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originally posted by: MysterX
a reply to: Bedlam
Thought the OP stated that it's been proven that a magnetic field can direct and influence both heat and light?
originally posted by: MysterX
a reply to: Bedlam
Thanks for the explanation, but i wasn't imagining a hand held magnet powered ray gun, i was imagining our magnetosphere, acting like a fluorescent strip light with an igniter on the blink making the light from the tube stutter.
originally posted by: Quadlink
Well this would fit into the theory's in the videos " The Primer fields " .... a must watch.
originally posted by: RoScoLaz4
as a boy i found magnets irresistably interesting. they were like magic.
i remember reading a ufo contactee story years ago in which 'liquid magnets' were a factor in the saucers propulsion system (supposedly). doubtless there are as yet unexplored uses for magnetism still to be found.
originally posted by: Bedlam
originally posted by: MysterX
a reply to: Bedlam
Thanks for the explanation, but i wasn't imagining a hand held magnet powered ray gun, i was imagining our magnetosphere, acting like a fluorescent strip light with an igniter on the blink making the light from the tube stutter.
Nah. It's not the sort of thing you get in the atmosphere in normal sorts of environments. It's more an effect you will see in solids, if they're very regularly crystalline, if they're in a cryogenic environment, and if they're in a colossal magnetic field. And even then, I'm not sure they won't find he was measuring some sort of constraint of electron motion due to the Hall effect or spin interference or the like, instead of it being a phonon phenomenon.