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{{Short description|Force observed on an asymmetric capacitor}}
The '''Biefeld–Brown effect''' is an effect that was discovered by ] (]) and ] (]). The effect is more widely referred to as '']'' (EHD) or sometimes ''electro-fluid-dynamics'', a counterpart to the well-known '']''. Small models lifted by this effect are sometimes called ']'.
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2020}}


The '''Biefeld–Brown effect''' is an electrical phenomenon, first noticed by inventor ] in the 1920s, where high voltage applied to the electrodes of an asymmetric ] causes a net propulsive force toward the smaller electrode.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Bahder|first=Thomas|last2=Fazi|first2=Christian|date=June 2003|title=Force on an Asymmetric Capacitor|url=https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/citations/ADA416740|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170619022057/http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA416740|url-status=live|archive-date=19 June 2017|journal=U.S. Army Research Laboratory|via=Defense Technical Information Center}}</ref> Brown believed this effect was an anti-gravity force, and referred to as "]" based on it being an electricity/gravity phenomenon.<ref> Paul Schatzkin, ''The Man Who Mastered Gravity '' – Chapter 10 ''The Biefeld Brown Effect''</ref> It has since been determined that the force is due to ] that transfers its momentum to surrounding neutral particles.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Canning |first=Francis X. |last2=Melcher |first2=Cory |last3=Winet |first3=Edwin |date=2004-10-01 |title=Asymmetrical Capacitors for Propulsion |url=https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20040171929 |language=en}}</ref>
== Effect analysis ==


==Overview==
]


It is generally assumed that the Biefeld–Brown effect produces an ] that transfers its momentum to surrounding neutral particles. It describes a force observed on an asymmetric ] when high voltage is applied to the capacitor's electrodes.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Bahder|first=Thomas|last2=Fazi|first2=Christian|date=June 2003|title=Force on an Asymmetric Capacitor|url=https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/citations/ADA416740|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170619022057/http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA416740|url-status=live|archive-date=19 June 2017|journal=U.S. Army Research Laboratory|via=Defense Technical Information Center}}</ref> Once suitably charged up to high ] potentials, a thrust at the negative terminal, pushing it away from the positive terminal, is generated.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last=Tajmar|first=Martin|date=February 2004|title=Biefeld-Brown Effect: Misinterpretation of Corona Wind Phenomena|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/245425484|journal=American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics|volume=42|issue=2|pages=315–318|via=ResearchGate|bibcode=2004AIAAJ..42..315T|doi=10.2514/1.9095}}</ref>
The effect relies on ], which allows air molecules to become ]ized near sharp points and edges — this belief is perpetuated in the construction of pointy ]s historically (though rounded or spherical topped rods are better than the pointed rods). Usually, two electrodes are used with a high voltage between them, about 20 kV and up to megavolt levels, where one electrode is small or sharp, and the other larger and smoother. The most effective distance between electrodes occurs at an electric field gradient of about 10 kV/cm, which is just below the nominal breakdown voltage of air between two sharp points. This creates a high field gradient around the smaller, positively charged electrode. Around this electrode, ]s are stripped off the atoms in the surrounding medium, they are literally pulled right off by the electrode's charge.


The use of an asymmetric capacitor, with the negative electrode being larger than the positive electrode, allowed for more ] to be produced in the direction from the low-flux to the high-flux region compared to a conventional capacitor.<ref name=":1" /> These asymmetric capacitors became known as Asymmetrical Capacitor Thrusters (ACT).<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal|last=Canning|first=Francis|last2=Melcher|first2=Cory|last3=Winet|first3=Edwin|date=1 October 2004|title=Asymmetrical Capacitors for Propulsion|url=https://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=20040171929|journal=NASA Technical Reports Server}}</ref> The Biefeld–Brown effect can be observed in ]s and ], which utilize the effect to produce thrust in the air without requiring any combustion or moving parts.<ref name=":0" />
This leaves a cloud of positively charged ]s in the medium, which are attracted to the negative smooth electrode, where they are neutralized again. In the process, thousands of impacts occur between these charged ions and the neutral air molecules in the air gap, causing a transfer in momentum between the two, which creates a net directional force on the electrode setup. This effect can be used for ] (see ]) and ] ]s.


