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ISLA SAN GIORGIO (VENECIA)=GEORGE LEMAITRE
15 mar. 2017 - Subido por Derivando
Qué relación hay entre Albert Einstein, los ríos y el famoso número Pi? Hoy en Derivando te lo vamos a explicar ...
15 mar. 2017 - Subido por Derivando
Qué relación hay entre Albert Einstein, los ríos y el famoso número Pi? Hoy en Derivando te lo vamos a explicar ...
7 dic. 2017 - Subido por Jaume Solsona Villaplana
Einstein, los ríos y el número PI. Jaume Solsona Villaplana. Loading... Unsubscribe from Jaume Solsona ...
15 mar. 2017 - Subido por Derivando
El bloguero de YouTube Eduardo Sáenz explica uno de los descubrimientos de Albert Einstein en relación a la ...
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Different cyclotron size: a) Lawrence ́s first one, b) Venezuela First one (courtesy of Dorly Coehlo), c) Fermi National Laboratory at CERN. And size matters, and Cyclotrons win as best hospital candidates due to Reactors are bigger, harder and difficult to be set in a hospital installation. Can you imagine a nuclear reactor inside a health installation? Radiation Protection Program will consume all the budget available. Size, controlled reactions, electrical control, made cyclotrons easy to install, and baby cyclotrons come selfshielded so hospital don ́t need to spend money in a extremely large bunker. Now on, we are going to talk about our first experience with the set up of a baby cyclotron for medical uses inside the first PET installation in Latin America. “Baby” means its acceleration “D” diameters are suitable to be set inside a standard hospital room dimensions, with all its needs to be safetly shielded for production transmision and synthetized for human uses for imaging in Nuclear Medicine PET routine. When we ask why Cyclotrons are better than reactors for radioisotopes production to be used in Medicine, we also have to have in mind that they has: 1. Less radioactive waste 2. Less harmful debris
https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Different-cyclotron-size-a-Lawrence-s-first-one-b-Venezuela-First-one-courtesy-of_fig3_221906035
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H. G. Wells
H. G. Wells |
H. G. Wells en 1920
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Información personal |
Nombre de nacimiento |
Herbert George Wells |
Nacimiento |
21 de septiembre de 1866 Bromley (Reino Unido) |
Fallecimiento |
13 de agosto de 1946 (79 años) Londres (Reino Unido) |
Causa de muerte |
Tumor hepático |
Nacionalidad |
Británica |
Lengua materna |
Inglés |
Familia |
Padres |
Joseph Wells Sarah Neal |
Cónyuge |
Isabel Mary Wells (1891-1894, divorciados) Amy Catherine Robbins (1895-1927) |
Pareja |
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Hijos |
George Phillip "G. P." Wells (1901-1985) Frank Richard Wells (1903-1982) Anna-Jane Blanco-White (1909-2010) Anthony West (1914-1987) |
Educación |
Educación |
Doctor en Biología |
Educado en |
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Alumno de |
Thomas Henry Huxley |
Información profesional |
Ocupación |
Escritor, historiador, periodista, idista, escritor de ciencia ficción, novelista, sociólogo y guionista |
Área |
Ciencia ficción, escritor, literatura de no ficción y literatura de ciencia ficción |
Años activo |
desde 1895 |
Cargos ocupados |
Presidente de PEN Club Internacional (1932-1935) |
Movimiento |
Romanticismo |
Seudónimo |
H. G. Wells, Reginald Bliss, Septimus Browne y Sosthenes Smith |
Géneros |
Ciencia ficción, biografía y ensayo |
Obras notables |
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Partido político |
Partido Laborista |
Miembro de |
Sociedad Fabiana |
Distinciones |
- Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame (1997)
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Firma |
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Herbert George Wells (Bromley; 21 de septiembre de 1866-Londres, 13 de agosto de 1946),1 más conocido como H. G. Wells, fue un escritor y novelista británico. Wells fue un autor prolífico que escribió en diversos géneros, como ciencia ficción, docenas de novelas, relatos cortos, obras de crítica social, sátiras, biografías y autobiografías. Es recordado por sus novelas de ciencia ficción y es frecuentemente citado como el «padre de la ciencia ficción» junto con Julio Verne y Hugo Gernsback.23
