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	      Breakthrough as scientists beat gravity 
	    
	   | 
	 
       
      
       
      
      by ROBERT MATTHEWS and IAN SAMPLE
       
       SCIENTISTS in Finland are about to reveal details of the world's
      first anti-gravity device.
      Measuring about 12in across, the device is said to reduce significantly the
      weight of anything suspended over it.  
      The claim - which
      has been rigorously examined by scientists, and is due to appear in a physics
      journal next month - could spark a technological revolution. By combating
      gravity, the most ubiquitous force in the universe, everything from transport
      to power generation could be transformed.  
      The Sunday Telegraph has learned that Nasa, the American space agency,
      is taking the claims seriously, and is funding research into how
      the
      anti-gravity effect could be turned into a means of flight.  
      The researchers at the Tampere University of Technology in Finland, who
      discovered the effect, say it could form the heart of a new power source,
      in which it is used to drive fluids past electricity-generating turbines.
      Other uses seem limited only by the imagination:  
      
       
	- 
	  Lifts in buildings could be replaced by devices built into
	  the ground. People wanting to go up would simply activate the anti-gravity
	  device - making themselves weightless - and with a gentle push ascend to
	  the floor they want. 
	
 - 
	  Space-travel would become routine, as all the expense and danger
	  of rocket technology is geared towards combating the Earth's gravitation
	  pull. 
	
 - 
	  By using the devices to raise fluids against gravity, and then
	  conventional gravity to push them back to earth against electricity-generating
	  turbines, the devices could also revolutionise power generation. 
 
	  
        
      
      According to Dr
      Eugene
      Podkletnov, who led the research, the discovery was accidental. It emerged
      during routine work on so-called "superconductivity", the ability
      of some materials to lose their electrical resistance at very low
      temperatures. 
      The team was carrying out tests on a rapidly spinning disc of superconducting
      ceramic suspended in the magnetic field of three electric coils, all enclosed
      in a low-temperature vessel called a cryostat. 
      "One of my friends came in and he was smoking his pipe," Dr Podkletnov said."He
      put some smoke over the cryostat and we saw that the smoke was going to the
      celing all the time. It was amazing - we couldn't explain it." 
      Tests showed a small drop in the weight of objects placed over the device,
      as if it were shielding the object from the effects of gravity - an effect
      deemed impossible by most scientists. 
      "We thought it might be a mistake," Dr Podkletnov said; "but we have taken
      every precaution." Yet the bizarre effects persisted. The team found that
      even the air pressure vertically above the device dropped slightly, with
      the effect detectable directly above the device on every floor of the laboratory.
      In. recent years, many so-called "anti-gravity" devices have been put forward
      by both amateur and professional scientists, and all have been scorned by
      the establishment. What makes this latest claim different is that it has
      survived intense scrutiny by sceptical, independent experts, and has been
      the Journal of Physics-D: Applied Physics, published by Britain's
      Institute of Physics.  
      Even so, most scientists will not feel comfortable with the idea of anti-gravity
      until other teams repeat the experiments.  
      Some scientists suspect the anti-gravity effect is a long-sought side-effect
      of Einstein's general
      theory of relativity, by which spinning objects can distort gravity.
      Until now it was thought the effect would be far too small to measure in
      the laboratory.  
      However, Dr Ning Li, a senior research scientist at the University of Alabama,
      said that the atoms inside superconductors may magnify the effect enormously.
      Her research is funded by Nasa's Marshall Space Flight Centre at Huntsville,
      Alabama, and Whitt Brantley, the chief of Advanced Concepts Office there,
      said: "We're taking a look at it, because if we don't, we'll never know."
       
      The Finnish team is already expanding its programme, to see if it can amplify
      the anti-gravity effect. In its latest experiments, the team has measured
      a two per cent drop in the weight of objects suspended over the device -
      and double that if one device is suspended over another. If the team can
      increase the effect substantially, the commercial implications are enormous.
       
