Mr. Magic wrote:Now when I gave you the previous link, another link jumped out at me. It had to do with Shortwave Radio Propagation Correlation with Planetary Positions.
http://www.enterprisemission.com/jnelson2.html
This title seems exactly something that Dr. Brown would be interested in. It is also interesting that the Engineering Department of RCA Communications produced the paper. I would hazard a guess that Dr. Brown may have been familiar with this paper, and if not, certainly the references on the first page.
One thing this paper mentions is the "four quadrants". Now remembering what Twigsnapper said that Dr. Brown talked about where "the four corners meet". Since Dr. Brown had his shortwave radio around all the time, were the four corners he was talking about the four quadrants?
Mr. Magic, you posted something that I have been pondering about a lot during the past few days, although I am a little bit surprised that you did not make any further connections.
Perhaps I may be wrong, but it would be worthwile to look at what do the over-the-horizon radar (OTH) and Dr. Brown's special shortwave radio have in common.
a.) The OTH works in the high frequency or shortwave part of the spectrum. Dr. Brown's special shortwave radio obviously makes use of shortwaves.
Mr. Nelson's work on "Shortwave Radio Propagation Correlation with Planetary Positions" could have been also crucial in the area of OTH.
And don't forget Dr. Brown's interest in sidereal radiation.
b.) Have you noticed how closely are Dr. Brown's OTH research and the appearance of this special shortwave radio closely related in time?
Chapter 71 wrote:There was also something called “Over The Horizon Radar.” Again, our only source is Morgan, who wrote on December 8, 2004:
"Our boy" was very much into what you have called "skip radar". In fact that is one of the reasons that he was in Florida in 1957. You may also find references to "cesium cloud" that was loosed in that and other areas. Concerned him greatly because nobody bothered to alert the local populace. They should have been warned, but it was all secret stuff and you know how that goes. This particular operation had a base in Bimini. It may be mentioned somewhere. We are skirting round classified areas here but there just might be something out there, loose and dangling. Good luck.
And further:
Linda recalls one other constant companion on these weekend jaunts: an RCA 'Stratoworld' shortwave radio that accompanied Townsend Brown wherever and whenever he traveled. Linda recalls the unit first showing up right after her father’s first trip to Europe in the winter of 1956.
Why was Dr. Brown using a shortwave radio? Shortwave radios work in the high-frequency range. The high-frequency bandwidth of the electromagnetic spectrum must according to Dr. Brown's research have a parallel counterpart in the gravitational spectrum. And Dr. Brown's was very much interested in high-frequency gravitational waves.
On the Possibilities of Optical-frequency Gravitational Radiation wrote:As such, the gravitic spectrum would be analogous to the electromagnetic spectrum. The two would have a parallel relationship.
...
So far, low-frequency and intermediate-frequency gravitic radiation has received the most attention, largely because current cosmological theory appears to recognize its probable existence.
...
Investigators in this field have given consideration to the possible generation in nature of gravitic radiation in the microwave frequencies. Such frequencies are believed to originate in various cosmological processes, but their detection here on Earth presents technical problems not as yet resolved.
...
Supra UHF (including optical-frequency) gravitationai radiation is believed to be generated as electromagnetic radiation attempts to leave a black hole. According to Gertsenshtein (1962) and Vladimirov (1964).."When an electromagnetic wave propagates thru a region with a static or electromagnetic field, the Electromagnetic wave gets coherently (but slowly) converted into gravitational wave .... If strongly charged black holes (e~M in the notation of Christodoulou & Ruffini 1971) can exist, despite their intense electrostatic pull on surrounding plasma, then as an electromagnetic wave propagates outward from near the surface of the hole toward infinity, its conversion into a gravitational wave will be nearly 100% effective".
Now, continue to keep in mind that the OTH also functions in the high-frequency range.
But back to the shortwave radio. Have you ever asked yourself why this shortwave radio, if it indeed operated on the principle of electrogravitic communication, did not have a heavy lead ball attached to it instead of an antenna?