== Interpretations == == History ==
{{Further|Thomas Townsend Brown}}


The "Biefeld–Brown effect" was the name given to a phenomenon observed by Thomas Townsend Brown while he was experimenting with ]s during the 1920s while he was still in high school. When he applied a high voltage electrical charge to a ] that he placed on a scale, Brown noticed a difference in the tube's mass depending on orientation, implying some kind of ].<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":4">{{Cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/education/2003/apr/17/science.highereducation|title=TT Brown's Electrogravitics|last=Pilkington|first=Mark|date=16 April 2003|work=The Guardian|access-date=27 August 2018}}</ref> This discovery caused him to assume that he had somehow influenced gravity electronically and led him to design a propulsion system based on this phenomenon.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://chipdesignmag.com/carter/2012/12/10/thomas-townsend-brown-part-iv-of-the-holiday-serial/|title=Thomas Townsend Brown: Part IV of the Holiday Serial|website=Systems Design Engineering|access-date=27 August 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140520003506/http://chipdesignmag.com/carter/2012/12/10/thomas-townsend-brown-part-iv-of-the-holiday-serial/|archive-date=20 May 2014|url-status=dead}}</ref> On 15 April 1927, he applied for a patent, entitled "Method of Producing Force or Motion," that described his invention as an electrical-based method that could control gravity to produce linear force or motion.<ref name=":0" /> In 1929, Brown published an article for the popular American magazine ''Science and Invention'', which detailed his work. The article also mentioned the "gravitator," an invention by Brown which produced motion without the use of electromagnetism, gears, propellers, or wheels, but instead using the principles of what he called "electro-gravitation." He also claimed that the asymmetric capacitors were capable of generating mysterious fields that interacted with the Earth's ] and envisioned a future where gravitators would propel ocean liners and even space cars.<ref> Paul Schatzkin, ''The Man Who Mastered Gravity '' Chapter 21: ''How I Control Gravitation''</ref>
The effect has become something of a ] in the ] world, where it is seen as an example of something much more exotic than electrokinetics. ] devoted an entire chapter of his book '']'' to a retelling of Brown's early work with the effect, implying he had discovered some new '']'' effect being used by UFOs. In fact Brown was fully aware of how the device worked, but that makes for a less interesting story. Today the ] is filled with sites devoted to this interpretation of the effect (see below for some of the more profound sites).


At some point this effect also gained the moniker "Biefeld–Brown effect", probably coined by Brown to claim ] professor of physics and astronomy ] as his mentor and co-experimenter.<ref name="ttbrown.com"> Paul Schatzkin, ''The Man Who Mastered Gravity '' Chapter 11: ''He Made Things Up ''</ref> Brown attended Denison in Ohio for a year before he dropped out and records of him even having an association with Biefeld are sketchy at best.<ref name="ttbrown.com"/> Brown claimed that he did a series of experiments with professor of astronomy Biefeld, a former teacher of Brown whom Brown claimed was his mentor and co-experimenter at Denison University.As of 2004, Denison University claims they have no record of any such experiments, or of any association between Brown and Biefeld.<ref> Paul Schatzkin, ''The Man Who Mastered Gravity '' Chapter 11 – ''He Made Things Up ''</ref>
An article by M. Tajmar (see below, or ) describes an experiment designed to test the possibility that this effect may need some other effect than ion winds for its explanation. No such effect was found, to the limit of experimental accuracy. In particular, no thrust could be observed in a vacuum. A naval research lab, however, concluded in several repeated experiments a net thrust was apparent in vacuum. Neither of these tests were peer-reviewed, and therefore credibility can be given to neither.


