News

LightBlog

Sunday, July 23, 2017

Converting radiation into Traction, a big step forward with Emdrive

 A patentee who violates the laws of physics engine



picture taken from Emdrive.com


Briton Roger Scheuer, the inventor of the EmDrive engine, patented a new version of the unit. The work of the device has not yet been explained in the framework of conservation laws.


The document describing the device is available on the website of the UK Intellectual Property Office.
The patented Shoier modification of EmDrive differs from previous versions of the unit in the presence of a pair of superconducting plates. According to the scientist, this makes it possible to reduce the relative frequency of the electromagnetic wave as it propagates in the motor cavity, and thus increase the EmDrive thrust.
The EmDrive engine is a device from a magnetron (generating microwave) and a resonator (accumulating energy of their oscillations). Externally, the unit resembles a bucket placed on its side. This design allows, according to Scheuer, to convert radiation into traction.

The thrust developed by EmDrive is of the order of fractions of a micronucleon or millunewton. From the resonator of the engine, during its operation, no emissions of photons or other particles were recorded-something that would explain the possible appearance of thrust and the fulfillment of the law of conservation of momentum.

The conservation laws are a consequence of the symmetry properties of space-time. For example, the law of conservation of momentum is a reflection of the homogeneity of space - the equality of its properties, regardless of the point chosen in it, and the law of conservation of energy - the homogeneity of time.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Adbox