[geocentrism] Re: more to reflect on 2.

  • From: Martin Selbrede <mselbrede@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: geocentrism@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sat, 24 Feb 2007 22:03:09 -0600


On Feb 24, 2007, at 4:56 PM, philip madsen wrote:


but this raises a question,
"of Dr. Robert Moon, Chicago University physicist, who in his article “Space Must Be Quantized,” shows that the prevailing theory that space is a vacuum is not supported by the evidence. The reason? Because space has an impedance of at least 376 ohms, something not predicted or accounted for in conventional science" My question is how is this 376 ohms measured? and from this how can this measurement be distinguished for space, from the impedance of the interface of the instrument? radio antennaes present to the coax feeder an impedance which is called the radiation resistance, but I always assumed it to be a characteristic of the interface between the antenna element and space.
Can any one expand on this?



Phil,

I can expand a bit on this. I always laugh when I see anyone quoting Dr. Robert Moon's article. If you trace the article back, you'll find that the citation goes back to me. I happened to own a copy of the magazine in which Moon's article was published, and I cited it in the early 1990s in connection with its geocentric implications. When I see the citation cropping back up in various uncredited guises, it strikes me as hilarious. All we see are the parts I quoted, and nothing of the rest of the article. In the slide presentation for my public lecture on geocentricity (still available on video), I even provide the picture of Dr. Moon from his article.

The 376 ohms are reactive (space stores electromagnetic energy in the form of waves and returns it -- without loss -- at the end of wave transmission or associated terminal events). Moon goes into further detail about the quantization of the impedance in regards to the Hall resistance and von Klitzing's work (which earned von Klitzing a Nobel prize around 1985 for showing the resistance to be quantized).

Martin


Other related posts: