I agree with Jahn.
I have an explanation for why the effect happens.
Does anyone else?
Neil
JhanDavis@... wrote:
> Claude, Ross, et al -
> The technology of this is still something we're all thinking about,
> but what I'm getting a good feel for now is that anytime you spin a disk,
> you're just *supposed* to have another disk, as physically equivalent as
> possible to the first, positioned at some distance from it along the axis of
> rotation, spin planes parallel, positioned so that they share the same axis
> of rotation, but are loosely-coupled (not rigid axis) so that they can rotate
> separately. I'm hesitant about saying that they should be spaced 2pi radii
> apart, or 2e radii apart, along the rotation axis, but we should attempt to
> find values that work. There's bound to be a numeric trick in it. Now for
> the fun part...
> I'm sensing that clockwise rotation of one disk "should" induce
> counterclockwise rotation in the other, & vice-versa, when they're properly
> spaced apart. This is related to the concept of energy flow within the
> Compton Radius vortex. Also to the connectedness of all things in the
> universe. Maybe subatomic particles have this characteristic. In which case
> I'd also expect the universe, as a super-particle, to have the same singular
> topological feature. Let's build the doggone thing and see what happens!
> - Jhan
>
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