Lifters' ).
Budda-Budda !! Takka-Takka !! Vip ! Ping ! Pow ! Bang ! Wham
! Bam ! Blam !
* Dew Pond
Construction ~ Collect
atmospheric humidity for millenia
: Details & photos.
* DiPIETRO,
Angelo : Compressed Air Rotary Engine ~ Nearly
100% efficient, compact, light weight (29 lbs); 6
expansion chambers and pivoting dividers move a
rotary piston. Fits directly to a wheel, produces
no exhaust. High power, few moving parts.
* DIRCKS : Perpetuum
Mobile ~
The definitive 1861 compilation : 3 centuries of
attempts at self-motive power.
* DJUREK,
Daniijel : Room-T Superconductor ~ Simple, patented room-T
superconductivity.
* DOBLER, Paul
: Telluric Radiation Photography ~ A simple method for
photography of underground watercourses, &
apparatus for artifical generation of the
radiation ( See also : BLONDLOT / N-Rays ).
* DOMENJOZ,
John : Parachute Airplane ~ A unique
powered semi-rigid parachute
design.
Budda-Budda !! Takka-Takka !! Vip ! Ping ! Pow ! Bang ! Wham
! Bam ! Blam !
* DOMOKOS, Gabor / VARKONYI, Peter : Gomboc ~
The 1st self-righting form (
mono-monostatic ).
* DOTTO, Giani :
Diamagnetic Levitation ~ And healing of cancer...
articles & patent.
* DOTTO, G. : Rotary Engine ~ 400 HP in 36 kg, no ignition
system.
* DOUGAL : Infrared Therapy ~
* DUDGEON, E. : Growing Crops
& Plants by Electricity ~ Details
practical methods of electroculture ( PDF ).
* DUDLEY : Electric-Field Rocket ~ Experiments with electrified
rockets, claimed up to 400% increased
altitude.
* DUFES
:
Bioactive Polymers vs. Cancer ~
* DUNAEVSKIJ,
Samuil : Steam Engine ~ Claims
near-perfect efficiency ...
* DURNIN,
Steve : Infinitely Variable Transmission ~ Elegant,
simple, patented, demonstrated.
* DYE, Tony :
Dexpressor ~ Waste
engine heats drives pump,
reduces engine load up to 50%.
* DYKE, Hartford v. : Silent Weapons for
Quiet Wars *~ "A
politically biased technical instruction
manual on how to justify, how to
selectively survive, human animal
husbandry before the need for animal
husbandry becomes unstably critical..." Mr
van Dyke has been disappeared into the
federal prison system...
" D " Is For ...
Deadly Disgusting Dietary Digestion ...
http://www.naturalnews.com/040727_GMO_feed_severe_inflammation_pig_stomachs.html
A new study led by Dr. Judy Carman : pigs fed a diet of
genetically engineered soy and corn showed a 267% increase in
severe stomach inflammation compared to those fed non-GMO
diets. In males, the difference was even more pronounced: a
400% increase. (For the record, most autistic children are
males, and nearly all of them have severe intestinal
inflammation.)
The study was conducted on 168 young pigs on an authentic farm
environment and was carried out over a 23-week period by eight
researchers across Australia and the USA. The lead researcher,
Dr. Judy Carman, is from the Institute of Health and
Environmental Research in Kensington Park, Australia. The
study has now been published in the Journal of Organic
Systems, a peer-reviewed science journal.' (
http://www.organic-systems.org/journal/81/8106.pdf )
The study is the first to show what appears to
be a direct connection between the ingestion of GMO animal
feed and measurable damage to the stomachs of those animals.
Tests also showed abnormally high uterine weights of animals
fed the GMO diets, raising further questions about the
possibility of GMOs causing reproductive organ damage.
Proponents of corporate-dominated GMO plant science quickly
attacked the study, announcing that in their own minds, there
is no such thing as any evidence linking GMOs to biological
harm in any animals whatsoever. And they are determined to
continue to believe that, even if it means selectively
ignoring the increasingly profound and undeniable tidal wave
of scientific studies that repeatedly show GMOs to be linked
with severe organ damage, cancer tumors and premature death.
The study was jointly announced by GM Watch and Sustainable
Pulse.
(
http://www.gmwatch.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=14900:evidence-of-gmo-harm-in-pig-study
)
(
http://sustainablepulse.com/2013/06/11/evidence-of-gmo-harm-in-pig-study
)
Lead author of the study Dr. Judy Carman stated, "We found
these adverse effects when we fed the animals a mixture of
crops containing three GM genes and the GM proteins that these
genes produce. Yet no food regulator anywhere in the world
requires a safety assessment for the possible toxic effects of
mixtures. Our results provide clear evidence that regulators
need to safety assess GM crops containing mixtures of GM
genes, regardless of whether those genes occur in the one GM
plant or in a mixture of GM plants eaten in the same meal,
even if regulators have already assessed GM plants containing
single GM genes in the mixture."
The following photo shows one of the pig intestines fed a
non-GMO diet vs. a pig intestine fed a GMO diet. As you can
see from the photo, the pig fed the GMO diet suffered severe
inflammation of the stomach:
Yet more evidence that GMOs damage mammals
The study adds to the weight of scientific evidence from
others studies which show that rats fed a diet of GMOs grow
horrifying cancer tumors and suffer premature death.
