Topside #16, Autumn 1965, reposts a review by Smith from late 1962, of a book "New Principles in Quantum Mechanics" by H C Dudley. The book appears to be a fringe critique of mainstream physics, yet the author is "Chief of the Radio-Isotope Laboratory at the U.S. Naval Hospital at St Albans, N.Y."
https://archive.org/details/Topside_Iss ... ew=theater
From Prabook, an odd little "biographical wiki" (because Wikipedia doesn't judge Dudley notable enough), so results may vary, it appears that Dudley was in the US Navy in WW2, and then a radiation physicist. But yes, he had off-the-map physics ideas.
https://prabook.com/web/horace_chester.dudley/1692299
Horace Chester Dudley, American scientist. Achievements include patents in field. Decorated Bronze Star, Secretary Navy medal; recipient National prize, American Chemical Society, 1929, Outstanding Alumnus award, Southwest Missouri State University, 1982; grantee, Atomic Energy Commission, 1963-1964, National Science Foundation, 1963, 1965, University Illinois, 1970, 1972, University Southern Mississippi, 1965-1967.
Background
Dudley, Horace Chester was born on June 28, 1909 in Saint Louis. Son of Horace Chester and Rhoda Olivette (Mc Adoo) Dudley.
Education
AB, Southwest Missouri State College, 1931. Doctor of Philosophy in Chemistry, Georgetown University, 1941. Postgraduate, University California, 1948.
Postgraduate, New York University, 1957.
Career
...
Lab. assistant United States Bureau Standards, Washington, 1931-1932. Junior chemist Bureau Chemistry, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, 1933-1934.
Assistant chemist div.med. research Chemical Warfare Service, Edgewood Arsenal, Maryland., 1934-1936;biochemist United States Public Health Service, Bethesda, Maryland., 1936-1942.
Commissioned Lieutenant, United States Navy, 1942, advanced through grades to captain, 1955. Explosives specialist, commanding officer units Pacific Theater of Operations, 1942-1947.
Head division biochemistry Naval Medical Research Institute, Bethesda, 1947-1952. Head section allied science Medical Service Corps, Washington, 1949-1952.
Head radioisotope laboratory, department radiology Naval Hospital, Saint Albans, New York, 1952-1962.
Retired, 1962. Professor physics, department chairman physics, University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, 1962-1969. Professor radiation physics, chief physicist University of Illinois Medical Center, Chicago, 1969-1977, retired, 1977.
With Rad. Safety Associations, 1976-1985.
Member committee cooperative clinical studies, member medical library staff Virginia Medical Center, Hines, Illinois, 1980-1985. cons.in field
Achievements
Horace Chester Dudley has been listed as a notable scientist by Marquis Who's Who.
Despite his distinguished career, he seems to have had off-the-map physics ideas, but exactly what those ideas were is hard to verify:
https://www.gfwilkinsonbooks.com/produc ... Relativity
[2 items] The Theory of Relativity: A Re-examination. A Challenge to Those of Inquiring Mind, Based on the Neutrino Hypothesis. [Together with] Hyperspace: The Mathematical Basis of Relativity.
THEORY: 39 pp.; 8vo; blue wrappers which are loose, pulled from the staples, but text block is clean and intact. HYPERSPACE: single sheet folded to 4 pages, 11.25" x 8.5", which has been folded again horizontally with resulting fold crease. ALSO: Publisher's circular for Dudley's, New Principles in Quantum Mechanics, a single sheet; 10.75" x 6.5" printed on one side, with two horizontal fold creases. According to the title page of Theory, H. C. Dudley was a Captain in the Medical Services Corps., United States Navy, and according to Hyperspace, he was in the Radioisotope Laboratory at the U. S. Naval Hospital, St. Albans, N. Y. One finds him as a contributor to Analog, Science Fact & Fiction Magazine in 1960, 1961, and a few copies of his New Principles of Quantum Mechanics can be found online. Theory of Relativity is apparently more scarce, and only one copy of Hyperspace is listed on Worldcat.
And at least one of his Dudley's Analog articles, with a very Townsendian flavour, ended up on Rex Research:
http://www.rexresearch.com/dudley/dudley.htm
Analog Science Fact and Fiction (November 1960, p. 83-94)
"The Electric Field Rocket"
by Horace C. Dudley
During a lecture on nuclear theory, the professor explained the disintegration of uranium. At the end of the lecture, he stated, “This system of mathematical theory shows a definite probability that an airplane may pass through a rocky cliff and come out the other side unscathed”.
It was here that the writer parted company with “modern” nuclear theory. My flying days began when I ran away from home about 1921 to sneak my first ride in a Jenny. Since then having experienced one air crash, and witnessed many others, no amount of calculations can convince me that which is impossible, can be possible. Out of this came a critical examination of all mathematical theory, which led to some theorizing on my own (1).
