On 11 Sep, 15:13, "Bill Miller"
wrote:
> Shown below is the text of a news release that I just received.
>
>
> Hamilton, Ontario - September 24, 2007 (Note - this is a pre-release copy)
>
> McMaster research engineer Professor Natalia Nikolova, and her husband
> Robert Zimmerman, have verified the existence of a new type of radio wave
> called the Vector Potential Wave. This wave was first predicted in 1880 by
> British mathematician James Clerk Maxwell, but had never been directly
> detected until this summer here on McMaster campus in the Communications
> Research Lab. Dr. Nikolova comments, "One of the most enigmatic predictions
> of Maxwell was his concept of the magnetic vector potential. Until recently,
> most engineers believed it was only a mathematical concept with no physical
> reality. Now, more than 125 years later, we have realized a magnetic vector
> potential detector which allows measuring the wave at any distance from a
> microwave antenna".
>
> Nikolova and her husband have been working on this development nearly 2
> years. Zimmerman feels that the new discovery will ultimately lead to radio
> and television transmissions which do not require energy. On a more
> fundamental level, he added, "Maxwell was correct all along".
>
> The novelty of the discovery is that while the transmission requires very
> little energy, the reception of the wave requires that an active battery
> operated receiver be used. This is distinct from usual AM radio
> transmissions, where much energy is radiated by the transmitter, and the
> receiver can be a 'crystal set' with no battery.
>
> The detector developed by the research team is a plasma device looking like
> a fluorescent tube which displays super-conducting properties for radio
> signals. Nikolova is quick to add, "The device is at room temperature but
> acts like a superconductor, as predicted by Fritz London in 1930".
>
> Nikolova and Zimmerman plan on submitting their results this week to the
> research journal THE PHYSICAL REVIEW of the American Physical Society. >
>
> It sounds to me like they are attempting to use a variant of the
> Aharanov-Bohm effect for communication. I'm not familiar with Fritz London's
> 1930 work.
>
> Comments?
>
> Bill
I am not an expert in electromagnetics. Nor do I want to be. Whilst
the work at McMasters may be interesting to you and similar
enthusiasts I am suffering from an effect that electromagnetic experts
don't want to address.
Like many others I am woken from my sleep each early morning, made to
feel incredibly hot and have my health put at risk. Engineers and
Health Officers tell me that this is the result of military
electromagnetic emmissions from microwave and other communications
equipment. These experts tell me that it relates to AWACs, satellite
arrays and ground base lasers and that the "Engineers haven't come up
with a way of helping people like you yet".
Instead of fiddling around looking for waves which may or may not
exist why don't you experts help all of us having our lives and helth
ruined by current technologies?
Rumpus