A scientific study published last year concluded that eating
genetically modified corn (GM corn) and consuming trace levels
of Monsanto's Roundup herbicide was linked with rats
developing shockingly large tumors, widespread organ damage,
and premature death.
That study was also criticized by corporate GMO trolls who
argued that scientists should not show pictures of rats with
large cancer tumors caused by GMOs because the pictures scare
consumers into being afraid of GMOs.
Here are some of the pictures they don't want you to see,
taken right from the public announcement of the study:
Yummy, yummy, yummy,
I've got Love in my Tummy ...
... But none in my 'Nads :
http://blog.seattlepi.com/videoblogging/2013/06/14/evidence-of-gmo-harm-in-pig-study-video-interview-with-farmer-howard-vlieger/
Jun 14, 2013
Video
Interview With Farmer Howard Vlieger ... Pigs
All Sterile From GMO Corn ...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3175LUxMcc?
WWGF News with Howard Vlieger
concerning the Pig Study ...
DO NOT WORRY !
THESE STUDIES ARE SEVERELY FLAWED !
REMEMBER :
ONLY MONSANTO CAN SAVE THE CHILDREN !
SAVE THE CHILDREN !
SAVE MONSANTO !
" D " Is For ...
DONETSKIJ, Vladislav &
BESHNOV, Gennadij
Russian Patent 2317699
Plant Treatment Activator
Plant treatment activator has sprayer connected with working
chamber formed as spiral-shaped pipe made from diamagnetic
material. Inlet end of spiral-shaped pipe is connected through
valve to outlet end of pump for feeding of nutrient solution from
acumulating reservoir. Working chamber consists of two flat
tubular spirals of opposite winding directions, with leading ends
of said spirals being connected through branch pipe. Flat
spiral-wound inducer of single winding direction is located
between said leading ends. Ends of windings are connected to
output of current pulse generator. Flat inducer winding is made in
the form of two flat spirals of single winding direction made from
current-onductive wires. Spirals are positioned atr opposite sies
of dielectric material substrate, leading ends of spirals being
connected together using current-conductive web.
Effect : Improves nutient properties of solutions for plants.
" D " Is For ...
DAM, Henrik, et al: UV-Light Emitting Surfaces
sciencenordic.com
10 September 2012
Scientists reinvent light
by
Kristian Sjøgren
A new method enables scientists to create large, inexpensive and
flexible surfaces that can emit light in the same way as an OLED
TV screen. This could result in luminous clothes, glowing
wallpaper and even radiant cereal packets.
Scientists have come up with a method for creating light-emitting
surfaces using method that’s similar to the one used for printing
newspapers. The picture shows flexible light sheets fabricated
using the so-called roll-to-roll coating method.
Genesis 1:3 – And God said, "let there be light,” and there was
light.
Now Nordic scientists are invading God’s turf by reinventing
light.
Researchers from the Technical University of Denmark (DTU),
together with Swedish colleagues, have devised a new and simple
method for creating luminous surfaces with LECs (Light-emitting
Electrochemical Cells).
The new surfaces are flexible, inexpensive and can be produced in
great sizes.
This could revolutionise the future and give light in places we
would normally never have thought possible.
“What’s new about our invention is that we can fabricate
light-emitting devices using roll-to-roll coating methods, which
are similar to the way newspapers are produced,” says Henrik Friis
Dam, a PhD student at DTU Energy Conversion, who together with
Swedish colleagues invented the new method.
“This makes the production of large light-emitting surfaces
cheaper than could ever be achieved with e.g. OLED, which is used
in some types of TV screens.”
The invention has been published in the journal Nature
Communications.
LEC can make clothes glow
Due to its low production costs and its potentially unlimited
size, surfaces with LEC can be used for rethinking the use of
light.
OLEDs are a variant of light-emitting diodes (LEDs), in which the
top layer is a thin organic layer consisting of compounds of
carbon, rather than an actual diode (pictured). This means that
OLEDs can be made much thinner than is possible with LED. LED was
introduced in TVs in 2009, but TV manufacturers have already
started working on the next generation of displays with OLED,
which provide a significantly improved viewer experience on a
paper-thin TV.
The researchers reckon that LECs can for instance be used to make
glowing wallpaper and radiant traffic signs.
It’s also conceivable that LECs can be used for making luminous
clothing or to light up the inside of e.g. cereal packets,
enabling people to see the contents in the dark.
“With LEC, we can create completely new kinds of indoor and
outdoor lighting. It’s also cheap and environmentally friendly to
manufacture,” says Dam.
LEC overtakes OLED on the inside
It’s long been hoped that the size of OLEDs (Organic Light
Emitting Diodes) could be scaled up from television size to
something much bigger.
There has been no shortage of attempts to do so, but so far all
attempts have failed. The problem with OLEDs is that they are
costly and difficult to fabricate.
The materials used for producing OLEDs are sensitive to substances
such as air and water, which is why OLEDs invariably depend on the
use of one or more time- and energy-consuming process steps under
vacuum.
The OLEDs also depend on an extremely controlled and uniform
thickness to function.
Against this background, it is natural to replace OLED with
something new and less sensitive, say the researchers.
