December 4th, 2018.
The USPTO issues a mysterious patent to the
Navy for this...
A hybrid aerospace/undersea craft, capable
of extreme speeds in water, air and space.
It takes advantage of a quantum mechanics
concept once thought impossible: manipulating
microscopic fluctuations always present in
the vacuum of empty space.
In this video, we’ll show the patent isn’t
as far-fetched as some say.
Many of the theories needed for it to work
have already been proven experimentally...they’ve
just been misunderstood by journalists who
don’t have a background in physics.
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The story starts with Salvatore Pais.
The inventor listed on the patent, Pais worked
on it while employed by the Naval Air Warfare
Center Aircraft Division, or NAWCAD.
It oversees all R&D for Navy aircraft, and
tests them in 2,700 square miles of restricted
airspace over the mid-Atlantic.
Pais breaks the craft down into four components:
an inner wall, outer wall, microwave emitters
and something called an “inertial mass reduction
device.”
The craft works, he says, by emitting high
frequency electromagnetic waves throughout
the cavity between the inner and outer walls,
causing it to vibrate. The cavity between
both walls needs to be filled with a noble
gas.
He claims: if done correctly, the craft can
interact with the empty space surrounding
it, allowing it to behave anomalously.
Remember those microscopic fluctuations always
present in a vacuum we mentioned? It basically
means... empty space isn’t really empty.
For decades, quantum mechanics predicted this:
reality is filled with tiny particles that
blink in and out of existence.
And it was finally proven in 1997.
Researchers placed two conducting surfaces
very close together, within a micron. The
gap between the surfaces only allows for some
particles to flicker in and out, while outside
the plates — more types of particles exist.
This imbalance pushes in on the metal plates,
forcing them together.
Known as the Casimir force, it
opens a new realm of physics. Experts are
now working on ways to interact with this
vacuum energy...and it’s this that Pais
suggests can propel his craft.
Right now, academic circles are attempting
to do this with high-powered lasers — they
call it “breaking” the vacuum.
A group in Shanghai did it like this.
First, they sent light through a sapphire
crystal and several lenses. They then released
this into a single, powerful pulse for just
a trillionth of a second.
A more powerful laser is expected to go online
by 2023.
And when focused on a small enough spot, its
intensity will be 10 to the 24 watts per square
centimeter — 25 orders of magnitude stronger
than sunlight hitting Earth. If we can get
that number to 10 to the 29, the brief pulse
of light is expected to break the vacuum,
pulling electrons and other particles seemingly
out of nothing….
...but, it’s just E = mc squared. Converting
energy into matter. At high energies, we’re
more familiar with it working the other way
around, like with nuclear weapons.
In 2017, German scientists got close to this,
and were able to squeeze the vacuum. They
observed quantum fluctuations reverberating
like a rubber band.
...so, file that away in your mind. We can
interact with this “hidden” vacuum.
But how far can we take this? And can it be
used to propel a craft?
According to the Navy filings, Pais isn’t
looking to use a laser to break the vacuum
— but rather, another patented device: a
high energy electromagnetic field generator.
He says it works like this: it’s encased
by a shell made of a special metamaterial,
probably a ceramic. Inside, an electric motor,
powered by thermal energy, forces the shell
to spin. The unique material, when spinning
fast enough, will generate an electromagnetic
field.
Two years ago, Pais and a Navy attorney told
a patent examiner their device was in its
early stages but operable…
This letter from the Chief Technology Officer
of Naval Air Systems Command says something
similar, adding Pais was already testing a
shell. “Based on these initial findings
I would assert this will become a reality,”
he said, adding: “China is already investing
significantly in this area…”
Two years later, and the paper trail hasn’t
been updated.
We don’t know if R&D remains stuck there.
But if Pais got past that, the rest of the
craft may work — and, again, quantum physics
explains why.
Assuming a working generator is inside a craft,
Pais suggests what matters next happens between
the inner and outer walls. If this space is
filled with a gas like Xenon, microwave emitters
powered by the generator could force the gas
into a plasma.
And here’s the real leap.
Pais believes this plasma-lined hull, surrounded
by an electromagnetic field strong enough
to stimulate its local vacuum...can achieve
a state called macroscopic quantum coherence.
It sounds complex, but bear with us.
It can be simplified.
At tiny scales, all of the particles around
us behave like waves.
An electron isn’t sitting in space while
we aren’t looking — rather it’s a wave
of probabilities of where the electron will
be when it is observed.
The famed double slit experiment proved this.
Electrons, when passed through a double slit,
diffracted like water waves.
Decoherence is the process of the weird, quantum
realm...becoming normal, like the world we see.
It’s counterintuitive.
But proven by decades of research.
Macroscopic quantum coherence, then
is something we can observe that still retains
some odd, quantum-ness...
Helium, the second most abundant element in
the universe, can do this.
When cooled to near-absolute zero, it does
things that sound impossible — leak through
a solid beaker, evaporate upward against gravity.
And when stirred, it forms a vortex that rotates
indefinitely...
Six Nobel Prizes in the last 25 years have
been given for research into this...and we
haven’t come close to grasping the full
potential here. It’s speculated very high
temperatures can achieve this too.
In his patents with the Navy, Pais’s theories
suggest the craft itself can reach this state.
Documents attached to the patent claim “if
we perform a thought experiment...high frequency
spin with high frequency vibration puts every
point on the boundary of the object in a state
of coherence....inducing a macroscopic quantum
phenomena.”
We said this was the “real leap” earlier,
because it is.
There’s nothing experimentally that can
verify whether or not a vehicle can achieve
quantum weirdness.
Though, if this is eventually figured out,
that’s where the real magic is. With coherence
achieved, the craft may not be subject to
the force of gravity or have inertia…
Remember, since by interacting with the vacuum,
we’d be pulling particles out of it, there’d
be a void in the area surrounding the craft.
That may allow for “smooth sailing” through
the void, Pais writes. There are fewer particles
flickering in and out of existence.
...ultimately, we don’t know how far the
Navy got.
But the main concepts — vacuum energy, macro
quantum behavior — have already been proven
in experiments. It’s just a matter of applying
this to different uses.
Consider this.
If superfluids look strange….imagine how
a craft with these properties might look to
an observer.
The British government’s Project Condign,
a massive study on UFOs, classified triangle/pyramid/cones
as a key category. It tracked them in Belgium
and the Soviet Union.
The report even suggested — 20 years before
Pais’s research — that black triangle
UFOs could be surrounded by plasma formations
emitting an “unknown field.”
Similar sightings date back to the 1500s,
when Nuremberg, Germany saw hundreds of spheres
and cylinders moving erratically in the sky...along
with a large, black triangle.
In more modern times, the most infamous example
may be the Phoenix Lights — a 1997 encounter
where Arizona residents saw a mile-wide triangle
drift slowly overhead…
In 2000, police officers in Southern Illinois
reported seeing a large triangle flying silently
above treetops.
Pais says in the patent that such a craft
may need to be a cone or triangle shape to
work.
What do you think?
Could military craft explain some parts of
the UFO phenomenon?
And how do you think the Navy got this information?
And what do you make of macroscopic quantum
phenomena?
Let us know your thoughts in the comments.
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