In his 1960 patent titled "Electrokinetic Apparatus," Brown refers to ] to describe the Biefeld–Brown effect, linking the phenomenon to the field of ] (EHD).<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> Brown also believed the Biefeld–Brown effect could produce an anti-gravity force, referred to as "]" based on it being an electricity/gravity phenomenon.<ref> Paul Schatzkin, ''The Man Who Mastered Gravity '' – Chapter 10 ''The Biefeld Brown Effect''</ref> However, there is little evidence that supports Brown's claim on the effect's anti-gravity properties.<ref name=":3">{{Cite news|url=https://www.wired.com/2003/08/pwr-antigravity/|title=The Super Power Issue: The Antigravity Underground|last=Thompson|first=Clive|date=1 August 2003|work=Wired Magazine|access-date=27 August 2018}}</ref> Brown's patent made the following claims:<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":2" />
Some people think that the ] might be related to this effect. In fact, when Tesla came to the USA he was supposedly carrying plans for a "flying machine". The only common factor between a Tesla coil and the Biefeld–Brown effect is that, in both of them, high voltage plays a vital role. The ], or high field gradients between electrode plates, can be produced by an ] powered by Tesla coils.


# There is a negative correlation between the distance between the plates of the capacitor and the strength of the effect, where the shorter the distance, the greater the effect.
== Patents ==
# There is a positive correlation between the dielectric strength of the material between the electrodes and the strength of the effect, where the higher the strength, the greater the effect.
# There is a positive correlation between the area of the conductors and the strength of the effect, where the greater the area, the greater the effect.
# There is a positive correlation between the voltage difference between the capacitor plates and the strength of the effect, where the greater the voltage, the greater the effect.
# There is a positive correlation between the mass of the dielectric material and the strength of the effect, where the greater the mass, the greater the effect.


In 1965, Brown filed a patent that claimed that a net force on the asymmetric capacitor can exist even in a ]. However, there is little experimental evidence that serves to validate his claims.<ref name=":0" />
]


==Effect analysis==
T. T. Brown issued a number of ]s on his discovery:
]


The effect is generally believed to rely on ], which allows air molecules to become ]ized near sharp points and edges. Usually, two ] are used with a high voltage between them, ranging from a few kilovolts and up to megavolt levels, where one electrode is small or sharp, and the other larger and smoother. The most effective distance between electrodes occurs at an electric potential gradient of about 10 kV/cm, which is just below the nominal breakdown voltage of air between two sharp points, at a current density level usually referred to as the saturated corona current condition. This creates a high field gradient around the smaller, positively charged electrode. Around this electrode, ionization occurs, that is, ]s are stripped from the atoms in the surrounding medium; they are literally pulled right off by the electrode's charge.{{citation needed|date=January 2014}}
* — A method of and an apparatus or machine for producing force or motion (accepted 1928-11-15)
* {{US patent|1,974,483}} — Electrostatic motor (1934-09-25)
* {{US patent|2,949,550}} — Electrokinetic apparatus (1960-08-16)
* {{US patent|3,018,394}} — Electrokinetic transducer (1962-01-23)
* {{US patent|3,022,430}} — Electrokinetic generator (1962-02-20)
* {{US patent|3,187,206}} — Electrokinetic apparatus (1965-06-01)
* {{US patent|3,196,296}} — Electric generator (1965-07-20)


This leaves a cloud of positively charged ]s in the medium, which are attracted to the negative smooth electrode by ], where they are neutralized again. This produces an equally scaled opposing force in the lower electrode. This effect can be used for propulsion (see ]), ] ]s and recently also in EHD cooling systems.<ref>{{cite web|last=Kocik|first=Marek|title=A System for Liquid Cooling of Electronic Elements with EHD Pumping Mechanism|url=http://www.iesj.org/html/service/ijpest/vol10_no1_2016/PDF/IJPEST_Vol10_No1_10_pp047-050.pdf|access-date=20 June 2017}}{{Dead link|date=June 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> The velocity achievable by such setups is limited by the momentum achievable by the ionized air, which is reduced by ion impact with neutral air. A theoretical derivation of this force has been proposed (see the external links below).
Historically numerous patents have been granted for various applications of the effect, from electrostatic dust precipitation, to ]s, and also for flight. A particularly notable patent — {{US patent|3,120,363}} — was granted to G.E. Hagen in 1964, for apparatus more or less identical to the later so called ']' devices. Other ionic US patents of interest: 2022465, 2182751, 2282401, 2295152, 2460175, 2636664, 2765975, 3071705, 3177654, 3223038, 3120363, 3130945