Sin embargo, durante su vida fue reconocido como un crítico social con visión de futuro, incluso profético, que dedicó sus talentos literarios al desarrollo de una visión progresista a escala global. En su faceta de futurista, escribió diversas obras utópicas y previó el advenimiento de aviones, tanques, viajes espaciales, armas nucleares, televisión por satélite y algo parecido a internet.4 En la ciencia ficción imaginó viajes en el tiempo, invasiones alienígenas, invisibilidad e ingeniería biológica. Entre sus obras más destacadas están La máquina del tiempo (1895), La isla del doctor Moreau (1896), El hombre invisible (1897), La guerra de los mundos (1898) y La guerra en el aire (1907). Estuvo nominado en cuatro ocasiones al Premio Nobel de Literatura.5
En un principio Wells estudió biología y sus ideas sobre cuestiones éticas se desenvolvieron en un contexto específica y fundamentalmente darwiniano.6 También fue siempre un abierto socialista que a menudo (aunque no siempre, como al comienzo de la Primera Guerra Mundial) simpatizó con posturas pacifistas. Sus obras posteriores fueron cada vez más políticas y didácticas, dejando de lado la ciencia ficción, mientras que a veces indicaba en documentos oficiales que su profesión era el periodismo.7 Novelas como Kipps o La historia de Mr. Polly, que describen la vida de la clase media-baja, llevaron a sugerir que era un digno sucesor de Charles Dickens,8 aunque Wells retrató numerosos estratos sociales e incluso intentó, en Tono-Bungay (1909), un diagnóstico del conjunto de la sociedad inglesa. Enfermo de diabetes, Wells cofundó en 1934 La Asociación Diabética (hoy conocido como Diabetes UK), de finalidad caritativa. Por sus escritos relacionados con la ciencia, en 1970 se decidió en su honor llamar H. G. Wells a un astroblema lunar ubicado en la cara oculta de la Luna.9
Nació en la Casa Atlas, High Street número 47, en Bromley, Kent, el 21 de septiembre de 1866,1 como el tercer hijo varón de Joseph Wells y su esposa Sarah Neal. La familia pertenecía a la empobrecida clase media-baja de la época. Tenían una tienda nada próspera comprada gracias a una herencia, en la que vendían productos deportivos y loza fina.10
En 1874 el joven Herbert George Wells vivió un hecho que tendría notables repercusiones en su futuro: sufrió un accidente que lo dejó en cama con una pierna quebrada. Para matar el tiempo, empezó a leer libros de la biblioteca local que le traía su padre. Se aficionó a la lectura y comenzó a desear escribir. Ese mismo año entró en una academia comercial llamada Thomas Morley's Commercial Academy, en la que continuó hasta 1880.1
En 1877 su padre sufrió un accidente que le impidió ganarse la vida como lo había hecho hasta entonces. Ello condujo a que Herbert y sus hermanos comenzaran a emplearse en diversos oficios. Fue así como, entre 1881 y 1883, llegó a ser aprendiz de una tienda de textiles llamada Southsea Drapery Emporium: Hyde's, experiencia que se ve reflejada en sus novelas The Wheels of Chance (1896) y Kipps: The Story of a Simple Soul (1905) cuyo protagonista es aprendiz textil.1 En 1883 se enroló en la escuela de gramática Midhurst de Sussex Occidental como alumno y tutor, donde continuó su avidez por la lectura.10
En 1884 obtuvo una beca para estudiar Biología en el Royal College of Science de Londres, donde tuvo como profesor a Thomas Henry Huxley. Estudió allí hasta 1887. Wells mismo, recordando esa época, habla de haber sufrido hambre constantemente.11 En este período también ingresa a un club de debate de la escuela llamado Debating Society, donde expresa su interés por transformar la sociedad. Formó parte de los fundadores de The Science School Journal, una revista en la que dio a conocer sus postulados en literatura y en temas sociales. Fue en ella que vio la luz por primera vez su novela La máquina del tiempo, pero con el título original: The Chronic Argonauts (Los Argonautas Crónicos).