LEC can replace OLED
Unlike OLEDs, LECs are notably less sensitive to thickness, oxygen
and water. This means that LECs can be produced relatively easily
and cheaply using the same technique used for printing newspapers
– the so-called roll-to-roll coating method.
LEC will be replacing OLED in future applications where size and
price are important parameters – maybe as early as five to ten
years from now.
Henrik Friis Dam
“With the roll-to-roll method, a liquid runs out of a crack down
on the material you want to print it on.
This could for instance be a transparent plastic sheet,” says Dam.
“Since LEC screens don’t depend on the thickness in the same way
as OLEDs do, much less precision is required in the manufacturing
of it.”
Successful trials, but some way yet to go
The researchers have already put their new method to the test, and
they have succeeded in creating luminous plastic.
However, with a pixel size of 2 x 2 mm and a unit size of 1 x 4
cm, we shouldn’t expect to see glowing wallpaper in the immediate
future.
”I admit that our efficiency is not yet ideal. My Swedish
colleagues are continuing to improve the resolution, size and
efficiency, but we’ve shown that it’s possible.
“LEC will be replacing OLED in future applications where size and
price are important parameters – maybe as early as five to ten
years from now,” says Dam.
http://www.nature.com/ncomms/journal/v3/n8/full/ncomms2002.html
doi: 10.1038/ncomms2002
Ambient fabrication of flexible and
large-area organic light-emitting devices using slot-die
coating
Welcome to
The World of Null-D
Abanda in Speranza, Voi ce Entrate
FARWELL, Robert : Glass-Making Machine
http://www.expressandstar.com/pictures/2010/09/08/an-invention-in-a-glass-of-its-own/
8 September 2010
An invention in a glass of it’s own
Now Robert is putting all his energies into the 'Garden Shed Glass
Blower' machine, which he invented this year.
His boundless enthusiasm and madcap ideas have gained him a
reputation as an eccentric.
But Robert Merlyn Farwell, aged 63, believes one day he will come
up with an invention which will change the world.
For years Mr Farwell, of Parkfield Road, Stourbridge, has toiled
away in his self-built workshop, which he calls “Camalot Castle.”
It is like a miniature castle and often attracts the attention of
passers-by. Inside Mr Farwell has been working on projects
including a water-powered engine and a new kind of ECG machine.
Until now, none of them has been taken up by companies. He said:
“I just love inventing. I thrive on coming up with solutions to
problems.”
His varied career has included appearances as an extra in TV shows
such as Coronation Street and Boon.
Mr Farwell also set up a business called Wizard Merlyn’s Costume
Hire in Church Street, Stourbridge, in the 1980s.
His talents also extend to magic, and he spent summer seasons in
Clacton in the 1970s as a children’s entertainer.
He said: “I’ve certainly had a varied career.
“I know I’m a bit eccentric but there’s a lot more to me than just
inventing.”
His mother, Gladys, gave him his middle name after visiting a
fortune teller while she was pregnant.
The fortune teller told her that if she called him Merlyn she
would “see his name in lights.”
Mr Farwell’s latest innovation is a piece of equipment which he
says will “revolutionise” the glass-making industry.
The ‘garden shed glass maker’ uses a fraction of the energy of
conventional furnaces and could save manufacturers thousands of
pounds, he claims.
It is also made using a new thermal material which Mr Farwell has
developed.
This latest invention has been used during the International
Festival of Glass at the Ruskin Glass Centre in Wollaston Road.
Glass makers at the event “loved” the machine, he
said. If demand is there, he will move into a factory and
start mass producing them.
The equipment is made using a material which Mr Farwell calls
“Merlyn’s Low Therm.”.
Though he will not reveal how he developed the material, he claims
it stops heat being lost from the equipment.
He said: “It doesn’t absorb heat – it just bounces it off.
“I’m not telling anyone how I made it, though, it’s my creation.”
The machine costs 65p an hour to run, which is more than 80 per
cent cheaper than furnaces used in the industry.
Mr Farwell, a father-of-five, was commissioned by Richard Golding
of Okra Glass to help with a refit to the glasshouse at the Ruskin
Centre.
He has created a new glory hole – a furnace used as part of the
glass-making operation – for the centre.
Then Mr Farwell developed the design into a contraption which
creates glass shapes in three stages.
A furnace melts small pieces of glass, which are then put on the
end of a rod and turned in the glory hole at about 1,000 degrees
fahrenheit, to create the desired shape.
The shape is then put in a leer, or oven, to slowly form and cool
down. The equipment costs £8,000, whereas the three pieces of
machinery separately would cost at least £50,000.
He said: “This could revolutionise the glass industry.
“This is the area for glass and something like this will reduce
costs and be much more energy-efficient.”
Mr Farwell’s first job on leaving school at 15 was at Tudor
Crystal in Stourbridge and he has gone full circle by returning to
the industry.
After that he worked installed ventilation systems in machinery at
factories across the Midlands, including Land Rover and British
Aerospace.
Though he is frustrated that his inventions have not caught the
imaginations of bosses at commercial firms, he has vowed to
continue working on ideas.
He says the ‘Easy ECG’ machine, which measure a person’s heart
rate through their fingers, gives a more accurate reading than
equipment used in the NHS.