However, this effect works using either polarity for the electrodes: the small or thin electrode can be either positive or negative, and the larger electrode must have the opposite polarity.<ref name=":2" /> On many experimental sites it is reported that the thrust effect of a lifter is actually a bit stronger when the small electrode is the positive one.<ref name=":0" /> This is possibly an effect of the differences between the ionization energy and electron affinity energy of the constituent parts of air; thus the ease of which ions are created at the 'sharp' electrode.
== External links ==


As air pressure is removed from the system, several effects combine to reduce the force and momentum available to the system. The number of air molecules around the ionizing electrode is reduced, decreasing the quantity of ionized particles. At the same time, the number of impacts between ionized and neutral particles is reduced. Whether this increases or decreases the maximum momentum of the ionized air is not typically measured, although the force acting upon the electrodes reduces, until the glow discharge region is entered. The reduction in force is also a product of the reducing breakdown voltage of air, as a lower potential must be applied between the electrodes, thereby reducing the force dictated by Coulomb's Law.
* — A Website & Forum that are completely dedicated to the Biefeld–Brown effect
* — About the ] ]
* ] — Vulgarisation article


During the glow discharge regime, the air becomes a conductor. Though the applied voltage and current will propagate at nearly the speed of light, the movement of the conductors themselves is almost negligible. This leads to a Coulomb force and change of momentum so small as to be zero.
=== Misinterpreted EHD only ===


Below the glow discharge region, the breakdown voltage increases again, whilst the number of potential ions decreases, and the chance of impact lowers. Experiments have been conducted and found to both prove and disprove a force at very low pressure. It is likely that the reason for this is that at very low pressures, only experiments which used very large voltages produced positive results, as a product of a greater chance of ionization of the extremely limited number of available air molecules, and a greater force from each ion from Coulomb's Law; experiments which used lower voltages have a lower chance of ionization and a lower force per ion. Common to positive results is that the force observed is small in comparison to experiments conducted at standard pressure.
* on ]'s "Common Errors" page
* (])
* — Plasma propulsion information


==Disputes surrounding electrogravity and ion wind==
=== Anomalous effects ===
Brown believed that his large, high voltage, high capacity capacitors produced an electric field strong enough to marginally interact with the Earth's gravitational pull, a phenomenon he labeled ]. Several researchers claim that conventional physics cannot adequately explain the phenomenon.<ref>{{Cite web
| magazine = Infinite Energy
| date = September–October 2002
| title = The "Lifter" Phenomenon
| last = Mallove
| first = Eugene
| url = http://www.infinite-energy.com/iemagazine/issue45/thelifterphen.html
}}</ref> The effect has become something of a ] in the ] community, where it is seen as an example of something much more exotic than ]. William L. Moore and ] devoted an entire chapter of their book on the "]" to a retelling of Brown's early work with the effect, implying he had discovered a new electrogravity effect and that it was being used by UFOs.


There have been follow-ups on the claims that this force can be produced in a full vacuum, meaning it is an unknown anti-gravity force, and not just the more well known ]. As part of a study in 1990, ] researcher R. L. Talley conducted a test on a Biefeld–Brown-style capacitor to replicate the effect in a vacuum.<ref name=":3" /> Despite attempts that increased the driving DC voltage to about 19 kV in vacuum chambers up to 10<sup>−6</sup> torr, Talley observed no thrust in terms of static DC potential applied to the electrodes.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Talley|first=R. L.|date=May 1991|title=Twenty First Century Propulsion Concept|url=http://www.otherhand.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Talley-paper-propulsion-concept.pdf|journal=Air Force Systems Command}}</ref> In 2003, ] scientist Jonathan Campbell tested a lifter in a vacuum at 10<sup>−7</sup> torr with a voltage of up to 50 kV, only to observe no movement from the lifter. Campbell pointed out to a ] reporter that creating a true vacuum similar to space for the test requires tens of thousands of dollars in equipment.<ref name=":3" />
* (])
* (Gravity research group, Aviation Studies International Ltd.)
*
* — Claims that Biefeld–Brown effect generates a thrust due to a spacetime warp
** — Introduction on EHD thrusters & lifters, vacuum experiment (including an explanation of why the effect does not occur in a vacuum)


