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Originally posted by b309302
Let us assume gravity is a wave (explanation at bottom).
Waves degrade as they pass through a denser material (i.e.mass).
Originally posted by b309302
Why won't this work?
Getting past E=mc2 by keeping mass a constant as you accelerate:
Gravity: Let us assume gravity is a wave (explanation at bottom). Waves degrade as they pass through a denser material (i.e.mass).
If two people were pushing you from opposite sides with equal force (gravity) the result would be no movement. If one person eased up a bit and stopped pushing you as hard (gravity wave through mass) which way would you move? The denser the mass (less the other person is pushing you) the stronger the push towards that mass.
Gravity is a push not a pull. Invert Newtonian physics so you are pushed into a weaker gravity field not pulled into a stronger one. More mass= greater attraction to that mass. Newtonian physics still works, we just invert the fields.
Matter: What would happen if you started to compress these waves together? Compressed them until they almost had a measurable mass... wouldn't you have the foundation for the subatomic?
How could we prove this? Using the fact mass increases as speed increases approaching infinity as you approach (c). Imagine gravity waves permeating space time... and you decide to start accelerating an object. As that objects speed increased it would encounter more and more gravity waves the faster you went. Akin to a speed boat accelerating from wave crest to wave crest, the faster the boat goes the more waves it encounters in a given time frame and the more energy it would take to overcome the resistance. What if these oncoming gravity waves compress... compress to a measurable density. Energy to matter as you approach (c). It would take infinite energy to overcome this mass increase. Unless...
Using mass/energy/gravity propagating as a wave through space time we come to the conclusion that mass does not move through space. Instead it moves like a wave ( a very dense wave) through the ocean (the ocean being the membrane of 12 dimensional super string theory). The water molecules themselves do not travel with the wave, they just pass the energy along.We do not actually move through space, we just pass our energy along the membrane as a propagating wave front. If E=mc2 suggests energy and matter are the same, they are both waves...of different density and amplitude.
So... if we found the amplitude of a gravity wave, inverted it and using wave cancellation in front of a ship, we would avoid mass increase. Since these waves are no longer compressed in front of the ship mass remains a constant. This design would also require no additional thrust since gravity would push the ship into the area of lower gravity ahead of it. Speed is controlled by the amount of wave cancellation and the theoretical upper limit is the speed of gravity. No infinite mass=no infinite energy.
So I guess I'm saying all energy and matter are simply different density and amplitude waves propagating along membrane space. Thus they can be manipulated by wave interference.
This theory is a lot more intricate then i put here, I would appreciate any feedback.
Originally posted by b309302
reply to post by jkrog08
Mechanism is form verses function. Still doing the math to find gravity wave amplitude. Not impossible just a lot of work. .
Originally posted by b309302
Why won't this work?
Getting past E=mc2 by keeping mass a constant as you accelerate:
J, I thought you just posted in another thread they were trying to prove that with the LHC, so if it's not proven yet, is it really that well accepted? It really doesn't sound too plausible to me but if they come up with some experimental results to prove it I'll be reviewing that.
Originally posted by jkrog08
reply to post by b309302
Yes but gravity is still lost from real space into the brane space, or hyperspace. This is a pretty well accepted postulate in the theoretical physics community. So what I am saying is you would need to find some way of negating the loss of gravity for this to work in any practical sense IMHO.