       
	  
      
      
       
      I believe that any gravitational effect of Evgeny Podkletnov's spinning
      superconducting disc will be swamped by another effect (12 January, p 24).
      Einstein's special theory of relativity predicts that the disc will produce
      an "electrostatic" force on any nearby static charges. The effect is directly
      proportional to how fast the disc is spinning, the current in the loop, and
      the square of the disc's diameter.  
      I calculate that the 145-millimetre disc, spinning at 5000 revolutions per
      minute and carrying 1000 amps, will act like a static charge of 4.3
      millicoulombs, equivalent to a 20-centimetre sphere carrying 380 kilovolts.
      That could exert a significant force on any test mass or balance carrying
      a stray static charge, and ions present in cold dry air would drive the reported
      air currents. Normal electrostatic shielding will not work as expected.  
      Even if this is the only effect that Podkletnov has seen, it is still valuable
      new science-it would verify a core element of special relativity, and could
      perhaps be scaled up and exploited to create an ion drive.  
      Jock Hall Ben fleet, Essex  
       
      Did anyone report a small tornado appearing above Podkletnov's laboratory?
      I would have expected that, with the column of air above the antigravity
      wheel being 2 per cent lighter than the surrounding air, it would have started
      to rise, been replaced by heavier air, which would have also started
      to rise, resulting in a minor tornado or at least a dust devil without
      the benefit of dust. No?  
      On the other hand, I wonder why the device wasn't peddled as a perpetual
      motion machine. Simply place a heavy wheel with its axis horizontal and part
      of its rim above the device. That part of the rim would get lighter and the
      wheel would start to rotate. Perpetual motion! Perhaps even NASA would have
      bridled at spending $600,000 of the taxpayer's money for a perpetual motion
      machine. Antigravity sounds more scientific, perhaps.  
      Paul White Portsmouth, Rhode Island  
       
      The anti-gravity machine described in Podkletnov's 1992 paper seems to be
      almost identical to the gravity generators used on the starship Enterprise,
      as described on page 144 of Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual,
      by Rick Steinbach and Michael Okuda, copyright Paramount Pictures 1991-except
      that the Star Trek devices have larger superconducting discs and spin a lot
      faster. Of course, that can only be a coincidence, can't it?  
      Howard Medhurst Crawley, West Sussex 
      [New Scientist 9 Feb 2002] 
       
	  
      
       
	