The state of our theorizing has been well summed up (1953) by a Nobel prize winner, Louis de Broglie: “The history of science shows that the progress of science has constantly been hampered… by principles that we have come to assume without discussion”. Prof. J. C. Bailar, President of the American Chemical Society pointedly reminded scientists (1959) that the theories of today have superseded those of yesterday, and that they in turn will be superseded by those of tomorrow, even if today’s seem perfectly logical.
As a starting point it is suggested that one examine several of the references which discuss atmospheric electricity (2, 3, 4). It will be found that the old concept of current flow (+) to (-) is often renamed in these writings. Here then is the indication tat our present concepts of charge, field, and current flow are in a chaotic state. If our electron and x-ray tubes function by reason of electron passage, then current flow must be electron flow, (-) to (+). And there is current flow, ionosphere to earth!
Theoretical studies of charge, fields and gravity led to the prediction that the earth is a (+) charged “particle” spinning in a hue (-) charged field (1). But theorizing is one thing and experimentation is still another. So a series of privately financed experiments were begun, utilizing both laboratory apparatus, and small rocket. The procedures and results are outlined below.
Laboratory Experiments
In October 1957, preliminary experiments were begun with a small Van de Graff generator producing a maximum electrostatic (+) charge of about 75,000 volts. This unit was used to study the action of various one-quarter to one-half inch spheres and various powders under the influence of a (+) charged field.
These preliminary tests indicated that a large electrostatic generator would be useful. After several modifications, the final unit constructed was a van de Graff generator having a spherical collector head 12 inches in diameter, capable of producing a (+) charge of 425,000 volts. The capacity of he ES generator was increased by employing an electronic high-voltage generator, and applying a (+) potential of 25,000 volts on the groundside brush of the Van de Graff.
These units were used to study the movement of (+) charged one- to four-inch diameter hollow spheres in various (+) and (-) charged electric fields. The spheres were made of glass, plastic, or aluminum. The inner and/or outer surface of the non-conductors were rendered conducting by spraying with lacquer containing aluminum powder. In the case of glass spheres, one of the best sources of supply was ordinary Christmas tree ornaments which contain inside a flashing of metallic silver. This can easily be removed with a few drops of nitric acid. A non-conducting body does not take a charge and therefore is not repelled.
As a result of the laboratory experiments outlined above, it was postulated tat a rocket may become a (+) charged body, repelled by the (+) charge of the earth and simultaneously attracted by the (-) charged zone above. This reduced to its simplest, is a macro reduction of R.A. Millikan’s oil drop experiment (1909), in which he, at will, augmented or counterbalanced the force of gravity on charged oil droplets, by means of electrostatically charged plates. For this Millikan received the Nobel prize for determining the nature of the unit charge on the electron.
Quoting Millikan is something that Townsend also did.
From 200 firings carried out by the author, the following general facts emerge.
(a) Both high humidity and high temperatures decrease the rise of a rocket so constructed as to be an accelerating, charged body.
(b) Conversely, low temperature and low humidity greatly favor the rise of a rocket so constructed as to retain its charge during acceleration.
(c) A completely non-conducting rocket shows erratic flight characteristics in cold, dry weather.
(d) An accelerating, conducting rocket becomes a moving charge in an electric field and thus establishes concentric magnetic lines of force. These lines of force couple with the magnetic flux of the earth, stabilizing the flight of the rocket. This effect causes the rocket to resist changes in its vertical path, such as the force of crosswinds might induce.
(e) Under optimum conditions the electrostatic field of the earth may be utilized to aid the thrust of a rocket motor.
However the rest of the page is an article by Harry Stine of the National Association of Rocketry, in Analog (month unknown) 1961, claiming that the NAR attempted in October 1960 to January 1961 to replicate Dudley's results, and were unable to.
Dudley continues to fascinate me as one of the peripheral characters around Townsend, and I'd like to get hold of either or both of his paper on Relativity or his book on Quantum Mechanics, to see just how far from the mainstream he was while remaining a practicing radiation physicist.
Dudley has a patent (US3095167A, filed 1960, granted 1963) on his electrostatic-charged rocket idea, which... yes, cites Townsend Brown.
Rex Research patent images:
http://www.rexresearch.com/dudley/dudley.htm
Google patents:
https://patents.google.com/patent/US3095167A/en
Patent Citations (5)
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1974483A * 1930-02-07 1934-09-25 Brown Thomas Townsend Electrostatic motor
US2102527A * 1937-06-14 1937-12-14 Everett M Hadley Air resistance reducer
GB635784A * 1946-07-19 1950-04-19 Zygmurit Stefan Jablonski Apparatus for reducing fluid friction
US2946541A * 1955-04-11 1960-07-26 John R Boyd Airfoil fluid flow control system
US3022430A * 1957-07-03 1962-02-20 Whitehall Rand Inc Electrokinetic generator
The Internet Archive does however have a borrowable copy of Dudley's 1976 "The Morality of Nuclear Planning?" which, despite its title, seems to recap his fringe physics theories! So that's one step forward.
https://archive.org/details/moralityofn ... ew=theater
Regards, Nate