View Full Version : What's this?


kaduseus
01-05-03, 05:00 PM
Link to a whirly thing (http://www.geocities.com/codex34/grav/grav4.html)
Any idea's?

fmonroy
01-05-03, 06:02 PM
i don't know...
theory about gravitons?

how did you come to that page?

spookz
01-05-03, 06:22 PM
http://www.google.com/search?num=50&hl=en&lr=&ie=ISO-8859-1&newwindow=1&safe=off&as_qdr=all&q=Gravity++Dual+Vortex

http://www.geocities.com/codex34/

??

lethe
01-05-03, 07:02 PM
looks like a plasma chamber to me....

James R
01-05-03, 07:50 PM
Could be anything. It looks like a model of fluid flow of some kind in a rotating system.

orbie
01-06-03, 01:01 AM
Possibily something with magnetic fields and plasma flows. One of those torus (the donut thingies) would resemble the Tokamak Fusion reactor which utilizes a magnetic field to contain fusing hydrogen atoms in the form of plasma.

kaduseus
01-06-03, 10:03 PM
It's a rotating whirly thing, are you blind !!
No it hasn't got magnetic fields,yet, i will draw them in next time in a cross section.

It's what i worked out the mechanics of a self contained body would look like at the core of rotation.
You know galaxies, stars, planets, atoms. They're all self contained bodies with rotational motion.

The whirly thing is a general model of self containment, although you need another drawing to determine the interface between the internal and external of the body. Next month coz i'm going on holiday tomorrow for 4 weeks.

If you take a planer gravitational rotation and add polar jets, the animation is a simplistic interpretation of the resultant rotations.

Take a look at the hour glass nebula, this to me is a star going from a gravitational rotation to a centrefugal rotation probably being caused by the surrounding stars pulling the star appart.
As you will see there are 2 plumes, why??, take another look at the animation.
There are some other really nice images from space showing similar mechanics to the hour glass nebula.

If you look at the animation of the crab nebula you will notice pulsating rings being produced in the gravitational plane but going away from the center, why??, look at the animation and consider what would happen if the toroids were to begin bouncing together and appart at a high frequency, this would set up a 'pressure wave' in the gravitational plane, no matter moves away from the center, the wave 'appears' to travel away from the center due to build up and dissipation of matter. The traffic log jam animations show this better than i can explain.

I'd really like to build a coreless reactor that could produce such a rotation, just think, atoms so big you could see them!! I'll be at the opposite side of the planet when they turn the thing on.
I wonder what would happen when you turn the machine off???

spookz
01-07-03, 09:13 AM
Next month coz i'm going on holiday tomorrow for 4 weeks.

i think the anticipation would have killed me off by then

;)