	   PLATONIC
	    SOLIDS The six mathematicians were not scattered throughout the Greek
	    world, as had been those in the fifth century B.C.; they were associated
	    more or less closely with the Academy of Plato
	    at Athens. Although Plato himself made no outstanding
	    specific contribution to technical mathematical results, he was the center
	    of the mathematical activity of the time and guided and inspired its deyelopment.
	    Over the doors of his school was inscribed the motto, "Let no one ignorant
	    of geometry enter here"; his enthusiasm for the subject led him to become
	    known not as a mathematician, but as "the maker of mathematicians." It is
	    clear that Plato's high regard for mathematics did not come from Socrates;
	    in fact, the earlier Platonic dialogues seldom refer to mathematics. The
	    one who converted Plato to a mathematical outlook undoubtedly was Archytas,
	    a friend whom he visited in Sicily in 388 B.C. Perhaps it was there that
	    he learned of the five regular solids, which were associated with the four
	    Elements of Empedocles in a cosmic scheme that fascinated men for
	    centuries. Possibly it was the Pythagorean regard for the dodecahedron that
	    led Plato to look on this, the fifth and last, regular solid as a symbol
	    of the universe. Plato put his ideas on the regular solids into a dialogue
	    entitled the Timaeus, presumably named for a Pythagorean who serves as the
	    chief interlocutor. It is not known whether Timaeus of Locri really existed
	    or whether Plato invented him as a character through whom to express the
	    Pythagorean views that still were strong in what is now Southern Italy. The
	    regular polyhedra have often been called "cosmic bodies" or 'Platonic solids"
	    because of the way in which Plato in the Timaeus applied them to the explanation
	    of scientific phenomena. Although this dialogue, probably written when Plato
	    wia near seventy, provides the earliest definite evidence for the association
	    of the four Elements with the regular solids, much of this fantasy
	    may be due to the Pythagoreans. Proclus attributes the construction of the
	    cosmic figures to Pythagoras; but the scholiast Suidas reported that Plato's
	    friend Theaetetus, born about 414 B.C. and the son of one of the richest
	    patricians in Attica, first wrote on them. A scholium (of uncertain date)
	    to Book XIII of Euclid's Elements reports that only three of the five
	    solids were due to the Pythagoreans, and that it was through Theaetetus that
	    the octahedron and icosahedron became known. It seems likely that in any
	    case Theaetetus made one of the most extensive studies of the five regular
	    solids, and to him probably is due the theorem that there are five and only
	    five regular polyhedra. Perhaps he is responsible also for the calculations
	    in the Elements of the ratios of the edges of the regular solids to
	    the radius of the circumscribed sphere. Theaetetus was a young Athenian who
	    died in 369 B.C. from a combination of wounds received in battle and of
	    dysentery, and the Platonic dialogue bearing his name was a commemorative
	    tribute by Plato to his friend. In the dialogue, purporting to take place
	    some thirty years earlier, Theaetetus discusses with Socrates and Theodorus
	    the nature of incommensurable magnitudes. It has been assumed that this
	    discussion took somewhat the form that we find in the opening of Book X of
	    the Elements. Here distinctions are made not only between commensurable
	    and incommensurable magnitudes, but also between those that while incommensurable
	    in length are, or are not, commensurable in square. Surds such as
	    Ö3 and Ö5
	    are incommensurable in length, but they are commensurable in square, for
	    their squares have the ratio 3 to 5. The magnitudes
	     Ö(1+ Ö
	    3)  and Ö(1+
	    Ö 3) on the other hand, are incommensurable
	    both in length and in square. 
	    [Carl C Boyer "A History of Mathematics"] 
	     | 
	 
       
      
	
	  
	    And then there were five  
	    A hidden force could be changing the face of the Universe  
	    
	     
	     
	     
	     THE ground is shifting under our feet. Fundamental properties
	    of the Universe are changing, and physicists can't explain how or why. Now
	    researchers say an as yet undiscovered fifth force could be behind these
	    mysterious changes.  
	    Physicists combine supposedly unchanging physical properties, such as the
	    speed of light and an electron's charge, into a number called the "fine structure
	    constant" that describes how our Universe hangs together. But in 1999,
	    astronomers analysing 10-billion-year-old light from distant quasars got
	    a shock when they found that it was different from what we'd expect to see
	    today.  
	    They concluded that the fine structure constant, or alpha, must have been
	    different 10 billion years ago. If so, the host of fundamental values tied
	    to alpha could be changing too: light may be slowing down, the electron's
	    charge growing, and atomic nuclei losing mass. 
	    If the Universe is four dimensional, then a fifth
	    force is the only thing capable of triggering these changes, say Gia Dvali
	    and Matias Zaldarriaga of New York University. The four fundamental forces
	    known so far are gravity, electromagnetism and the strong and weak nuclear
	    forces. But the new force would have a repelling effect, showing itself
	    via tiny particles called "alpha ions" slowly emitted from protons and neutrons.
	    As the repelling alpha ions were lost, atomic nuclei would lose mass, but
	    atoms would become more strongly bound together.  
	    The force would be incredibly weak,100,000 times fainter than gravity. But
	    it would work over long ranges, meaning it could serve as the mysterious
	    repulsive energy called quintessence, Latin for "fifth element", that
	    some scientists say explains why the Universe is flying apart faster and
	    faster. 
	    "The possibility that you could find a [force] that is both making the fine
	    structure constant vary and causing the Universe to accelerate is extraordinarily
	    exciting. It'd be a fantastic discovery," says theoretical physicist Sean
	    Carroll of the Enrico Fermi Institute at the University of Chicago.  
	    There are several theories to explain the variation in alpha, but they all
	    require some kind of fifth force, says John Barrow of the University of
	    Cambridge. "They would each have different consequences for observations
	    very close to the surface of neutron stars." But Dvali and Zaldarriaga say
	    there's an easier way to detect traces of alpha ions. They would be shed
	    at different energies depending on a particle's mass, and that would make
	    protons and neutrons fall at very slightly different speeds.  
	    A satellite programme called STEP is already being planned to test the theory.
	    Free-floating masses will be isolated in an ultra-high vacuum. If they fall
	    at different rates, it would support the existence of alpha ions. Otherwise,
	    we may have to look to higher dimensions for an
	    answer. Dvali and Zaldarriaga say that without a fifth force, that's the
	    only thing that could explain why alpha is changing. Charles Choi, New York
	    More at: Physical Review Letters (vol 88, p 091303)  
	    [New Scientist 2 March 2002]
	     