A person can put their two forefingers in the sensor and, seconds
later, the heart reading appears on a computer screen.
He said: “They would never take it on in the NHS because it would
undermine everything they have done so far.”
The workshop in his drive took him a year to build with his son,
Stefan in 1995.
It has the words ‘Camalot Castle’ spelt out in cats eyes which
light up when people drive past at night.
After years of work, Mr Farwell now believes the glass making
machine is an idea which can be marketed and become a commercial
success.
He added: “Inventors thrive on problems, with this one I really
think I could make a difference.”
http://english.pravda.ru/health/18-11-2010/115846-magnesium_can_stop_blindness-0/
18.11.2010
Magnesium can stop blindness
Food rich in magnesium reduced the risk of developing diabetic
retinopathy, glaucoma and cataracts. Also helps to combat aging
and PMS.
The food of the Brazilian is all wrong. Only 17% of the population
consume the 400 grams recommended by WHO (World Health
Organization) of fruits, vegetables and greens, as surveyed by the
Ministry of Health. Outcome: no magnesium in our diet that
protects the eyes and carries out more 300 vital metabolic
functions.
Just to give you an idea, a recent study published in the British
Medical Journal shows that eating an extra portion and a half of
green vegetables, an important source of magnesium, reduces by 14%
the risk of contracting diabetes. A meta-analysis at the Institute
of Metabolic Science in Cambridge (UK) shows that a diet rich in
magnesium lowers blood pressure and the level of glucose in the
blood. Therefore, it may deter the development of diabetic
retinopathy, a major cause of blindness.
According to the Institute ophthalmologists, Penido Burnier and
Leoncio Queiroz Neto, the disease affects 75% of the 10 million
Brazilians who are diabetic and in most cases leads to loss of
vision. Although studies are not conclusive, the expert claims
that the nutrient is essential for eye health. For example, he
says, it acts as a blocker of calcium deposits on the inner walls
of arteries. "These deposits cause the formation of neovessels
that hinder the nutrition of the retina and leads to the death of
its cells, the main characteristic of diabetic retinopathy" he
explains. In addition to preventing calcification of arteries and
vessels, he highlights, magnesium hinders the production of a
potent vasoconstrictor, endothelin-1. So, those who have a diet
low in magnesium are more likely to contract hypertension and
primary open-angle glaucoma, due to the lower blood flow to the
head of the optic nerve.
The problems of nutritional deficiency do not stop there. The
expert says that magnesium helps the absorption of vitamins E, C
and B, essential nutrients for the health of the ocular tissues
and other organs. It also protects against oxidative stress that
can cause early cataracts, serious skin aging and the symptoms of
PMS (premenstrual tension) among women, he says.
Signs of Deficiency and Sources
The main signs of magnesium deficit are listed by the physician:
Tremor in hands or eyelids // Cramping and involuntary movements
in the face // Insomnia // Weakness // Tachycardia // Loss of
appetite, nausea or vomiting.
He says these discomforts do not appear simultaneously and may
still be associated with other health concerms. Adopting
supplementation on your own, should not even be considered.
Queiroz Neto explains that the absorption of magnesium and calcium
are compete. Therefore, consumption must be combined. Moreover,
supplementation requires medical supervision because excess can
cause drops in blood pressure, changes in bone calcification and
respiratory problems.
The main sources of magnesium are: leafy greens, seafood, nuts and
whole grains.
Diabetic retinopathy is seen only in its advanced stages.
There are no symptoms in its early stages. Diabetic retinopathy is
the death of retinal cells, an ocular membrane eye where images
are processed. The specialist says that half of the patients
seeking their first consultation already have their visual acuity
significantly compromised. The problem, he says, is that you
cannot recover lost vision. To stop the evolution, it can be
treated with laser applications for drying neovascularization,
administration of anti-inflammatory drugs or surgery in more
advanced cases.
Half of the glaucomatous lose vision in one eye.
The glaucoma is also asymptomatic. This makes the those affected
have similar behavior to that of patients affected by diabetic
retinopathy.
A disease characterized by loss of visual field is the second
leading cause of blindness worldwide. The doctor says that the
difficulty occurs when the outflow of aqueous humor, the fluid
that fills the eyeball, causes the death of cells in the retina
and optic nerve head. "It is common in glaucomatous to make their
first visit after having lost sight in one eye or half of the
axioms of the optic nerve that are unrecoverable" he says.
Treatment is done with eyedrops, laser applications and,
ultimately, surgery.
Cataracts can be associated with habits
Cataracts, the largest cause of treatable blindness, is the
clouding of the lens, the natural lens of the eye responsible for
focusing images on the retina. It is generally associated with
aging. According to him, it may occur early due to nutritional
deficiency, excessive sun exposure or trauma. To eliminate the
disease, the only treatment is surgery that replaces the cloudy
lens by an intraocular lens. Surgery is more advanced in recent
years. So much so that it now allows a person over 60 years of age
to see the same as another who is 20 years old. The increase of
glucose into the blood in patients with diabetes makes the eyes
become more vulnerable. To preserve vision, an ophthalmologist
should be consulted annually or whenever a change of any type is
perceived.