Around the same time in 2003, researchers from the ] tested the Biefeld–Brown effect by building four different-sized asymmetric capacitors based on simple designs found on the Internet and then applying a high voltage of around 30 kV to them. According to their report, the researchers wrote that the effects of ion wind was at least three orders of magnitude too small to account for the observed force on the asymmetric capacitor in the air. Having proposed that the Biefeld–Brown effect could theoretically be explained using ion drift instead of ion wind due to how the former involves collisions instead of ballistic trajectories, they noted these were only "scaling estimates" and more experimental and theoretical work was needed.<ref>Bahder 2003, pp. 21-22.</ref>
== References ==


Around ten years later, researchers from the ] conducted experiments on the Biefeld–Brown effect that supported one of ARL's hypotheses that assigned ion drift as the most likely source of the generated force.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Malik|first=M.|last2=Primas|first2=J.|last3=Vopecky|first3=V.|last4=Svoboda|first4=M.|date=January 2014|title=Calculation and measurement of a neutral air flow velocity impacting a high voltage capacitor with asymmetrical electrodes|journal=AIP Advances|volume=4|issue=1|pages=017137|doi=10.1063/1.4864181|bibcode=2014AIPA....4a7137M|doi-access=free}}</ref>
* Tajmar M. ''Biefeld–Brown Effect: Misinterpretation of Corona Wind Phenomena'', AIAA Journal, ] ], vol. 42, no. 2, pp. 315-318(4),
* Buehler D.R. ''Exploratory Research on the Phenomenon of the Movement of High Voltage Capacitors'', Journal of Space Mixing, April 2004, vol. 2, pp. 1-22,


In 2004, ] published a paper that also failed to replicate Brown's work and suggested that Brown may have instead observed the effects of a ] triggered by insufficient outgassing of the electrode assembly in the vacuum chamber and therefore misinterpreted the corona wind effects as a possible connection between gravitation and electromagnetism.<ref name=":1" />
]


==Patents==
]
]
]

]
T. T. Brown was granted a number of ]s on his discovery:
* — A method of and an apparatus or machine for producing force or motion (accepted 1928-11-15)
* {{US patent|1974483}} — Electrostatic motor (1934-09-25)
* {{US patent|2949550}} — Electrokinetic apparatus (1960-08-16)
* {{US patent|3018394}} — Electrokinetic transducer (1962-01-23)
* {{US patent|3022430}} — Electrokinetic generator (1962-02-20)
* {{US patent|3187206}} — Electrokinetic apparatus (1965-06-01)
* {{US patent|3196296}} — Electric generator (1965-07-20)

Historically, numerous patents have been granted for various applications of the effect, including electrostatic dust precipitation, ]s, and flight. {{US patent|3120363}} was granted to G.E. Hagen in 1964 for apparatus more or less identical to the later so-called ']' devices.

==References==
{{Reflist}}

==External links==
* {{ cite magazine |url= http://www.salon.com/2002/08/05/zero_gravity/ |title= The Hunt for Zero Point by Nick Cook |series= Review |quote= An editor for the esteemed Jane's {{sic|Defense|hide=yes}} Weekly says the U.S. government has been working on Nazi anti-gravity technology in secret for 50 years |first= Kurt |last= Kleiner |magazine= Salon |date= 5 August 2002 |url-status= live |archive-date= 15 January 2011 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110115142418/http://dir.salon.com/story/books/review/2002/08/05/zero_gravity/index.html |ref=none}}
*{{Cite journal | last1 = Tajmar | first1 = M. | title = Biefeld-Brown Effect: Misinterpretation of Corona Wind Phenomena | journal = AIAA Journal | volume = 42 | issue = 2 | pages = 315–318 | year = 2004 | doi = 10.2514/1.9095|bibcode = 2004AIAAJ..42..315T |ref=none}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Biefeld-Brown Effect}}
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 01:23, 11 January 2025

Force observed on an asymmetric capacitor

The Biefeld–Brown effect is an electrical phenomenon, first noticed by inventor Thomas Townsend Brown in the 1920s, where high voltage applied to the electrodes of an asymmetric capacitor causes a net propulsive force toward the smaller electrode. Brown believed this effect was an anti-gravity force, and referred to as "electrogravitics" based on it being an electricity/gravity phenomenon. It has since been determined that the force is due to ionic wind that transfers its momentum to surrounding neutral particles.

