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==Abstract==
==Abstract==


This is a preliminary quantification of the Biefeld-Brown effect. The approach has four principal features: (1) the equivalence of acceleration and gravitation is applied to elementary charges; (2) the net mass of the charges becomes imaginary when v > c in a dielectric; (3) the upward acceleration of an electrified capacitor is obtained through the application of an imaginary gravitational constant to the imaginary mass; and (4) ?rescaling? the acceleration of charge leads to the same result as in (3), but without recourse to imaginary quantities.[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
This is a preliminary quantification of the Biefeld-Brown effect. The approach has four principal features: (1) the equivalence of acceleration and gravitation is applied to elementary charges; (2) the net mass of the charges becomes imaginary when v > c in a dielectric; (3) the upward acceleration of an electrified capacitor is obtained through the application of an imaginary gravitational constant to the imaginary mass; and (4) ?rescaling? the acceleration of charge leads to the same result as in (3), but without recourse to imaginary quantities.
 
[[Category:Scientific Paper|thoughts biefeld-brown effect]]


[[Category:Gravity]]
[[Category:Gravity]]

Revision as of 13:31, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
TitleThoughts on the Biefeld-Brown Effect
Author(s)Larry D Adams
KeywordsBiefeld-Brown, electrogravitics, electrokinetics
Published1992
JournalElectric Spacecraft Journal
Number6
Pages29-34

Abstract

This is a preliminary quantification of the Biefeld-Brown effect. The approach has four principal features: (1) the equivalence of acceleration and gravitation is applied to elementary charges; (2) the net mass of the charges becomes imaginary when v > c in a dielectric; (3) the upward acceleration of an electrified capacitor is obtained through the application of an imaginary gravitational constant to the imaginary mass; and (4) ?rescaling? the acceleration of charge leads to the same result as in (3), but without recourse to imaginary quantities.