H. G. Wells mientras estudiaba en Londres (circa 1890).
Al suspender el examen de geología en 1887, perdió la beca. Por eso no fue sino hasta 1890 que recibió el título de grado en zoología del Programa Externo de la Universidad de Londres. Sin la beca, es decir, sin ingresos, se fue a vivir a casa de una pariente llamada Mary, prima de su padre, donde se interesó por la hija de ésta, Isabel. Entre 1889 y 1890 fue profesor de la Henley House School.1213 Fue uno de los fundadores de la Royal College of Science Association, siendo su primer presidente en 1909.11
Su relación con Rebecca West, que duró diez años, dio por fruto un hijo, Anthony West, nacido en 1914. Al contraer tuberculosis, abandonó todo para dedicarse a escribir; llegó a completar más de cien obras. Se le considera uno de los precursores de la ciencia ficción y sus primeras obras tuvieron ya por tema la fantasía científica, descripciones proféticas de los triunfos de la tecnología y comentarios sobre los horrores de las guerras del siglo xx: La máquina del tiempo (The Time Machine, 1895), su primera novela, de éxito inmediato, en la que se entrelazaban la ciencia, la aventura y la política; El hombre invisible (The Invisible Man, 1897); La guerra de los mundos (The War of the Worlds, 1898) y Los primeros hombres en la luna (The First Men in the Moon, 1901). Muchas de ellas dieron origen a varias películas.
A la vez se interesó por la realidad sociológica del momento, especialmente por la de las clases medias, defendiendo los derechos de los marginados y luchando contra la hipocresía imperante, que dibujó con cariño, compasión y sentido del humor en novelas como Love and Mr. Lewisham (1900), Kipps, the Story of a Simple Soul (1905) y Mr. Polly (1910), novela de extenso retrato de los personajes en la que, como en Kipps, describe con fina ironía el fracaso de las aspiraciones sociales de sus protagonistas.
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The realm of relativistic hydrodynamics
Modeling relativistic fluids and the phenomena associated with them – from supernovae and jets to merging neutron stars
Hydrodynamics or fluid dynamics is the study of the behaviour of fluids such as water and air – water flowing down a canal, but also, for instance, air flowing around an airplane fuselage. The term relativistic hydrodynamics (or relativistic fluid dynamics) refers to the study of flows in the arena of special or of general relativity. Special relativity will come into play when the velocities attained by certain portions of the fluid or by the fluid as a whole approach the speed of light. General relativity comes into play when there are sufficiently strong gravitational fields – either because the fluid’s environment features such fields, or because the mass and energy of the fluid are sufficient to generate their own strong gravity.
The flows we are accustomed to in daily life are a far cry from meeting either of the two conditions – even the flows encountered by a supersonic aircraft amount to no more than a fraction of a percent of the speed of light, and within the whole solar system, there are no really strong sources of gravity altogether. However, such extreme conditions, where hydrodynamics becomes relativistic, are routinely encountered by astronomers observing some of the most violent events in the cosmos.
In fact, almost any phenomenon astronomers observe in the context of what is suitably called high-energy astrophysics requires a relativistic description. In order to understand the dynamics and evolution of such phenomena (we’ll get around to some impressive examples, below), astrophysicists usually resort to mathematical models which incorporate relativistic hydrodynamics as a key building block.
The challenge of relativistic hydrodynamics
The equations describing relativistic hydrodynamics are remarkably complex. In addition to Einstein’s description of gravity, space and time – which entails equations that are already quite complex all by themselves – they must also incorporate proper models for the properties and behaviour of matter, for instance how it flows or reacts to external pressure. For very idealised situations it might be possible to do the calculations by hand, writing down explicit formulae describing the dynamics. An example would be the collapse of a shell that is perfectly spherical (and thus perfectly symmetrical) and made of matter which has very simple properties, dust, for instance, which has no internal pressure to resist gravity, and which thus collapses readily to form a black hole. But for more realistic matter models, which are necessarily more complicated and without any assumption of symmetry, the only option left is to perform computer simulations, in other words: to use the techniques of numerical relativity.
Such simulations have become a powerful way to improve our understanding of the dynamics and evolution of the different kinds of relativistic flows encountered in physics. In particular, this is true for astrophysical systems which, given their size and mass, do not lend themselves to laboratory experimentation. Even so, in order to produce realistic simulations, it is necessary to push current computer technology and programming to their very limits. Indeed, progress in the field is closely tied to advances in the capabilites (such as speed and memory) of (super-)computers on the one hand, and to improvements in the design of ever more efficient and accurate simulation algorithms on the other.
Let us now take a quick tour of the astrophysical realm of relativistic hydrodynamics.