Overview

It is generally assumed that the Biefeld–Brown effect produces an ionic wind that transfers its momentum to surrounding neutral particles. It describes a force observed on an asymmetric capacitor when high voltage is applied to the capacitor's electrodes. Once suitably charged up to high DC potentials, a thrust at the negative terminal, pushing it away from the positive terminal, is generated.

The use of an asymmetric capacitor, with the negative electrode being larger than the positive electrode, allowed for more thrust to be produced in the direction from the low-flux to the high-flux region compared to a conventional capacitor. These asymmetric capacitors became known as Asymmetrical Capacitor Thrusters (ACT). The Biefeld–Brown effect can be observed in ionocrafts and lifters, which utilize the effect to produce thrust in the air without requiring any combustion or moving parts.

History

Further information: Thomas Townsend Brown

The "Biefeld–Brown effect" was the name given to a phenomenon observed by Thomas Townsend Brown while he was experimenting with X-ray tubes during the 1920s while he was still in high school. When he applied a high voltage electrical charge to a Coolidge tube that he placed on a scale, Brown noticed a difference in the tube's mass depending on orientation, implying some kind of net force. This discovery caused him to assume that he had somehow influenced gravity electronically and led him to design a propulsion system based on this phenomenon. On 15 April 1927, he applied for a patent, entitled "Method of Producing Force or Motion," that described his invention as an electrical-based method that could control gravity to produce linear force or motion. In 1929, Brown published an article for the popular American magazine Science and Invention, which detailed his work. The article also mentioned the "gravitator," an invention by Brown which produced motion without the use of electromagnetism, gears, propellers, or wheels, but instead using the principles of what he called "electro-gravitation." He also claimed that the asymmetric capacitors were capable of generating mysterious fields that interacted with the Earth's gravitational pull and envisioned a future where gravitators would propel ocean liners and even space cars.

At some point this effect also gained the moniker "Biefeld–Brown effect", probably coined by Brown to claim Denison University professor of physics and astronomy Paul Alfred Biefeld as his mentor and co-experimenter. Brown attended Denison in Ohio for a year before he dropped out and records of him even having an association with Biefeld are sketchy at best. Brown claimed that he did a series of experiments with professor of astronomy Biefeld, a former teacher of Brown whom Brown claimed was his mentor and co-experimenter at Denison University.As of 2004, Denison University claims they have no record of any such experiments, or of any association between Brown and Biefeld.

In his 1960 patent titled "Electrokinetic Apparatus," Brown refers to electrokinesis to describe the Biefeld–Brown effect, linking the phenomenon to the field of electrohydrodynamics (EHD). Brown also believed the Biefeld–Brown effect could produce an anti-gravity force, referred to as "electrogravitics" based on it being an electricity/gravity phenomenon. However, there is little evidence that supports Brown's claim on the effect's anti-gravity properties. Brown's patent made the following claims:

  1. There is a negative correlation between the distance between the plates of the capacitor and the strength of the effect, where the shorter the distance, the greater the effect.
  2. There is a positive correlation between the dielectric strength of the material between the electrodes and the strength of the effect, where the higher the strength, the greater the effect.
  3. There is a positive correlation between the area of the conductors and the strength of the effect, where the greater the area, the greater the effect.
  4. There is a positive correlation between the voltage difference between the capacitor plates and the strength of the effect, where the greater the voltage, the greater the effect.
  5. There is a positive correlation between the mass of the dielectric material and the strength of the effect, where the greater the mass, the greater the effect.

In 1965, Brown filed a patent that claimed that a net force on the asymmetric capacitor can exist even in a vacuum. However, there is little experimental evidence that serves to validate his claims.

Effect analysis

The effect is generally believed to rely on corona discharge, which allows air molecules to become ionized near sharp points and edges. Usually, two electrodes are used with a high voltage between them, ranging from a few kilovolts and up to megavolt levels, where one electrode is small or sharp, and the other larger and smoother. The most effective distance between electrodes occurs at an electric potential gradient of about 10 kV/cm, which is just below the nominal breakdown voltage of air between two sharp points, at a current density level usually referred to as the saturated corona current condition. This creates a high field gradient around the smaller, positively charged electrode. Around this electrode, ionization occurs, that is, electrons are stripped from the atoms in the surrounding medium; they are literally pulled right off by the electrode's charge.