KHARE, Esha : TiO2-Polyaniline Supercapacitor
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2327021/Teenager-invents-revolutionary-device-charges-cell-phone-20-seconds.html
19 May 2013
Teenager invents revolutionary device
which has the potential to charge a cell phone within just
20 SECONDS.
A California teen has attracted the attention of tech giants
Google for her potentially revolutionary invention which charges a
phone in 20 seconds flat.
The super-fast charging device has been dubbed a supercapacitor by
18-year-old Esha Khare, of Saratoga - as she took home $50,000
from the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, which
took place in Phoenix this week.
The device will make waiting hours for a phone to charge a thing
of the past and the gizmo packs more energy into a smaller space
than traditional phone batteries and holds the charge for longer.
Eesha Khare, 18, of Saratoga, Calif., received the Intel
Foundation Young Scientist Award of $50,000 for the invention of a
tiny energy-storage device With great power: The supercapacitor is
flexible and tiny, and is able to handle 10,000 recharge cycles,
more than normal batteries by a factor of 10
So far, Khare has only used her supercapacitor to power a
light-emitting diode or LED - but she sees a bright future that
one day will see her invention powering cellphones, cars and any
gadget that requires a rechargeable battery.
Heading to Harvard, Khare told CBS San Francisco that this is only
the start and that she will 'be setting the world on fire' from
here.
'My cellphone battery always dies,' she told NBC News when asked
what inspired her to work on the energy-storage technology.
Specializing in nanochemistry allowed Khare to reduce the size of
her invention. 'Really working at the nanoscale to make
significant advances in many different fields.'
'It is also flexible, so it can be used in rollup displays and
clothing and fabric,' Khare added.
'It has a lot of different applications and advantages over
batteries in that sense.'
The supercapacitor is flexible and tiny, and is able to handle
10,000 recharge cycles, more than normal batteries by a factor of
10.
How an 18-year-old girl has managed to figure out something that
multi-national corporations have not has led to her being flooded
with offers for her amazing leap forward.
Google have been in contact with Khare to explore how she plans to
change the makeup of cell phone battery life.
The new invention may make waiting hours for a phone to charge a
thing of the past.
[ No patent application as yet ... Here's her Project Summary
for the California State Science Fair ( PDF ) ]
European Patent Office Advanced Search :
http://worldwide.espacenet.com/advancedSearch?locale=en_EP
)
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MITCHELL, George : Magnetic Generator
http://www.newfreeenergy.com
George Mitchell -- Magnetic
Generator
George Mitchell offers an alternative to our dependence on fossil
fuels and other toxins.
We want to provide the world with clean economical power to all
mankind. It is possible to offer a non-toxic, non-nuclear
way to decrease the greenhouse effect and provide economical
power/energy for anything or anyone that has a need for power to
run their home, business, automobiles, computers and anything that
requires electricity.
The unit I created is the transmission of energy via mechanical
means.
My name is George Mitchell, the inventor.
I have developed a new clean alternative energy that has been
suppressed for 12 years... my invention is basically a magnetic
gear train which runs multiple electric generators
George Mitchell
7433 Hardin Graveyard Road
Enville, tenn. 38332
phone: 731-687-3664
e-mail: gmii@centurytel.net
newfreeenergy.com
jacksonsun.com
The Jackson Sun
July 18, 2009
Ex-welder invents a magnetic wheel
George Mitchell attaches magnets on seats of miniature wheels
to produce electric power...
by
Rochelle Davis
Enville TN - George Mitchell expected to go back to
work as a mill-wright welder after back surgery in 1992.
But he never went back. He took the advice of his general
practitioner, Reggie Henderson in Lexington, "He said, 'You've got
a brain. Put it to use. Forget your back."
While Mitchell was recuperating he saw a show about a Japanese man
who invented a cellular phone that used magnetic repulsion instead
of a battery, which gave him an idea for a creation of his own.
"He said to me "I can make this so much better'" Mitchell's wife,
Donna said.
The Mitchell's then purchased miniature wheels - much like Ferris
wheels 0 used by parakeets and shower curtains.
He removed the magnets from the shower curtains and attached them
to each end of the seats on the wheels, creating new magnetic
repulsion wheels to produce clean electric power. Thus, his
invention generates electrical power.
"I didn't understand it," said Donna Mitchell who helped her
husband file the patent application for the invention "Men and
women speak a different language. I didn't care that much
about mechanics."
"I couldn't comprehend. All magnets were to me was that they stuck
tot he refrigerator... It took many conversations and tapes (about
magnetic repulsion)."
George Mitchell called the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration to see if it would be interested in a new
electrical system. He was invited to Huntsville, Ala., on
May 22, 1997. NASA told him he invented a magnetic bearing
and toy, which could be used as a learning tool in engineering.
"They wanted to see if all of them (wheels) were running together
and how fast the revolutions per minute were," Mitchell said.
Mitchell's invention ran 1,100 rpms.
NASA also wanted to see his paperwork and designs on the
invention. He refused, because he was afraid NASA would
steal the idea.
Mitchell's patent is pending, but his invention is protected. His
goal is to hook up his home with the generator and then go
commercial. He said a state law allows a person to provide
his own electricity and receive money back for any excess.
"We're so hooked on fossil fuels when we don't have to be," said
Mitchell, who would like to make a car that does not pollute.