Collapse
We start with a paradigmatic example for the necessity of relativistic hydrodynamics: the collapse of the core of a massive star in the course of a supernova explosion, leading to the formation of extremely compact objects – neutron stars or possibly even black holes.
As the core of the star collapses, it reaches enormous densities – at peak values, matter is so compressed that a tablespoon full would have a mass of more than a hundred million tons – and the dynamic evolution is highly interesting, from the core literally bouncing back as the properties of matter change to the formation of travelling disturbances (shocks). During its fall, the matter can reach velocities up to 40 percent of the speed of light. For the collapse itself, Newtonian gravity and Einstein’s general relativity give markedly different predictions – in Einstein’s theory, gravity in the central regions is up to 30 percent stronger. This makes a relativistic description of hydrodynamics and gravity absolutely essential, especially in the case of a rotating inner core, where there is a delicate balance between the centrifugal forces associated with rotation and gravity’s inward pull. The following animation is based on a relativistic simulation of a collapsing stellar core:
[Image: AEI/ZIB/LSU. Animation size 942kB; please allow time for loading.]
Download movie version (mpeg, 19MB) here
The colors encode the different densities; during the animation, you can see the formation of a red-orange region that is the neutron star. The red and green patterns projected onto an imaginary plane beneath the newly formed star towards the end of the animation represent the gravitational waves produced during the collapse.
As a result of the core bouncing back, the outer layers of the star are ejected. This starts off the supernova explosion with its massive increase in brightness that allows astronomers here on earth to observe these phenomena even when they happen in other galaxies! The debris of the explosion makes for beautiful astronomical objects such as the supernova remnant N63a in one of our neighbouring galaxies, the Large Magellanic Cloud:
[Image: NASA/ESA/HEIC/Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)]
Core collapse is not the only way to make a supernova. Alternatively, we might be dealing with a White dwarf star – the remnant of a low-mass star like our Sun – capturing matter from an orbiting companion. Once a critical mass is reached, the White Dwarf will disintegrate in a thermonuclear explosion, leading to what astronomers call a supernova of type Ia.
Relativistic jets
Another very common phenomenon where relativistic hydrodynamics comes into play is the formation of so-called jets – situations in which matter flows onto a compact body, and some of the matter being flung away in a pair of tightly focussed beams! If this happens around a compact object of a few or a few dozen solar masses, we have what is called a microquasar; if the central object is much more massive, with a couple of millions or even billions of solar masses, we are dealing with an active galactic nucleus. The following image shows an example, the radio galaxy 3C272.1. In the close-up, one can clearly see the two tight beams emitted in opposite directions from the central core:
[Image: NRAO/AUI/NSF]
In fact, in the jets of many extra-galactic radio sources associated with active galactic nuclei, it seems as if matter were propagating faster than the speed of light! While this is just an optical illusion caused by matter moving near the speed of light, and almost directly towards or directly away from the observer, for this optical effect to occur, the jets’ flow velocities must be at least as large as 99% of the speed of light . One example, a blob of plasma (left) moving away from the core of an object called a blazar (an active galactic nucleus whose approaching jet is seen almost exactly head-on), is shown in the sequence below:
[Image: Piner et al., NRAO/AUI/NSF]
The object is the blazar 0826+243, and the plasma blob appears to move at 25 times the speed of light – while, in reality, it “only” moves at more than 99.9% of lightspeed.
Astronomers have made many high-resolution radio observations of jets, revealing a wealth of form and structure. Using the equations of relativistic hydrodynamics, together with the equations governing the dynamics of magnetic fields and the interactions of such fields with matter (“relativistic magneto-hydrodynamics”), it is possible to explain how these structures come about. In recent years, researchers have managed to perform quite detailed simulations of relativistic jets. An example can be seen in the animation below, which shows the evolution of a powerful jet as it propagates through the intergalactic medium:
[Image: Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics/L. Scheck et al. in Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 331, 615-634, (2002).]
For the main structures observed in the simulations – for instance propagating discontinuities in the beam, and a hot spot at the head of the jet – astronomers can find counterparts as they observe extragalactic radio sources.