This leaves a cloud of positively charged ions in the medium, which are attracted to the negative smooth electrode by Coulomb's Law, where they are neutralized again. This produces an equally scaled opposing force in the lower electrode. This effect can be used for propulsion (see EHD thruster), fluid pumps and recently also in EHD cooling systems. The velocity achievable by such setups is limited by the momentum achievable by the ionized air, which is reduced by ion impact with neutral air. A theoretical derivation of this force has been proposed (see the external links below).

However, this effect works using either polarity for the electrodes: the small or thin electrode can be either positive or negative, and the larger electrode must have the opposite polarity. On many experimental sites it is reported that the thrust effect of a lifter is actually a bit stronger when the small electrode is the positive one. This is possibly an effect of the differences between the ionization energy and electron affinity energy of the constituent parts of air; thus the ease of which ions are created at the 'sharp' electrode.

As air pressure is removed from the system, several effects combine to reduce the force and momentum available to the system. The number of air molecules around the ionizing electrode is reduced, decreasing the quantity of ionized particles. At the same time, the number of impacts between ionized and neutral particles is reduced. Whether this increases or decreases the maximum momentum of the ionized air is not typically measured, although the force acting upon the electrodes reduces, until the glow discharge region is entered. The reduction in force is also a product of the reducing breakdown voltage of air, as a lower potential must be applied between the electrodes, thereby reducing the force dictated by Coulomb's Law.

During the glow discharge regime, the air becomes a conductor. Though the applied voltage and current will propagate at nearly the speed of light, the movement of the conductors themselves is almost negligible. This leads to a Coulomb force and change of momentum so small as to be zero.

Below the glow discharge region, the breakdown voltage increases again, whilst the number of potential ions decreases, and the chance of impact lowers. Experiments have been conducted and found to both prove and disprove a force at very low pressure. It is likely that the reason for this is that at very low pressures, only experiments which used very large voltages produced positive results, as a product of a greater chance of ionization of the extremely limited number of available air molecules, and a greater force from each ion from Coulomb's Law; experiments which used lower voltages have a lower chance of ionization and a lower force per ion. Common to positive results is that the force observed is small in comparison to experiments conducted at standard pressure.

Disputes surrounding electrogravity and ion wind

Brown believed that his large, high voltage, high capacity capacitors produced an electric field strong enough to marginally interact with the Earth's gravitational pull, a phenomenon he labeled electrogravitics. Several researchers claim that conventional physics cannot adequately explain the phenomenon. The effect has become something of a cause célèbre in the UFO community, where it is seen as an example of something much more exotic than electrokinetics. William L. Moore and Charles Berlitz devoted an entire chapter of their book on the "Philadelphia Experiment" to a retelling of Brown's early work with the effect, implying he had discovered a new electrogravity effect and that it was being used by UFOs.

There have been follow-ups on the claims that this force can be produced in a full vacuum, meaning it is an unknown anti-gravity force, and not just the more well known ion wind. As part of a study in 1990, U.S. Air Force researcher R. L. Talley conducted a test on a Biefeld–Brown-style capacitor to replicate the effect in a vacuum. Despite attempts that increased the driving DC voltage to about 19 kV in vacuum chambers up to 10 torr, Talley observed no thrust in terms of static DC potential applied to the electrodes. In 2003, NASA scientist Jonathan Campbell tested a lifter in a vacuum at 10 torr with a voltage of up to 50 kV, only to observe no movement from the lifter. Campbell pointed out to a Wired magazine reporter that creating a true vacuum similar to space for the test requires tens of thousands of dollars in equipment.

Around the same time in 2003, researchers from the Army Research Laboratory (ARL) tested the Biefeld–Brown effect by building four different-sized asymmetric capacitors based on simple designs found on the Internet and then applying a high voltage of around 30 kV to them. According to their report, the researchers wrote that the effects of ion wind was at least three orders of magnitude too small to account for the observed force on the asymmetric capacitor in the air. Having proposed that the Biefeld–Brown effect could theoretically be explained using ion drift instead of ion wind due to how the former involves collisions instead of ballistic trajectories, they noted these were only "scaling estimates" and more experimental and theoretical work was needed.

