"Diamagnetic substances include water, protein, diamond, DNA, plastic, wood, and many other common substances usually thought to be nonmagnetic." -- Martin D. Simon, professor, May 2000
New Scientist: Frog defies gravity.
USING a giant magnetic field, scientists at the University of Nottingham and the University of Nijmegen in the Netherlands have made a frog float in mid-air.Simon, M.D., Geim, A.K.,. Diamagnetic Levitation: Flying Frogs and Floating Magnets (Invited), Journal of Applied Physics, Volume 87, Number 9, Pages 6200-6204, May 2000
The levitation trick works because giant magnetic fields slightly distort the orbits of electrons in the frog's atoms. The resulting electric current generates a magnetic field in the opposite direction to that of the magnet. A field of 16 teslas created an attractive force strong enough to make the frog float—until it made its escape.
The team has also levitated plants, grasshoppers and fish. "If you have a magnet that is big enough, you could levitate a human," says Peter Main, one of the researchers.
He adds that the frog did not seem to suffer any ill effects: "It went back to its fellow frogs looking perfectly happy."
Simon, M.D., Heflinger, L.O., and Geim, A.K., Diamagnetically Stabilized Magnet Levitation, American Journal of Physics, Volume 69, Number 6, Pages 702-713, Jun 2001
Cutting edge stuff there. Only 12 years old.
ReplyDeleteBetter than the 2000 year old news Oils usually posts.
Unless lately you consider all the stuff about crazy, selfish Leedskalnin. That guy was nuts and kept his secrets to himself. IF (and it's a big if) he did what is claimed, he could have transformed science! Instead he wrote his treatises and moral nonsense about "Fresh Boys" when he could have remade the world.
Leedskalnin was useless.
Jeffery,
ReplyDelete"Cutting edge stuff there. Only 12 years old."
Epic math fail. The Simon articles were published in 2000 and 2001 therefore not 12 years old.
Your beloved gravitation is even more cutting edge. Only 322 years old.
Is this how you define useless?
Jeffery,
ReplyDeleteIf magnetic gravity is so old and you knew it all along, why do you still believe in 17th century creationist gravitation?
The link you provided is from 12 April, 1997.
ReplyDeleteYour beloved gravitation is even more cutting edge. Only 322 years old.
And proved right by experience, observation and gradual modification every day of every one of those 322 years.
17th century creationist gravitation?
No such thing. Hasn't been a creationist theory for a very long time.
Besides, creationists are terrorists.
"If magnetic gravity is so old and you knew it all along..."
ReplyDeleteI did know about it. I've mentioned that frog before. Look it up on this blog. The magnetic field strength was (I recall) about 16 Tesla.
I think Anaconda has an aphorism about this.
ReplyDeleteI think Anaconda has an aphorism about this.
ReplyDeleteHe might want to have that looked at. Could develop into something awful. I avoided my lung disease signs for weeks, much to my detriment. Now I can't get a up a flight of stairs without stopping to fend off a coronary event.
Just sayin' ... he should take care of himself.
First ignore it, then deny it, then claim credit for it.
ReplyDeleteFirst ignore it, then deny it, then claim credit for it.
ReplyDeleteCertainly, you aren't referring to me and that frog, are you? I read about that experiement years ago and never ignored it or denied it.
I'm not sure how I would take credit for it... I was nowhere nearby at the time.
OIM,
ReplyDeleteWhat is a big deal? Yogis in India have been levitating for thousands of years and travelling lightyears away. Go figure!
Here's some good science!
ReplyDeleteElectromagnetic Black Hole!
Once again, this is probably a real phenomina, but it's not the definition of antigravity.
ReplyDelete