Scmazter Posted March 1, 2005 Posted March 1, 2005 SuP. Recently, I've become aware of the Rainbow Project / Philadelphia Experiment. This has me very interested, and I wished to ask here, if it is physically possible. The theory is that light has to be bent around the ship to make it invisible. To accomplish this, the Navy wrapped the ship's circumference in wire and passed a measured current through it. This caused a huge oscillating magnet to form a magnetic field around the ship, not only bending the light, but space and time as well. The physics of the experiment are reminiscent of Einstein's Unified Field Theory that once you bend light, you are also unwittingly bending space and time as well That's the bit which I wanted to ask. Apperantly, Einstein was also working onthe project - in that he developed thoeries to make it possibl. More info here: http://www.abovetopsecret.com/pages/philadelphia.html Thanks a lot!!!
Scmazter Posted March 1, 2005 Author Posted March 1, 2005 hmmm....magnets warping space and time? Yes, well this magnetic field, apperently was very strong. They fitted the vessel with a hell of a lot of electrical equipment, put 4 giant generators on board, and put wire and cables all around the ships (or something like that), and .... yeh. Given Einstein's Theory of Reletivety and Unified Field Theory are true (which I have no doubt they are), could it be possible?
[Tycho?] Posted March 1, 2005 Posted March 1, 2005 I dont think magnetic fields bend space time. Gravity does, which is part of general relativity. Einstien did not have a Unified Field Theory, and nobody does today. Its an effort to unify all the forces, which as not yet been done. This is a wacked out conspiracy theory, and not a very good one either.
5614 Posted March 1, 2005 Posted March 1, 2005 The Philadelphia Experiment is not really proved to be true... its more a modern myth.
Scmazter Posted March 1, 2005 Author Posted March 1, 2005 ']IEinstien did not have a Unified Field Theory You must be joking. You don't know, that for a very long time, also while working with the US Navy in Philadelphia, Einstein was working on the Unified Field Thoery?
swansont Posted March 1, 2005 Posted March 1, 2005 You must be joking. You don't know' date=' that for a very long time, also while working with the US Navy in Philadelphia, Einstein was working on the Unified Field Thoery?[/quote'] "Working on" is not the same as "having."
Scmazter Posted March 1, 2005 Author Posted March 1, 2005 Obviously. But still. It was very largely there, he just didn't complete his work on it.
Cadmus Posted March 2, 2005 Posted March 2, 2005 '']Einstien did not have a Unified Field Theory, and nobody does today.I think that if you just look on the Internet you will find that a great many people have a unified field theory.
Severian Posted March 2, 2005 Posted March 2, 2005 Einstein didn't even believe in quantum mechanics, nevermind Quantum Field Theory! This is pure myth.
Scmazter Posted March 2, 2005 Author Posted March 2, 2005 Einstein didn't even believe in quantum mechanics, nevermind Quantum Field Theory! This is pure myth. He was working on a Unified Field Theory which may or may not be the same. There are papers which he worked on before he died, to prove he was infact working on this. Not even close to a myth.
Deified Posted March 2, 2005 Posted March 2, 2005 Given Einstein's Theory of Reletivety and Unified Field Theory are true (which I have no doubt they are) Why on earth would you not have ANY doubt? You don't even know what the "Unified Field Theory" is. Why are you accepting it as the truth? [edit] Just because you or anyone else says "there are papers" does NOT make it true. Also, when researching science or history or really anything, always be wary of ".com"s.
Scmazter Posted March 2, 2005 Author Posted March 2, 2005 Lol. Because Einstein was a genious? There isn't just one person.....his papers are widely known. Come on, you can't seriously deny his work on the theory.
J.C.MacSwell Posted March 2, 2005 Posted March 2, 2005 Lol. Because Einstein was a genious? There isn't just one person.....his papers are widely known. Come on' date=' you can't seriously deny his work on the theory.[/quote'] Nobody's denying his "work". Einstein never claimed to have suceeded at a unified field theory.
ydoaPs Posted March 5, 2005 Posted March 5, 2005 http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq21-1.htm philidelphai experiment is crap. the wires neutralize the magnetic feild so magnetic mines dont hit it.
syntax252 Posted March 5, 2005 Posted March 5, 2005 If a magnet chages light so that you can't see something inside it's field, how do they find the patients who go through an MRI examination?
J.C.MacSwell Posted March 5, 2005 Posted March 5, 2005 If a magnet chages light so that you can't see something inside it's field, how do they find the patients who go through an MRI examination? They find them a lot more interesting...due to their magnetic personalities.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now