	     
	      
		|  In a speech delivered at the turn of the century, the Irish
		  scientist William Thomson congratulated science on having achieved such a
		  marvelous understanding of the natural world. All that remained was a kind
		  of mopping-up operation, he boasted, requiring little more than "adding a
		  few decimal places to results already obtained." Thomson, however, had neglected
		  to mention the still-unresolved mystery surrounding the ancient Greeks'
		  fifth element, the ether, a quintessential substance from which
		  the heavens supposedly had been made. Moreover, he had no idea that looming
		  on the horizon of science was a small dark cloud whose name was Albert Einstein;
		  in just five more years, he would rain all over Thomson's cheery forecast
		  and take by storm science's tidy little description of the cosmos.(p232)
		  
		   
		    
		  Perhaps, scientists speculated, light waves traveled through a material agency
		  that was not easily detectable, some kind of invisible, all-pervasive
		  ether, they called it. This ether would be odorless, colorless, and
		  densenessless; and yet, it would enable light waves to convey themselves
		  from one place to another. How convenient! In 1881, American physicist Albert
		  Michelson and British physicist Edward Morley began a series of extraordinary
		  experiments they hoped would detect the seemingly undetectable ether. It
		  hinged on one idea: Since the earth whirled around the sun at 30,000 meters
		  per second (about 67,500 mph), it would be expected to create quite a measurable
		  wake in the ether, if indeed the invisible stuff really did exist. Michelson
		  and Morley proposed to compare the speed of light in two different
		  directions-along the wake and across it. In other words, they would compare
		  a beam of light moving along the direction of the earth's orbit with a second
		  beam moving across it. (p240)  
		  It was no wonder, therefore, that light always had struck philosophers as
		  being so supernatural. Every time one looked at the light from a star, a
		  flame, or even Edison's incandescent bulbs, one was seeing pure, incorporeal
		  energy-as fantastic, in its own way, as beholding a disembodied soul. For
		  2,000 years, in one form or another, ether had obfuscated the true cosmos
		  from science 5 probing senses, but no longer. With his theory of relativity,
		  Einstein had seen the universe through eyes unclouded by the ancient ethereal
		  haze; consequently, that hoary quintessential element was about to become
		  as obsolete as the concept of absolute space and time. (p249) 
		  [Michael Guillen "5 Equations that Changed the World"] 
		    | 
	       
	     
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       Those who interview famous people always
      hope to extract some embarrassing admission from their subjects. In the current
      issue of Physics World, the editor Peter Rodgers persuades
      Prof Paul Davies the distinguished physicist
      and science writer, to admit to the scientific equivalent of having once
      belonged to a weird cult back when he was a PhD student, Prof Davies confessed,
      he had had an urge to explain why Alpha equals 1/137.'  
      This sounds perilously like one of those crackpot attempts to unravel
      the significance of the number 666 in the book of
      Revelations. To be fair, it's not quite as bad as that: Alpha is the
      number that sums up the strength of the electromagnetic force in our universe.
       