In Dr. Brown's document "Electrogravitational Communication System" from September 1953 we can read the following:
Electrogravitational Communication System wrote:Starting with an average radio communication system, the present invention consists essentially of the replacement of the usual antenna with large insulated masses. The balance of the electronic circuits may remain virtually unchanged. A new component of radiation is produced, and it is only that component of the radiation which passes through electromagnetic shields that is of interest in the present specifications and claims. The circuits and systems described herein represent additions to and improvements upon my previously described invention - "Electrogravitational Communication System."
A casual reader would have the impression that Dr. Brown's electrogravitic communication device is just an adapted normal radio - the most visible difference probably being the big lead sphere instead of a normal antenna.
This was in 1953. Now in 1956 after Dr. Brown returns from France we can see a seemingly normal shortwave radio which supposedly operates on the principle of electrogravitic communication. But where is the cumbersome lead sphere?
My speculation here would be that the third element in the whole story is Dr. Brown's special tunnel diode. I somehow have the feeling that it's a crucial element in the whole mechanism of electrogravitic communication. What if the famous shortwave radio would contain such a special tunnel diode?
Finally please keep in mind that Dr. Brown's shortwave radio could RECEIVE as well as SEND. It was a TRANSCEIVER.
Mr. Twigsnapper wrote:Skipping over the how such a thing would work you really have latched onto something very important here.
Can't let the thought go by without commenting.
Yes. He could send AND receive. Which put him in a most unusual situation considering that the people who were the closest to him. He eventually made sure each one also had a "set". What then does that mean on an operations level? Remember that from that point on the "master set" was ALWAYS by his side. To others it looked like a simple short wave radio of the day. It was decidedly not. twigsnapper
Source:
viewtopic.php?p=10129&highlight=recieve ... e447#10129
When Dr. Brown was in Florida in 1957 he was basically occupied with two things - the OTH and the speacial tunnel diode. Have you noticed how closely together are the tunnel diode and the OTH mentioned in chapter 71?
Chapter 71 wrote:Umatilla is a town 40 miles northwest of Orlando, near the center of the Florida peninsula. And what drew Dr. Brown to that particular location? A message from Morgan on June 23, 2004, begins to fill in the blanks:
You will note that after the Paris trips [Dr. Brown] almost immediately moved to Florida and began working on the tunnel diode development. (Remember, we are using that phrase but TTBs "tunnel diode" is amazingly different than the one that is mentioned in open sources.)
Nearly a year later, on April 18, 2005, Morgan added a bit to this revelation:
When Dr. Brown headed for Umatilla he actually was working for a section of General Electric, developing that special diode program for the Navy. You are not going to find much written about that. Suffice it to say that as far as the world was concerned…well, they just don't have any idea what he was really doing.
...
However, it appears that satellite reconnaissance was not the only kind of intelligence and national security work that Townsend Brown was engaged in. There was also something called “Over The Horizon Radar.” Again, our only source is Morgan, who wrote on December 8, 2004:
"Our boy" was very much into what you have called "skip radar". In fact that is one of the reasons that he was in Florida in 1957. You may also find references to "cesium cloud" that was loosed in that and other areas. Concerned him greatly because nobody bothered to alert the local populace. They should have been warned, but it was all secret stuff and you know how that goes. This particular operation had a base in Bimini. It may be mentioned somewhere. We are skirting round classified areas here but there just might be something out there, loose and dangling. Good luck.
And what would happen if you combine Dr. Brown's special tunnel diode with the OTH?
Is not the radar itself also a kind of TRANSCEIVER being able to emit as well as to receive waves?
Here we can also see a direct link between Dr. Robert Sarbacher, Wilbert Smith and Dr. Brown.
- Wilbet Smith was an expert on radio waves and radio-wave propagation. He also made important contributions in development of radio technology.
Surely he must have occupied himself also with shortwave radios and was also familiar with Mr. Nelson's work on "Shortwave Radio Propagation Correlation with Planetary Positions"
- Dr. Robert Sarbacher was like Dr. Brown working for General Electric at a certain period of his life and he was among other a great expert on the radar.