Gamma ray bursts
A relativistic description of gravity and of the dynamics of matter is also necessary in scenarios involving the gravitational collapse of massive stars (with masses of about 30 solar masses and higher) to form black holes, or during the last phases of the coalescence of two neutron stars which orbit each other. These two explosive events are believed to be the mechanisms responsible for the so-called gamma-ray bursts, the most luminous events in the universe short of the big bang itself. In particular, stellar collapse is considered the mechanism behind what are called “long” gamma-ray bursts, the bursts lasting for about 20 seconds, while neutron star mergers are regarded as responsible for “short” gamma-ray bursts, with a duration of only about 0.2 seconds. The following animation shows on the left a false colour image of the gamma rays received from the different regions of the whole sky, using data collected with NASA’s Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. As you can see, there is a bright flash in the top half which, at one time, is so bright that it dominates the whole of the image. This is one particular gamma ray burst; the curve on the right traces how the burst’s brightness changes over time:
[Image: NASA’s “Imagine the Universe!” website]
Since the gamma-ray bursts take place at a distance of billions of light years from Earth, the fact that, even at that distance, they are visible as extremely bright phenomena implies that huge amounts of energy must be released – comparable to converting the mass of our sun completely into gamma-rays over the course of a few seconds within a region of space no more than a couple of thousand kilometres across. There is general agreement, supported by observational evidence, that the gamma rays are not emitted in all directions (such as the emissions of a light bulb), but that they are focussed (such as the light from the beam of a lighthouse, which you only see if it is pointed directly at you). The focussing accounts for some part of their perceived brightness, and it would mean we observe only those gamma ray bursts whose light happens to be emitted exactly in the direction of the Earth. The mechanism for this focussing would be, once more, matter moving at relativistic speeds to form some kind of jet. Theoretical models estimate that the matter responsible for the gamma-ray burst emission must be travelling at more than 99.99% of the speed of light.
Simulations of how this movement comes about and causes an event as spectacular as a gamma ray burst are, once more, the province of relativistic hydrodynamics. For short gamma ray bursts, these simulations need to track the merger of two orbiting neutron stars. The following animation illustrates one such simulation, where each of the two neutron stars has 1.4 times as much mass as our sun:
[Image: M. Shibata, Tokyo University. Animation size 651kB; please allow time for loading.]
Download movie version (mpeg, 6.6MB) here.
The final stage of the merger which is shown here would take about 3 thousandth of a second from start to finish. In the animation, the colors encode different densities, while the velocity of matter in different regions is represented by little arrows.
There is an additional aspect to all these astrophysical scenarios: The presence of both relativistic flows and massive yet compact objects turns them into prime candidates for the production of gravitational waves! The possibility of directly detecting these elusive ripples in the curvature of spacetime, and of extracting a wealth of new information from the data, is one of the driving motivations of present-day research in relativistic astrophysics – and faithful modelling of these situations using relativistic hydrodynamics is a key ingredient of successful gravitational wave astronomy!
Man-made relativistic flows
While natural flow processes here on Earth are a far cry from reaching relativistic speeds, there are indeed artificial – man-made – relativistic flows, namely in particle accelerators. One example is the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York, which began operation in 2000, another the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN near Geneva, which is currently under construction.
In these facilities heavy ions – heavy atomic nuclei, for instance those of gold or lead, stripped of their electrons – are accelerated to ultra-relativistic velocities and made to collide with one another. At RHIC, the projectiles travel at typical speeds of 99.995% the speed of light – at such speed, the relativistic mass of a moving object is more than a hundred times larger than its mass at rest! After the LHC has started its operations in late 2007, there will be the possibility for experiments in which the mass – and energy – will be increased by almost a factor of one hundred.
Heavy-ion collision experiments provide a unique way to compress and heat up nuclear matter, and to prove the existence of an exotic state of ultra-compressed nuclear matter, called a quark-gluon-plasma, which is predicted by the theory of strong nuclear interactions (quantum chromodynamics). They recreate, within a tiny region of space, conditions similar to those under which matter existed in the early universe, fractions of a second after the big bang.
Physicists use several techniques do describe what happens in these collisions. A number of results can be obtained by treating all the particles involved as separate objects. But for other calculations, it is much more useful to treat the dense, strongly interacting matter formed in the collision as a continuous fluid. Of course, given the energies involved, we need to take into account the effects of special relativity. As an example, the following animation shows results of a simulation of a jet – a particle stream produced in such collisions – propagating through a simplified version of such a fluid, producing a Mach cone similar to the sonic boom of a supersonic aircraft:
[Animation B. Betz, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt.]