      Even so, many physicists regard attempts to explain its value as misguided;
      for them, Alpha equals 1/137, because it just does - just as Pi equals 22/7
      or thereabouts. That's the way our universe is.  
      Yet Prof Davies is not the only distinguished physicist
      to have fallen under the spell of Alpha and other fundamental constants".
      The Nobel Prize-winners Paul Dirac and Wolfgang Pauli both spent years pondering
      the values of these constants - with Pauli reputedly being very disturbed
      to find himself spending his last hours in a hospital room numbered 137.
       
      As Prof Davies points out however, Alpha is no longer regarded as fundamental
      or even constant. Along with the numbers capturing
      the strengh of the other three fundamental forces - gravity, and the strong
      and weak nuclear forces -Alpha is now considered to be just the deceptively
      simple upshot of a Theory of Everything, which
      will (physicists hope) eventually show that all four forces are merely different
      facets of one "superforce".  
      Put (very) simply, this super-force is thought to have existed only in the
      first moments after the Big Bang. Soon afterwards,
      the rapid expansion and cooling of the universe caused it to separate into
      the four different fundamental forces that control events today.  
      As with talk of Alpha, such an account of events in the early universe
      has a decidedly biblical tone to it. Not that creationists are very keen
      on it: they tend to dismiss it as "just a theory" - apparently in the belief
      that a theory is the basest form of knowledge. 
      While it does not aspire to the certainty of a dogma, as a scientific theory
      it can actually make at least one claim for being taken seriously: it can
      be put to the test - at least, in theory. If some way could be found
      to recreate the temperatures of the early universe, it should be possible
      to witness today's four forces merging back into the one primordial
      "superforce". 
      Remarkably, such a re-run of history can be performed using a particle
      accelerator. Temperature is just a measure of how well heat can flow from
      one place to another. As such, it is really just another way of stating the
      speed of particles: the higher the temperature, the higher their speed. 
      Large particle accelerators, such as the five-mile wide LEP machine in Geneva,
      can accelerate electrons to colossal speeds - and thus mimic extremely high
      temperatures, more than one rnillion billion degrees C. According to astronomers,
      such temperatures prevailed about one hundred-billionth of a second after
      the Big Bang.  
      If the superforce theory is right, the electromagnetic force should have
      been stronger in the early stages of the Big Bang. Thus physicists using
      particle accelerators should notice the value of Alpha increase as they crank
      up the speed of the particles.  
      Amazingly, this is precisely what physicists have found using the LEP machine.
      By the time they hit temperatures of one million billion degrees, the value
      of Alpha had increased from its "room temperature" value of 1/137 to 1/128.
      In other words, these experiments show that about one hundred-millionth of
      a second after the Big Bang, electromagnetism was seven per cent stronger
      than it is today. After extrapolating the results from this and other
      experiments, physicists now claim hard evidence to show at least three of
      the four forces merging into each other at sufficiently high temperatures.
       
      In the face of such evidence, those past attempts to explain why Alpha "must"
      equal 1/137 now look a bit naive. Certainly Pauli needn't have fretted so
      much about the significance of his room number.Ultimately, these failed attempts
      highlight the dangers - that even Nobel Prize-winners face - of believing
      that because something looks simple, it must have a simple explanation.  
      Einstein himself recognised the dangers, and his words of advice still ring
      in the ears of theoreticians to this day: "A theory should be as simple as
      possible - but no simpler." 
      [The Sunday Telegraph 9/9/2002] 
      
       
       