NOTE: F=Stanton Friedman, S=Dr. Sarbacher
http://www.presidentialufo.com/sarbacher_friedman.htm wrote:F: Yes.
S: That's what started it, (laughing) Yep I know the judge(???)
Because one of Hugh's men came to me, see I had a , in those
days I had a much higher rating than Raimo, about the only
thing we know about Raimo was that he had written some elementary
book on radio.
See whereas I had written the bible on Radars
F: Yes
S: My rating was much higher than either of those guys and in those
days the people that write the oven(???) and in the military
gave contracts on the basis of the training of the people in these
companies.
e
F: Ya
S : But since I was better rated than Raimo or Wildridge at that time
although they were both older than I ah I had been, had a higher
rating and ah, ah, Hughes tried to hire me because then they
couldn't take the contract away from him.
F: Ya
S: See when they left they took the contract with them. Hughes tried
to talk me into taking the job, well I had a very good laboratory
at the time.
F: In Washington?
S:
Ya, I was really rolling along and that laboratory was really
operating. We were building, General Electric got involved in that
Arctic Radar System. See at that time everybody was afraid Russia
was going to send planes over the Arctic
F: Ya, the DEW Line I suppose
S: So General Electric had been given a big contract to eh put in the
Radar detecting
F: Ya
S: And eh, and Radar stations and nobody had done more xxxxxxxx how radar worked. So General Electric hired me and I sent some of my
boys, I must of had 200 men up there. What I did (laugh) I hired
telephone(????) retired men and gave them a course in eh high
frequencies (laugh) you know, and then we, we, I gave them
transmitters to take with them so that when they got a problem
they didn't know, they could call me (laughing). We could work it
out down in the lab see.
F: You didn't have to get cold.
S: No.
So we did the job for General Electric xxxxx xxxxx got the
contract but we were his sub contractor
F: Well that's a...
S: So we had a big thing going
- Dr. Brown was one of the top-most experts on radio
Chapter 43 wrote:Nevertheless, this version of Brown’s termination from the Navy persists. In his otherwise laudable treatise on classified antigravity research The Hunt for Zero Point: Inside the Classified World of Antigravity Technology, veteran aerospace journalist Nick Cook repeats the William Moore version of the story, writing:
In 1942, [Brown] was appointed head of the Atlantic Fleet Radar Materiel School… in Norfolk, Virginia, a position that would have made him privy to some of the most highly classified technical secrets of the day. Whatever work he was engaged in, it appears to have taken its toll, since the following year he suffered a nervous breakdown and was discharged from the Navy.
...
The first obvious question is “what commander in his right mind let go of the man who knew ‘more about Radar detection than any individual in the U.S. Navy’?” Of course, the part about “techniques and theory more advanced than in present use” is the really intriguing proposition, and may be the clue that gives the lie to the whole to the other dubious allegations. Note also that prior to his departure, Brown had “purchased equipment from his own funds,” which equipment was “taken by” Brown when he left Norfolk.
Further we should keep in mind that it was Dr. Sarbacher who informed Mr. Smith that UFOs are right at the top of the list of secret research in the U. S.
How would now Richard Miethe, the high-voltage expert, that Dr. Sarbacher together with Mr. Twigsnapper saved from a Soviet prison camp fit into the picture?
Was he involved in German pre-WWII and WWII radar research?
I am saying this, because there exists an interesting explanation for foo fighters and it is connected to radars.
http://home.dmv.com/~tbastian/files/foo.txt wrote:Foo Fighters??? Ball Lightning???
One theory may have had confirmation in 1943, when Allied bombers over Germany started spotting strange lights that would approach and track them. No larger than a basketball, the lights sometimes appeared to interfere with the aircraft’s electrical system but were otherwise harmless. Some have tried to claim that these lights, nicknamed "foo fighters", were some form of Nazi secret weapon.
However, the descriptions of foo fighters match ball lightning very closely.
