Originally posted by DrStiffler
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Ok. First of all, the question: Can a localized spatial resonance exist?
In order to answer that question, we need to look at the question wether or not the electric field, or charge, can exist without charge carriers. As you know, electrons can be considered as being EM waves, as can *all* matter. How on earth can *any* matter exist, if charge itself must be carried by a charge carrier consisting of matter, of mass?
Thomas Bearden says it like this:
New Tesla Electromagnetics & the Secrets of Electrical Free Energy (1984, Bearden)
"In present electromagnetics theory, charge and charged mass are
falsely made identical. Actually, on a charged particle, the "charge" is
the flux of virtual particles on the "bare particle" of observable mass.
The charged particle is thus a "system" of true massless charge
coupled to a bare chargeless mass. The observable "mass" is static,
three-dimensional, and totally spatial. "Charge" is dynamic, four-
dimensional or more, virtual and spatiotemporal. Further, the charge
and observable mass can be decoupled, contrary to present theory.
Decoupled charge -- that is, the absence of mass -- is simply what we
presently refer to as "vacuum." Vacuum, spacetime, and massless
charge are all identical. Rigorously, we should utilize any of these
three as an "ether," as suggested for vacuum by Einstein himself (see
Max Born, Einstein's Theory of Relativity, Revised Edition, Dover
Publications, New York, 1965, p. 224). And all three of them are
identically anenergy -- not energy, but more fundamental components
of energy."
The most important part:
"Decoupled charge -- that is, the absence of mass -- is simply what we
presently refer to as "vacuum." Vacuum, spacetime, and massless
charge are all identical."
In other words: charge is something like a property of the vacuum itself and therefore pure electrical spational resonance can exist.
In the following article, Bearden states:
http://www.cheniere.org/articles/How...crisis1-1b.pdf
"Every joule of observable energy in the universe comes from the source charge (and its vacuum polarization) or a source dipole. In every EM system. It always has, and it always will. We live in the midst of an incredible number of "free EM energy emitters", called "charges and dipoles", that continually extract and outpour EM energy directly from the seething vacuum."
This matches quite nicely with what Prof. Claus Turtur writes in chapter "A circulation of energy of the electrostatic field":
http://www.wbabin.net/physics/turtur1e.pdf
"If electrostatic fields propagate with the speed of light, they transport energy, because they have a certain energy density [Chu 99]. It should be possible to trace this transport of energy if is really existing. That this is really the case can be seen even with a simple example regarding a point charge, as will be done on the following pages. When we trace this energy we come to situation, which looks paradox at the very first glance, but the paradox can be dissolved, introducing a circulation of energy [e5].
[...]
The first aspect of the mentioned paradox regards the emission of energy at all1 [e16]. If a point charge (for instance an elementary charge) exists since a given moment in time, it emits electric field and field’s energy from the time of its birth without any alteration of its mass.
The volume of the space filled with this field increases permanently during time and with it the total energy of the field. But from where does this “new energy” originate ? For the charged particle does not alter its mass (and thus its energy), the “new energy” can not originate from the particle itself. This means: The charged particle has to be permanently supplied with energy from somewhere.
[...]
The energy within the spherical shell [..] can now be calculated as the Volume integral [...] Obviously, this energy is not zero. This means that the charge (which is the field source) indeed emits energy permanently. By the way, this is a mathematical reproduction of the first paradox."
Now that leads to a very interesting thought. If charge is a property of the vacuum itself, is present everywhere, and emits energy all of the time, which is unfortunately "static", or "non-diverging" as Bearden calls it, what would happen if we transmit pure voltage waves, making "it" dynamic and we apply good old Huygens principle?
It looks like we might indeed get "self excitation from stimulation" in the vacuum itself, which would explain the working principle of Tesla's "magnifying transmitter"...
Now back to the question "what's mass got to do with it?"
Apparantly, mass somehow couples the electric field and the magnetic field and can be considered as a vortex, according to Meyl.
So, by moving charged, spinning particles (mass) around, you create both electric and magnetic fields. The (momentarily) separation of charged particles creates an electric dipole, which creates an electric field, which can emit pure electric waves in the vacuum. The *movement* of spinning particles with a *mass* can create magnetic fields, while the two together can create an EM field.
Now if you drive an "open pipe" *outside* a coil using a current *inside* the coil, and you consider that the *outside* resonance frequency differs from the *inside* resonance frequency, you only excite the *outside* resonance, the electric wave, the scalar wave, while the movement of the electrons and thus the magnetic field component remains fairly small, because the *inside* particle-based current is *not* in resonance.
So, what's mass gotta do with it?
It probably kills your scalar wave if you let it move around in resonance...
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