	Strange forces at work in the quantum world
      
      
      With the start of a new academic year, lecturers and students
      are about to enter into the age old academic contract:
      that the lecturers have an understanding of their subject and will try to
      convey it to any student who can be bothered to turn up. 
      There is one subject in which this contract has been broken for years, with
      lecturers not really understanding their subject at all, and cheerfully admitting
      as much to their students. It is quantum mechanics,
      the impressive-sounding name given to the grab-bag of tricks, fudges and
      lash-ups that constitutes our understanding of
      the sub-atomic
      world. Over the months ahead, another generation of physics students
      will be introduced to the wonders of Schrödinger's equation,
      wave-particle duality and the like, while the lecturers
      pray that no one asks too many questions about where it all comes from.  
      Even Richard
      Feynman, the American physicist who won a Nobel Prize for his work on
      quantum theory, once declared: "I think it is safe to say that no one understands
      quantum mechanics." 
      Sometimes it is fine to think of sub-atomic particles as tiny ball-bearings,
      while other times they are best thought of as waves.  
      Sometimes they can be considered tiny spinning tops, but ones that spin only
      at certain prescribed values.  
      One of the biggest challenges in understanding the subject is
      the sheer strangeness of it all, the lack of
      contact with familiar things. Feynman's advice on how best to understand
      quantum mechanics is reminiscent of that adopted by Buddhists contemplating
      the nature of reality: do not waste time with metaphysical questions - just
      accept it,and work with the consequences. Those who do are rewarded with
      some spectacular insights, from the links between magnetism and subatomic
      spin to the existence of "vacuum fluctuations'',
      in which particles are constantly created and destroyed all around us.  
      Even so, the human mind still feels comforted by the familiar which makes
      an article on quantum mechanics in last week's issue of the journal
      Nature doubly surprising. It describes
      one of the most mind-boggling sub-atomic effects predicted by quantum mechanics,
      and draws parallels to a phenomenon first seen by the captains of galleons. 
      In 1948, Hendrik Casimir, the Dutch physicist, made the startling
      discovery that if two metal plates are brought close enough together,
      a force magically appears between them, pushing
      them together. More startling still, the origin of the force is, quite literally,
      nothing - pure empty space. The force is very feeble, and it was measured
      convincingly only within the past five years using
      quartz crystals placed less than a thousandth
      of a millimetre apart: its strength amounted to about one-tenth the weight
      of this full-stop. Not a lot as Paul Daniels, the
      conjurer, might say, but still significant. As Eyal Buks, a physicist at
      Technion in Israel, points out in Nature, engineers have found that this
      "force from nowhere" can jam up tiny devices built
      with sub-millimetre components.  
      As so often with quantum mechanics, the origins of
      the
      Casimir Force are hardly intuitive. Roughly speaking, it emerges from
      the fact that even empty space is permeated by waves of energy that emerge
      from nowhere. Putting two plates into this sea of energy creates a region
      in which only waves of a certain size can fit.The two plates are then pushed
      together by the waves left outside the plates, hammering to be let in.  
      All of this might be obvious to those who routinely deal with the wave equations
      of quantum theory. It might, however, also come as little surprise to those
      who spend their time dealing with a more familiar form of wave. As Dr Buks
      points out, there have been reports since the early 19th century of a mysterious
      "force from nowhere" that emerges when two tallmasted ships come alongside
      one another in a swell. According to sea lore, unless evasive action is taken
      the two ships will be pushed together with disastrous consequences. 
      Remarkably, Sipko Boersma, the Dutch physicist, has recently shown that this
      maritime force can be explained by analogy to its esoteric quantum counterpart.
      In a swell, ships roll from side to side, creating waves themselves. If two
      ships come alongside each other, the waves they create cancel each other
      out in the gap between the two vessels - allowing the waves in the water
      on the other side to force them together.  
      As with the Casimir Force, is not an enormous force, but still enough to
      cause trouble. Yet its greatest significance could well be its value as an
      everyday analogy for an atomic effect that is anything but run of the mill.[See
      also
      Symmetry,Maths] 
      Robert
      Matthews 
      [The Sunday Telegraph Sep 22 2002] 
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