Experiment regarding magnetic fields with gravity

Abstract This experiment was designed to test the string theory as a physical reality. The ground‐based device placed the N poles of the magnets upwards, north, south, east, and west. Coil Ass'Y was placed between 2 N poles with bearing covers on the top and bottom. Gravity interacts to generat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jong Hoon Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022-12-01
Series:IET Quantum Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1049/qtc2.12047
Description
Summary:Abstract This experiment was designed to test the string theory as a physical reality. The ground‐based device placed the N poles of the magnets upwards, north, south, east, and west. Coil Ass'Y was placed between 2 N poles with bearing covers on the top and bottom. Gravity interacts to generate electricity in the Earth's direction or the opposite direction by the repulsive magnetic force. The voltage was measured from 3.60 to 3.80 sequentially while the generator was stationary through the monitor. The author found symmetry in Lex Tertia voltage and current zero data during experiment F4 6380 at a balanced state under gravity with the repulsive magnetic force. It generated from 42.8 to 794 μV in the vacuum chamber but from negative 16.1 to positive 18.3 μV in the air. As a result, the author measured more negative current and positive voltage generated in a vacuum. Trapped gravity was set to behave as free relativistic quantum particles or fluids in the magnetic sea. The result made it accessible to study the magnetic sea for different initial superpositions of positive‐ and negative‐gravity spinor states. This might explain the relativistic quantum gravity exists as a physical reality, graviton interacting with photons to induce a magnetic field.
ISSN:2632-8925