Re: Negative Resistance discovered??

Jerry W. Decker ( (no email) )
Sat, 11 Jul 1998 14:00:57 -0500

Hi Folks!

Here is another email from Tom Bearden about the negative resistance
discovery;
==========
Jerry,

Well, phase conjugation involves time reversal.

In a time-reversed region, charges behave oppositely
to what they do in a time-forward region.

Thus indeed electrons run backwards -- IN A TIME-REVERSED
REGION!

If one thinks that is "against nature," one just is
inadvertently thinking that time in a region can only
run forward. Not so.

The fiberous nature of the material also adds to
the credibility. Just examine the fiber fuse phenomenon,
e.g. which destroys a fiber optics cable by melting a
little hole in the core surface about every centimeter or
so. Eerily, often after the cable has been damaged,
initiating the fiber fuse again in the opposite direction,
will result in the thing marching back down the cable,
FILLING UP ALL THOSE HOLES AGAIN and restoring the cable.

And the fiber fuse only works in those fiber optics
cables whose cores contain germanium (which is the
majority of them). It doesn't work in a core
containing silicon but no germanium.

Indeed, multiple retroreflections are almost bound
to occur in the fibrous material as described by Chung
et al. So if they get that material just right, they
darn sure can make a true negative resistor. They can
also transmit (in the future at least) energy down
a transmission line, and have more energy arrive at
the end that they transmitted into the cable at the
input end.

Our last message explained that they actually input
about 10exp13 more than they think.

This is a very exciting development. Please stay on
top of it and keep me informed.

Thanks,
Tom

--             Jerry Wayne Decker  /   jdecker@keelynet.com          http://keelynet.com   /  "From an Art to a Science"       Voice : (214) 324-8741   /   FAX :  (214) 324-3501             ICQ # - 13175100   /   AOL - Keelyman   KeelyNet - PO BOX 870716 - Mesquite - Republic of Texas - 75187