Numerical simulations with relativistic fluid models have proved to be of great help in understanding certain aspects of these highly energetic heavy-ion collisions.
Further Information
https://www.einstein-online.info/en/spotlight/hydrodynamics_realm/ |
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Does space "flow" like a river? There's an analogy in General Relativity ... Why The Theory of Relativity Doesn't Add Up (In Einstein's Own Words).
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The string theory time travel paradox^2
Tanuj Handa
Tanuj Handa
IITR | IIT-BHU | USCT | Developing research and creativity quotient | Curious about life |
Fecha de publicación: 28 oct 2019
Time is like a river, it swifts and shores in one direction
This is a notion with which everyone must be familiar with, the obsession to know more about the universe and how things are happening the way they happen goes way back in 20,000 BC when cosmologist made attempts to describe the force which makes it all stable. Time is one leg of the chair of the universe in which we all stand, thus it is quite dangerous to tamper the force and experiment with it.
Consider this analogy of time and river, both have a unidirectional flow and we are just the boat sailing along whether be time or the river. Travelling backwards against the flow requires a lot of energy like what quoted by the theory of relativity E=mc^2 is the amount of energy we have to achieve, to begin with, time travel.
Now, as you might have a little idea about string theory, which discusses the how the river of time is divided into different streams and the stream which we get depends upon the actions we take in present.
From the concept of time travel, we can conclude that if we get enough energy we can flow back in time, but if we don't give it in the right direction, we might face consequences. Some of the hypothesis of the event that may follow are :
1. We can end up being an alternate form of reality ( the one we can't relate to from our past)
2. We might alter the space-time and end up having both the different reality come together
3. The concept to enter in an alternate reality may require more energy than to go in our reality of past, hence it might not be achieved
Following it all, it might be difficult to relate but consider like this, you have just started to move the boat against the stream but instead of going to the diversion from where you came in, you chose the alternate stream and thus you are in an alternate past. OR you try to go back to your path from where you came and suddenly the stream takes you to different diversion and you end up in an alternate reality of your time, both of which are equally exciting and terrifying.
My notion to say it as paradox square is because as both time travel and string theory are a big paradox in itself, it's quite difficult to imagine such an event to happen. The only way we can know it all when we get to know how to flow against the flow of time and look it all by ourselves.
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/string-theory-time-travel-paradox2-tanuj-handa |
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Viktor Schauberger: The Man Who Invented Flying Discs For The Nazis
- ENGLISH NEWS
- TECHNOLOGY GAME SCIENCE
VN EN
Some historical figures leave behind little real information, but many secrets and mysteries.
Ảnh minh họa
One such person was a scientist, thinker, philosopher, and inventor, and the author of innovative technological ideas. He was hired to work for the Third Reich and allegedly built for the Nazis a flying machine that looked like a disc-shaped UFO for the Nazis.
And then this man suddenly disappeared from history as quickly and mysteriously as he appeared. It is officially believed that he died a natural death, but there are many theories that he was either deliberately killed or his death was faked, but in fact was kidnapped for his own purposes.
The Mysterious Disappearance Of Viktor Schauberger
A man named Viktor Schauberger was born in Austria in 1885 and initially had an experience that had nothing to do with his future fame as the inventor of Hitler’s UFOs. He grew up in a hereditary family of foresters living in a vast area of remote wilderness in Holzschlag, Upper Austria, and spent most of his youth and middle years tending more than 10,000 hectares of land.
During this time, constantly being in nature, he began to make many observations that profoundly changed his life and outlook. In particular, he was absolutely fascinated by water, which he regarded as an independent living organism, calling it the “Blood of the Earth” and the source of all living things.
He especially focused on such properties of water as its spiral forms, eddies, fast currents, eddies, and easy harmony with the surrounding world.
He obsessively studied the movements and effects of water, continuing to form many theories, and then he began to craft completely innovative types of spiral-cut water gutters, the design of which was based on his own hydrodynamic system.
According to this system, an inward-moving and swirling water vortex could be used for power and thrust, which was the beginning of his revolutionary new idea for a new type of engine that relied on implosion (an explosion directed inward) rather than conventional explosions.
Viktor Schauberger was completely self-taught, he never took any university courses, but he soon gained international recognition thanks to some of his ideas, patents, and inventions, and controversy. He was critical of the many inventions available in his era, believing that they work against the laws of nature and are destructive.