"We could feed our people and then some," Donna Mitchell added.
Mitchell's inspiration has been inventors, Albert Einstein Nicola
Tesla. The deaths of his father, mother-in-law, two cats and
a dog also inspired him, he said.
"I think the stress activated some chemical in the brain that
innovated the invention," He said.
jacksonsun.com
July 18, 2009
Drawn to work
By
NICHOLAS BEADLE
nbeadle@jacksonsun.com
Enville man perseveres to expand his inventions and garner
publicity
ENVILLE - The light finally came on.
It was a night last March - George Mitchell kicks himself for not
marking down the date. After years of trying and spending, his
magnetic device finally turned on the light he had wired to it on
a kitchen table.
He woke up his wife, Donna, and brought her to the kitchen. They
hugged.
Then, the magnets flew off.
He had hollowed out the rubber in lawnmower tires, glued the
magnets inside, duct-taped over the wheel and attached it to a
battery-powered motor. But as the wheels spun, some of the magnets
broke through the tape and began to bullet through the kitchen.
One left an indention on the ceiling; another split Donna's hair
and got glue in it.
"George," Donna told him, "no more in the house."
Now his machine - with a bigger motor and aluminum parts replacing
the lawnmower wheels - is in the back of a wood-paneled station
wagon parked outside his house near Enville, a small town split
between Chester and McNairy counties. The machine can power on two
car headlamps propped behind it within a few minutes.
Mitchell, an amateur inventor, sees the power his machine
generates as a new, cleaner form of alternative energy, but he has
faced setbacks and skepticism in the nearly decade and a half
since his first homemade breakthrough.
Despite the troubles, he keeps working toward bigger plans and
says he is hopeful that people - like the lights plugged into his
machine - will eventually turn on to his inventions.
Sudden inspiration
Mitchell has no college degree or formal scientific training,
though he says he has been known to watch science shows on
television deep into the night.
A conversation with him about his inventions is equal parts
wide-eyed profession of his passion for science and impassioned
explanation of the patriotic philosophy that underpins his work.
Finding better forms of energy requires open-minded urgency, but
he thinks Americans can do it, he says.
"We're the best when we get our backs up against the wall,"
Mitchell said. "Our creativity, our ideas, just come pouring out."
Now 53, he remembers playing with magnets when he was young,
feeling the pull and repulsion they can generate with his hands.
While attending junior high school in Jackson, he won a science
fair for a mockup of an atom.
He eventually found his way into professional welding, but back
problems stifled that career in the early 1990s.
His work as an inventor started as he coped with his injury and a
spate of deaths in the mid-1990s. Within a short time, he lost his
father, his mother-in-law - whom he describes as a dear friend -
and a couple of pets.
A doctor had told Mitchell to find a way to take his mind off his
injury, and he found it while watching a cable news report about a
Japanese man who tried to use magnets to power cell phones.
A realization burst open in his mind.
Mitchell says the idea must have come from God, who he thinks felt
bad for him and wanted to give him something worthwhile to work
on.
"I thought about Ferris wheels, taking out the seats and replacing
them with magnets," he said.
Mitchell hurried to the store and bought several shower curtains
and small, neon-colored plastic wheels meant to be parakeet toys.
He cut out magnets meant to hold the shower curtains in place and
attached them to the wheels, arranging them so that, when placed
beside another wheel rigged as such, the magnets pushed against
another magnet's opposing side.
He attached a hand crank to one of the wheels and turned it. When
he did, the repulsion caused by the magnets made the other wheels
turn. He re-purposed the motor of a card-dealing machine powered
by two AA batteries to replace the hand crank.
His new machine, fine-tuned since its first success, is
essentially a larger-scale version of his original design: A motor
powered by a car battery spins an aluminum wheel that holds six
square magnets - smooth, copper-colored and about the size and
thickness of a candy-box chocolate - fastened along its outer
edge.
The force of those magnets cause identical wheels placed on both
sides of the motor-powered wheel to spin, powering generators that
turn on the two headlamps.
Soon after finishing the first machine, Mitchell called NASA
officials to ask them if they were interested in a new way of
producing energy.
Setbacks
Mitchell has said he's been frustrated with federal officials
ranging from former Vice President Al Gore to U.S. Sen. John
McCain. He said he wrote to President Barack Obama's campaign a
few times before he was elected president last year but has never
heard back.
NASA officials invited him to demonstrate his first invention at
the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., but were
skeptical of the workings and usefulness of his device, Mitchell
said.
His work got media attention from as far away as California, but
he has struggled since the 1990s getting support to expand his
work, he said. He said he has applied for federal grants but has
always been turned down.
It took a decade to make significant progress in the next phase of
his work - to expand his invention so that it could power the
Mitchells' house in Enville. What was needed to make his new
machine was expensive, and local businesses seemed reluctant to
work with him to make his parts.
"I'm like, 'Do I have some sort of virus or something?'" he said.
Ed Gibson is a Milledgeville machinist who eventually helped make
aluminum wheels for Mitchell's new machine.
He said he thinks machinists have dealt with inventors in the past
whose machines are unlikely to work. "I hate to take people's
money and it turn out to be a flop," Gibson said.
