Re: Graduated Forcefalls

Jerry W. Decker ( (no email) )
Sun, 15 Feb 1998 23:05:25 -0800

Hi Hex et al!

You wrote;
> So here's my question (oops - two in fact, now):
> 1) Assuming that charge is the equivalent of "spatial pressure", I
> assume there is an accoustic counterpart, right? Would that accoustic
> counterpart be what we know as "shock waves"?

I don't know about charge being 'spatial pressure' though it is an
interesting statement. Shock waves as far as I know can occur at any
frequency and in any medium, consisting of high density, short duration
bursts.

> 2) Did Keely ever mention whether there are any forces built up from
> sound that sound graduates to, and if not does the graduation of
> energy simply end with accoustics, or does the process "loop back
> around" (i.e. where sound is converted back into lower forces and so
> on down the line - and presumably back again)?

I'm not saying Keely said this, but the graduation is really a division
of sound where it manifests as pressure, then matter. The term
'graduation' is a harmonizing of the mass aggregate constituents so that
they are all in phase, if not actually resonant....such as in a Bose
Einstein Condensate.

--                Jerry W. Decker  /   jdecker@keelynet.com          http://keelynet.com   /  "From an Art to a Science"       Voice : (214) 324-8741   /   FAX :  (214) 324-3501   KeelyNet - PO BOX 870716 - Mesquite - Republic of Texas - 75187