- #1
madhatter106
- 141
- 0
The other week I was doing some reading and had a tangential thought about electromagnetism. one thing lead to another and I was revisiting the Faraday Paradox.
I will state here at this point this is not a question in regards to over unity or zero-point energy, nor is this a pre-lude to such things. I tried to do quite a bit reading and searching about some oddities in the results of some simple experimentation I did. sadly most google hits return the aforementioned subject which I'm not interested in.
So on to the question. What explains the behavior of the electrons flow in relation to the direction of spin and polarity?
I'll try and explain a bit better, I setup a quick apparatus to measure voltage and current in a rotating "magnet sandwich" two 2" ring magnets, possibly ceramic but may be samarium-cobalt due to high pull strength of ~40lbs. 2 copper disks 1.8" dia and brass stator. insulated from ball bearing support with viton o-rings. basically stuff laying around the shop.
not wanting to read any current or fluctuations from other sources I spun the setup with fiber thread wound around the stator, pull start fashion. for higher rpm a couple rubber-bands attached to electric motor to spin up then shut off to allow free-spin and run-down.
since a picture is worth a thousand words I drew up some quick schematics with the data on them.
I've read numerous times about the mass of the electron and how the angular momentum will cause the electron to move to the stator as they are lighter and the heavier positron will collect on the outer ring causing the electron to move inward. however in the testing I did the direction of rotation causes the electron path to change and also in the case of reading the potential from both sides of the outer disk between polarities you'll find electrons where you just found positrons. confused? I sure am, and it gets even stranger when measuring the 'stator' from opposite polarities. AC/DC voltage simultaneously, on/off switching DC voltage. It's probably easier to read the diagrams to see the picture.
I'm aware this isn't a simple question and delves into some heavy study. I can't be the first to have tested this, I can't seem to find any data on this arrangement. No real surprise as the majority of groups 'building' that arrangement seem to be all talk and no proof. I wasn't after energy just curious to see if a picture could be formed from the data that would clarify the issue and possibly shed some light on this with relevant information.
I will state here at this point this is not a question in regards to over unity or zero-point energy, nor is this a pre-lude to such things. I tried to do quite a bit reading and searching about some oddities in the results of some simple experimentation I did. sadly most google hits return the aforementioned subject which I'm not interested in.
So on to the question. What explains the behavior of the electrons flow in relation to the direction of spin and polarity?
I'll try and explain a bit better, I setup a quick apparatus to measure voltage and current in a rotating "magnet sandwich" two 2" ring magnets, possibly ceramic but may be samarium-cobalt due to high pull strength of ~40lbs. 2 copper disks 1.8" dia and brass stator. insulated from ball bearing support with viton o-rings. basically stuff laying around the shop.
not wanting to read any current or fluctuations from other sources I spun the setup with fiber thread wound around the stator, pull start fashion. for higher rpm a couple rubber-bands attached to electric motor to spin up then shut off to allow free-spin and run-down.
since a picture is worth a thousand words I drew up some quick schematics with the data on them.
I've read numerous times about the mass of the electron and how the angular momentum will cause the electron to move to the stator as they are lighter and the heavier positron will collect on the outer ring causing the electron to move inward. however in the testing I did the direction of rotation causes the electron path to change and also in the case of reading the potential from both sides of the outer disk between polarities you'll find electrons where you just found positrons. confused? I sure am, and it gets even stranger when measuring the 'stator' from opposite polarities. AC/DC voltage simultaneously, on/off switching DC voltage. It's probably easier to read the diagrams to see the picture.
I'm aware this isn't a simple question and delves into some heavy study. I can't be the first to have tested this, I can't seem to find any data on this arrangement. No real surprise as the majority of groups 'building' that arrangement seem to be all talk and no proof. I wasn't after energy just curious to see if a picture could be formed from the data that would clarify the issue and possibly shed some light on this with relevant information.