Instead, he embraced the idea that humanity and nature can live together using alternative energy sources, such as using natural processes and live in harmony with them. His motto was “Kapieren und kopieren” (To comprehend and copy nature). Schauberger believed that many inventions of mankind were contrary to nature, and later he stated that even the propeller was an imperfect invention:
“As nature best demonstrated in the case of the winged maple seed, today’s propeller is a pressure rotor, and therefore a brake rotor, whose purpose is to allow the heavy maple seed to slowly fall to the ground like a parachute and move away from the wind.
No bird has such a rotating object on its head, nor a fish on its tail. This brake rotor was only used by a person for forward propulsion. As the propeller spins, drag increases in proportion to the square of the rotation speed. It is also a sign that this supposed propulsion device is not built naturally and is therefore out of place. “
Schauberger sought to bring his ideas to life by coming up with a detailed theory according to which water vortices can build on each other to create more and more forces, which, in turn, will create a force opposite to gravity. In essence, Schauberger was explaining how to create anti-gravity, which he called diamagnetism.
He used these theories to create fantastic inventions such as a water blast turbine that sucked in air in a spiral, reaching enormous forces. He also invented the machine that created a typhoon-like suction force to control the temperature in a room, and a power generator. These machines created energy from water and air using spiral pipes and nozzles.
All of this worked on the principles of clean energy and working with nature, apparently with little or no pollution and being completely sustainable.
It might seem odd that such a radical promoter of green energy and work with nature caught the attention of the Nazis, who were not particularly concerned with preserving the environment. But he really piqued their interest, and in 1934 the Nazis approached him with a tempting offer to work for them for a good salary. Schauberger agreed.
Furthermore. In 1938, Nazi Party member Julius Streicher allegedly personally ordered him to build an aircraft that could use a vortex engine. This device had to have the shape of a disk and move completely differently from all modern aircraft while hovering in the air in one place (levitation), performing precise maneuvers, and accelerating at high speeds.
Basically, they wanted Schauberger to build a futuristic anti-gravity ship using his own natural theories, and since they were the Nazis, he had no choice but to agree once again, receiving an exorbitant amount of money.
In 1940, Schauberger created the first prototype of his artificial UFO, called Repulsin A, which used friction between vortices and the surrounding air to force the air downward, creating an overall lifting and propelling effect, more or less producing a kind of mini-tornado, on the energy of which this ship moved.
However, it was found that the vortex motor was unstable, and the fan inside the device could not spin as fast as required because the blades were pushing out too much air. At the time, no way was found to circumvent the problem of generating more intense rotational energy, and the device was deemed too impractical.
Indeed, during the testing of the ship, although it could indeed levitate, it was almost impossible to control or move forward, usually quickly spinning out of control or even flying through the roof of the test hangar.
According to rumors, the Nazis were furious at Schauberger’s inability to solve these problems, which caused the inventor to be temporarily imprisoned. But then he came under the personal attention of Heinrich Himmler, who drew Schauberger to work on another miracle of technology – a new type of silent mini-submarine, and then ordered to continue work on a new version of the anti-gravity device called Vril-7.
It is not known how far Schauberger went with the Vril-7, as the end of World War II halted all secret Nazi research (at least official), with most of his work, prototypes, and plans destroyed so that they would not fall into the hands of the Allies.
The Americans, knowing how important Schauberger was to the Germans, arrested him and took him to the United States, intensively interrogating him, but were never able to get much information from him. However, they were able to use all the information they received to the maximum. The fundamental principles that Schauberger used were later applied to several projects, including the Avro Canada VZ-9 Avrocar, which was a vertical takeoff and landing aircraft developed during the Cold War era, and others.
Schauberger, while in the United States, tried for several more years on various civilian vortex technology projects such as generators, water purification systems and air purification devices, before eventually returning to Austria on September 25, 1958, almost penniless.
He died quite suddenly, just five days after his return to his homeland, taking all his secrets with him to the grave.
Since then, various conspiracy theories have regularly emerged about Schauberger, including that his research went much further than anticipated, and that many of the UFOs that were seen during the Second World War were in fact Schauberger’s experimental devices.
But all these are just hypotheses and unverified rumors, for sure no one knows anything. He remains in many ways a ghost person, the true scope of his work is unknown, and his research is enigmatic.
https://www.xaluannews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3296405 |
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