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Can planes be set free from Gravitas????

Boeing investigates possibility that planes can be set free from the pull of gravity
The Independent (London) July 30, 2002
By Charles Arthur Technology Editor Eugene Podkletnov: New theories on
gravity’s pull

FREEING PLANES from the pull of gravity may sound like something from
science fiction. But devotees of Dan Dare might be interested to learn that the
aircraft maker Boeing is trying to turn the idea into scientific fact.

A briefing document obtained by Jane’s Defence Weekly magazine says
researchers at the company are investigating radical gravity theories by a
Russian scientist, Eugene Podkletnov. He believes objects may lose some of their
weight (their gravitational pull) under certain conditions. Specifically, those
conditions would be the interaction of spinning superconductors and powerful
electromagnets.

But Dr Podkletnov’s work has been known of for more than six years without
being validated in a mainstream scientific publication, and has been
investigated by the US space agency Nasa and the military arm of the British
defence company, BAE Systems. “We haven’t found anything,” a BAE source said
yesterday.

A Boeing spokesman confirmed that the company had conducted tests on “a
number of anti-gravity devices”, and added: “These devices do not actually break
the laws of physics. We feel there is a basic science that exists for all this.”

Many large organisations spend money maintaining a watching brief on such
unlikely technologies, on the slim chance that they will be validated and
revolutionise our lives. Dr Podkletnov claimed in a 1996 paper submitted to a
physics journal that he had observed “gravity shielding”, where objects
suspended above a superconductor rotating at 5,000rpm showed an apparent fall in
weight of 2 per cent.

The claim drew a storm of interest, but the negative reaction led him to
withdraw it. Copies have survived on the internet, but no scientific laboratory
has confirmed the experiment by repeating it and publishing their results.
Critics also said it would be economically unfeasible to make superconductors
large enough to produce even a small weight reduction.

But Boeing’s spokesman said: “We are trying to engineer the science in a way
that produces something workable. It could help produce a transport system that
works without fuel, or produce spacecraft.”

He said that Boeing “would very much like to work with” Dr Podkletnov. But
it was alleged yesterday that the Russian government had thwarted their attempts
at co-operation.

A source at BAE Systems confirmed yesterday that the company was still
interested in Dr Podkletnov’s work, under a project called Greenglow, which it
started in July 1999. The researchers met the Russian scientist last summer, and
he claimed to have the design for a “gravity impulse generator”. But nothing has
emerged from his work since.

Students at Sheffield University who tried to replicate Dr Podkletnov’s work
failed to find any weight reduction. One scientist said they did not duplicate
his precise, experimental conditions. “It would cost about pounds 100,000 to set
that experiment up just as he did it,” he added.
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