uranium
Converting Cosmic Radiant Energy Into Electrical Energy
Submitted by cybe on January 31, 2006 - 23:12- Abisko
- Sweden
- USA
- 1986
- Alfred Hubbard
- Arthur H. Matthews
- Bruce A. Perreault
- Dr. Thomas Henry Moray
- Edwin V. Gray
- electrostatic
- fused
- Herbert Jaeger
- hypotheses
- Joseph Papp
- metamict
- mineral
- Oscar C. Blomgren Sr
- quartz
- radioactivity
- silica
- thorium
- uranium
- Nikola Tesla
- car
- crystal
- nature
- patent
- radiant energy
- space
http://www.nuenergy.org/alt/Proceedings2001.htm
by Bruce A. Perreault
-EXOTIC RESEARCH CONFERENCE 2001 PROCEEDINGS-
Abstract
The Earth is bathed in a sea of cosmic and solar energies. Can a device be built that can transform this high frequency energy into usable power? I believe that T. H. Moray did build such a device. This has inspired me to conduct my research and to build my own prototypes. How the radiant energy device really worked might shock a few people once the facts become known.
Present day alternative energy researchers find hope in that, one day, power will be obtained from the energy that runs the Cosmos. In reality, this dream proves to be a lure to its followers, beyond the limits of credibility. A quagmire of unsubstantiated hypotheses exists, so bottomless and unreal. The facts of many newly conceived energy concepts are wholly inadequate, lacking justification, and incapable of throwing any light on the promise of inexpensive, abundant sources of energy.
Radiant Energy FATE Magazine Article, September, 1956
Submitted by cybe on January 6, 2006 - 00:49ALCHEMIST 1956
by Gaston Burridge
A salt Lake City man claims discovery of a new form of energy with which he performs metallurgical miracles.
Legend, if not history, has it that the alchemists of old searched for two things; how to make gold from baser metals, especially lead, and how to produce an elixir of life.
Some persons believe the alchemists were not searching for a new formula for making gold, but rather looking for information they believed was once known, then lost.
