OK, if I understand this, energy is sent off to travel the earth at a rate of 84/1000's sec, or about 12 times a sec around the earth, and returns "almost without any loss of energy".
If it does this once, without loss of energy, it seems to me it would continue indefinitely (until whatever mild energy loss overcomes), making it a virtual perpetual energy wave. I'm guessing it would also slow a small amount with that little bit of energy loss, too.
How would one tap into this energy? Like to run/recharge your cell phone?
To maintain the energy you would have to add to it with every cycle. The loss is still there, nothing is absolutely lossless, and the total loss would naturally increase as the total charge increased. I imagine this would either hit a point where the loss becomes so great with each cycle that you cannot feasibly add any more than what was lost with each pass. Either that, or it splits the earth at a certain threshold.
[–] 15364142? [S] 0 points 3 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago (edited ago)
Free energy ???
With the knowledge of the facts before me, I do not think it hazardous to predict that we will be enabled to illuminate the whole sky at night and that eventually we will flash power in virtually unlimited amounts to planets. It would not surprise me at all if an experiment to transmit thousands of horsepower to the moon by this new method were made in a few years from now.
Space Force power to explore ?
[–] 15363556? [S] ago (edited ago)
The November wave was comprised of just a single frequency, and appeared as an unusually simple, clean zig-zag of about 17 seconds in length.
Independent seismologist Anthony Lomax tweeted the following image
At the top is the simple, unfiltered mystery wave. The bottom shows possible P- and S-wave echoes when the wave was filtered.
[–] 15366313? ago
Walter Russell was also the real deal!