Sound in a superconductor might produce antigravity

Jerry Wayne Decker ( jwdatwork@yahoo.com )
Sat, 22 Jan 2000 09:35:04 -0800 (PST)

Hi Folks!

Found this interesting repost to
alt.sci.physics.new-theories on using sound in a
superconductor to affect 'gravity' as in the Tampere
experiment;
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Strangely, I posted this some time in 1995 or 1996 and
its no longer in the dejanews archives. So here it is
again:

It seems to me that sound waves through a
superconductor might produce antigravity.

Compressing a superconductor can change its ability to
superconduct, especially if its barely below the
critical temperature.

So waves moving from the center to the edge would
shove flux off out of the disk. Maybe it would also
shove virtual flux (i.e. gravity) off the disk.

I've wondered if the finnish experiment results came
from something as mundane as bearing noise!

There might be other interesting effects from phonons.

Anyway, it seems it would be worth a try. I don't have
the money or setup to do it.

Kelly Loum - kelly_loum@my-deja.com

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