When Mitchell first approached him, Gibson said he was skeptical
of the execution of his device and reluctant to help. He said when
Mitchell recently returned to him, he seemed to have the operation
of his machine better charted out than he did before.
"That makes a lot of difference," Gibson said. "... (Potential
danger) was one of the problems I had with it to begin (with). He
was liable to kill somebody with it and they were likely to charge
me with it."
When officials rejected his grant applications, Donna Mitchell
said they told George he was trying to build something
scientifically impossible - a perpetual motion machine.
Donna said that at times the stress he put himself through to make
his machine operate made her hope he would give up.
"There's been a couple of times when it's been on his mind so
much," said Donna, who is 57. "I never told him I wanted him to
quit, but there were times when it was too stressful or too
whatever to be thinking about."
She said that last year, after failing to get publicity and
support for his project, George became extremely discouraged.
"He just put it away," she said. "Something was said about it - I
don't know if I mentioned it or he mentioned it. We were
discussing about how you're going to (have to) prove it if anyone
was going to be interested in it. You were going to have to turn
on the light."
Looking ahead
Finally, in March, George Mitchell got the light to come on -
dangerous flying magnets and all.
Attention has still been hard to come by, but despite the
setbacks, Mitchell foresees a world where energy produced by
machines like his is common place. In explaining how his latest
invention works, he talks about replacing a magnet on an energy
machine being as common one day as a repairman working on a broken
heat pump.
He still plans on building a machine that can power his house. He
and a mechanic in Adamsville also have plans to build an electric
car someday, Mitchell said.
Until then, he keeps tweaking his latest device, working deep into
the night.
EISELSTEIN, Paul : Atmospheric Electrical Generator
http://www.hidesertstar.com/the_desert_trail/community/features/article_e142c08b-ab92-5152-810e-3db15e5c362b.html
March 2, 2011
Atmospheric Energy Generator
Invention needs Funding
A local inventor has built a new energy source that can provide
enough electricity for a small house. The Einsvanian power plant
is a generator 3 feet long and wide and 4 feet high in Paul
Eiselstein’s garage that runs free from any external source.
It runs continuously and in a demonstration Friday produced enough
electricity to power a portable light and two power tools. “It is
a green energy source far better than any solar panel system or
fuel cell technology source,” Eiselstein claims. “It produces no
pollution, has no exhaust and can run inside a home safely.”
Eiselstein is keeping the particulars of how his invention
operates as a trade secret. In general terms, the generator pulls
energy from the atmosphere, converting potential energy to kinetic
energy. “There’s an unlimited source there,” the inve ntor
explained. “I’ve built several prototypes,” Eiselstein said,
admitting his current generator “is not pretty. I wish it was
better looking.” Eiselstein is eager to hook up the power plant to
his home’s electrical system but says the unit needs more te
sting.
The 1,500-pound generator runs at 5,500 rpms and produces 7,200
watts, 480 volts alternating current. The unit includes a battery
to store the power it produces. It makes a humming sound that is
about the same volume and pitch as an air conditioner unit. The
noise is made by an internal fan and bearings.
Future models, Eiselstein promised, will be quieter. “And
cheaper,” the manufacturer added. “I want to start producing and
selling them. I want people to receive their energy from green
sources.” Eiselstein said he wants to swap out the combustion port
ion — “the polluting part” — of a hybrid car with a more compact
version of his generator. To date, Eiselstein estimates he has
invested well over $70,000 in his invention.
“If I had more money I’d build it better — more presentable,”
Eiselstein said apologetically. He has recently created a
corporation. “I would like to find investors,” the
inventor-cum-entrepreneur said. “There are people out there who
are interested.”
See also :
Atmospheric Electric Generators :
http://rexresearch.com/atmoselx/atmoselx.htm
GUILLOT, Jules :
http://rexresearch.com/guillot/guillot.htm
PERRIGO, Harry :
http://rexresearch.com/perrigo/perrigo.htm
PLAUSON, Henry :
http://rexresearch.com/plauson/plauson.htm
TENTZERIS, Manos :
http://rexresearch.com/tentzeris/tentzeris.htm
HENDERSHOT, Lester :
http://rexresearch.com/hendershot/hendershot.htm
http://rexresearch.com/hendershot2/hendershot.htm
http://rexresearch.com/hendershot3/hendershot3.htm
HUBBARD, Alfred :
http://rexresearch.com/hubbard/hubbard.htm
&c ...
http://www.reuters.com/video/2013/06/13/reuters-tv-flying-bike-unveiled-in-prague?videoId=243330835&videoChannel=117849
http://www.gizmag.com/flying-bicycle-f-bike-test-flight/27924/
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ikBkKkU9F4
Nuclear Sabotage @ Fukushima
by
Jim Stone
[ PDF ]
Reactor 4 was decommissioned and could not have exploded ...
Hydrogen vents ( white towers ) prevent H-explosions ...
Jim Stone alleges that Israeli "security" company Magna
BSP planted the Stuxnet virus and a 'gun-type' mini-nuke
device ...
& much more ...
sciencenews.com
Science News Service
Jun 20 2013
Pinholes And Plastic Wrap Send Sound
Through Walls
Common kitchen item erases wall's barrier to sound
by
Peter Gwynne,
ISNS Contributor
(ISNS) – A team of Japanese and South Korean researchers has
devised a means of making solid walls virtually transparent to
sound.