The timing is also significant, as they seem to have started appearing when the English/Germans deployed radar, and it is quite likely that they were caused by the interaction between German systems, or the combination of the German radar and the airborne H2S radars carried by allied aircraft.
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General Electric E821 glass cavity magnetron used in England which worked on 10cm (~3GHz) wavelength and became available for aircraft interception. The magnetron became the heart of the H2S radar which was installed in British bombers.
The Freya FuMG 39G was the first German operational early warning radar defense system in 1938, along the German border. These sets operated on a 1.8-2.0 meter wave length (180-200 cm). For gun laying, a more accurate radar with a more concentrated beam, than the Freya was developed by Telefunken.
This radar, called the Wuerzburg FuMG 39 operated on 50cm (600MHz) wave length. A rotating dipole antenna and a pulsed radar was used. By the end of the war, over 5,000 units of this and upgraded models (Wuerzburg D) had been in deployed in Europe. The Wuerzburg-D (FuMG 39 T/D) was one of the most advanced radar units to be used during WWII.
Inital German airbore radar was the "Lichtenstein B/C" operated on 50cm (600MHz) wave length, and fitted on the Luftwaffe's primary night-fighter, the Messerschmitt Me-110 twin-engine fighter. Then Germany fitted newer radar to their night fighters which were also directed to the bomber formations by ground radar. The "Lichtenstein SN2" with a band of 2 meters (200cm, ~180MHz) mounted on the Ju-88G night fighters.
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England/Allies used 10cm radar, Germany/Axis used 50cm and 200cm wavelengths.. Aircraft resonance from ground radar creating localised standing waves/ionization, static charges building up on aircraft and propeller surfaces causing high voltage corona brush discharges, fuel fumes and carbon exhaust byproducts from engines, metal and paint ions from aircraft skin, interference and ionization from onboard airborne radar transmitters causing intense energy discharge in very short time periods causing plasma ball formations to occour in standing wave areas around aircraft. Plasma ball motion could be due to standing wave nodes dynamicly moving around aircraft from flight profile and formation position changes, in relation to ground radar and other aircraft...
Interesting, isn't it? The ominous foo fighters caused by interaction between the German and Allied radar-technology.
And notice the fascinating keywords that appear with the Wuerzburg FuMG 39 - rotating dipole antenna combined with a pulse radar. Dipole - a very important word! Especially in connection with dielectrics and electrets.
What if the Germans discovered that this phenomena could be harnessed, reproduced and brought under control in order to create stable ball lightnings?
Please also keep in mind that Dr. Walter Gerlach was according to alternative theories the head of the so-called "Rhine-Valley Experiments" - the area where foo fighters frequently appeared.
He was also an expert on spin, magnetic resonance and gravity.
Last, but not least the Germans had Dr. Hans E. Hollmann, the "Father of Modern Radar and Microwave Technology" at their side.
http://www.radarworld.org/hollmann.html wrote:Telefunken built the Wuerzburg radar sets which used most of H. E. Hollmann's inventions. Working in his company "Laboratory for High Frequency and Electromedecine," which employed 20 scientists, Hollmann developed the high frequency technology which led to the development of radar.
...
In 1935, H. E. Hollmann wrote the first comprehensive books on microwaves. The books are titled "Physics and Technique of Ultrashort Waves." The books were used in all countries of the world and it fueled the development of radar in all of the major countries in the world. His book showed examples of applications of microwaves. These books are still available in most libraries around the world.
...
After WWII he and his family came to the USA under "operation paper clip." The secret service documented his life's work...
Dr. Hollmann is important, because:
a.) Telefunken built Wuerzburg radar sets almost exlusively on Dr. Hollmann's ideas and patents. Here would also probably be included the interesting Wuerzburg FuMG 39 mentioned above.
b.) Dr. Hollmann was involved with electromedicine! How would a MODIFIED pulse radar influence the human mind, by the way?
c.) He was an expert on microwaves, which include ultra-high frequency super high frequency, and extremely high frequency signals.
d.) He was brought to the U. S. in via the ominous "Operation Paperclip"
AM