Around ten years later, researchers from the Technical University of Liberec conducted experiments on the Biefeld–Brown effect that supported one of ARL's hypotheses that assigned ion drift as the most likely source of the generated force.

In 2004, Martin Tajmar published a paper that also failed to replicate Brown's work and suggested that Brown may have instead observed the effects of a corona wind triggered by insufficient outgassing of the electrode assembly in the vacuum chamber and therefore misinterpreted the corona wind effects as a possible connection between gravitation and electromagnetism.

Patents

U.S. patent 3,120,363Flying apparatus — G.E. Hagen

T. T. Brown was granted a number of patents on his discovery:

Historically, numerous patents have been granted for various applications of the effect, including electrostatic dust precipitation, air ionizers, and flight. U.S. patent 3,120,363 was granted to G.E. Hagen in 1964 for apparatus more or less identical to the later so-called 'lifter' devices.

References

  1. ^ Bahder, Thomas; Fazi, Christian (June 2003). "Force on an Asymmetric Capacitor". U.S. Army Research Laboratory. Archived from the original on 19 June 2017 – via Defense Technical Information Center.
  2. Paul Schatzkin, The Man Who Mastered Gravity – Chapter 10 The Biefeld Brown Effect
  3. Canning, Francis X.; Melcher, Cory; Winet, Edwin (1 October 2004). "Asymmetrical Capacitors for Propulsion". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ Tajmar, Martin (February 2004). "Biefeld-Brown Effect: Misinterpretation of Corona Wind Phenomena". American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. 42 (2): 315–318. Bibcode:2004AIAAJ..42..315T. doi:10.2514/1.9095 – via ResearchGate.
  5. ^ Canning, Francis; Melcher, Cory; Winet, Edwin (1 October 2004). "Asymmetrical Capacitors for Propulsion". NASA Technical Reports Server.
  6. Pilkington, Mark (16 April 2003). "TT Brown's Electrogravitics". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
  7. "Thomas Townsend Brown: Part IV of the Holiday Serial". Systems Design Engineering. Archived from the original on 20 May 2014. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
  8. Paul Schatzkin, The Man Who Mastered Gravity Chapter 21: How I Control Gravitation
  9. ^ Paul Schatzkin, The Man Who Mastered Gravity Chapter 11: He Made Things Up
  10. Paul Schatzkin, The Man Who Mastered Gravity Chapter 11 – He Made Things Up
  11. Paul Schatzkin, The Man Who Mastered Gravity – Chapter 10 The Biefeld Brown Effect
  12. ^ Thompson, Clive (1 August 2003). "The Super Power Issue: The Antigravity Underground". Wired Magazine. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
  13. Kocik, Marek. "A System for Liquid Cooling of Electronic Elements with EHD Pumping Mechanism" (PDF). Retrieved 20 June 2017.
  14. Mallove, Eugene (September–October 2002). "The "Lifter" Phenomenon". Infinite Energy.
  15. Talley, R. L. (May 1991). "Twenty First Century Propulsion Concept" (PDF). Air Force Systems Command.
  16. Bahder 2003, pp. 21-22.
  17. Malik, M.; Primas, J.; Vopecky, V.; Svoboda, M. (January 2014). "Calculation and measurement of a neutral air flow velocity impacting a high voltage capacitor with asymmetrical electrodes". AIP Advances. 4 (1): 017137. Bibcode:2014AIPA....4a7137M. doi:10.1063/1.4864181.

External links

  • Kleiner, Kurt (5 August 2002). "The Hunt for Zero Point by Nick Cook". Salon. Review. Archived from the original on 15 January 2011. An editor for the esteemed Jane's Defense Weekly says the U.S. government has been working on Nazi anti-gravity technology in secret for 50 years
  • Tajmar, M. (2004). "Biefeld-Brown Effect: Misinterpretation of Corona Wind Phenomena". AIAA Journal. 42 (2): 315–318. Bibcode:2004AIAAJ..42..315T. doi:10.2514/1.9095.
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