The process relies on drilling small holes in a rigid material,
such as a wall, and covering them on one side by a membrane made
from the plastic wrap found in any kitchen.
"The wall with the bare holes seriously hinders the transmission,"
the team reported in the June 13 issue of Physical Review Letters.
"[B]ut with the membrane installed the transmission becomes, as
expected, almost as good as with no wall."
Properly sized, spaced, and tuned, the setup allows the pressure
waves responsible for sound to pass through the barrier. In
experiments, the system transmitted sound between three-quarters
and almost 100 percent of the volume of the original sound source,
depending on the size of the holes.
The research has potential uses in creating security barriers that
permit voice communication to pass through, and in developing
types of sound-based microscopes that could find application in
research laboratories and medical practice.
The development required significant advances in the theory and
practice of sound transmission.
"It is indeed astonishing," said physicist Oliver Wright of
Japan's Hokkaido University.
Wright collaborated on the research project with Sam Lee and
colleagues at Yonsei University and Kong-Ju-Bock Lee of Ewha
Womans University, both in South Korea.
"I am very excited by these results," said Johan Christensen, a
photonic engineer at the Technical University of Denmark who has
developed theoretical insights into this process. "The most
striking thing they demonstrate is the possibility of squeezing a
tremendous amount of sound through extremely small openings."
The approach the team employed resembles that used for an effect
that physicists call extraordinary optical transmission, which was
discovered by Thomas Ebbesen of the University of Strasbourg in
France in 1998. In this, Wright explained that given the size and
spread of holes drilled into a sheet, "tiny sub-wavelength holes
in metals can allow more light through than expected."
Wright said that his team set out "to reproduce the results in
audio acoustics." They set out to explore the idea that holes
smaller than the wavelength of sound waves would permit more sound
to pass through than expected.
Physicists had already tried to pass sound through solid walls by
drilling holes in them, but struggled because the rigid parts of
the wall reflected most of the sound under most conditions, Wright
said.
The only way to allow high volumes of sound through the holes is
to ensure that the sound waves travel much faster as they pass
through the holes than they do before reaching them and after
passing through them. Wright's team decided to do that by covering
each hole with a membrane of plastic wrap, the same kind used to
cover food.
The plastic film resonates in response to sound passing through
each hole. As a result, Wright said, "the pressure on both sides
of the hole becomes equal and the energy incident on one side of
the wall is funneled through the small holes. This results in
efficient transmission and no reflection."
In other words, holes covered by a membrane make walls effectively
invisible to sound.
Why did the team choose plastic wrap as the membrane material?
"It is known to be a convenient material to make a membrane and,
of course, it is readily available," Wright said. "Some first
experiments were done with rubber membranes, but we found that
[plastic wrap] provides a better transmission."
To test their setup, the researchers used loudspeakers to produce
sound and direct it through a rigid wall containing holes. A
microphone on the other side of the wall recorded the sound that
passed through.
In various studies, the team recorded 76 percent, 89 percent, and
97 percent transmission of the volume of sound through the wall
with holes covered with the plastic wrap. The percentage depended
on the size of the holes in relation to the total area of the
wall.
Scientists imagine two main types of use for the development.
"By the use of a wall with holes of varying size, one can make a
security barrier for efficient oral communication in places like
banks or taxis," Wright said. "By squeezing a lot of energy
through a single hole, one could make a novel form of acoustic
microscope."
Such an instrument could identify objects far smaller than the
wavelength of the sound that impinges on them. It could have
application in medical practice as well as research.
"If you focus sound to a spot much smaller than the wavelength,"
Christensen said, "you could be able to devise instruments to
detect early-stage tumors, which are too small to observe by
conventional ultrasound techniques."
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.110.244302
Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 244302 (2013)
13 June 2013
Giant Acoustic Concentration by
Extraordinary Transmission in Zero-Mass Metamaterials
Jong Jin Park1, K. J. B. Lee2, Oliver B. Wright3, Myoung Ki
Jung1, and Sam H. Lee1,*
1Institute of Physics and Applied Physics, Yonsei University,
Seoul 120-749, Korea
2Department of Physics, Ewha Womans University, Seoul 120-750,
Korea
3Division of Applied Physics, Faculty of Engineering, Hokkaido
University, Sapporo 060-8628, Japan
We demonstrate 97%, 89%, and 76% transmission of sound amplitude
in air through walls perforated with subwavelength holes of areal
coverage fractions 0.10, 0.03, and 0.01, respectively, producing
94-, 950-, and 5700-fold intensity enhancements therein. This
remarkable level of extraordinary acoustic transmission is
achieved with thin tensioned circular membranes, making the mass
of the air in the holes effectively vanish. Imaging the pressure
field confirms incident-angle independent transmission, thus
realizing a bona fide invisible wall. Applications include
high-resolution acoustic sensing.
About Sovereignty ...
ERICKSEN, C. [ Ed. ] :
The Ant-Government Guidebook for Judges (
1999, National Center for State Courts )
FRASER, Nathan : As King ( A Simple Guide to
Autonymous Living ) ( www.livefree.fm )