| Topic: |
Science > Physics |
| User: |
"" |
| Date: |
14 Oct 2006 12:14:59 PM |
| Object: |
"memory"effects !? |
http://www.oswirus.krakow.pl/cat_14/gyroscope/
A symmetric harnessed gyroscope accelerated to a given spinning
frequency takes different time periods to stop, depending on the
direction of previous spins. For repeated alternating, anticlockwise
and clockwise spinning, the rotation period in both directions
significantly increases, which is not the case when the gyroscope is
repeatedly rotated in the same direction. Using the measurements it was
observed, that the time of gyroscope's rotation was significantly
lengthened or shortened, what indicates that it either increased or
decreased the movement resistance of the gyroscope. The presented
experimental results suggest the existence of anomalous movement
resistance and demonstrate that a fixed spinning gyroscope displays
unusual history-dependent movement resistance effects. The effect is
real, large, reproducible and does not follow from experimental error
.
|
|
| User: "Dirk Van de moortel" |
|
| Title: Re: "memory"effects !? |
14 Oct 2006 12:39:29 PM |
|
|
<top9@gazeta.pl> wrote in message news:1160846099.263799.273610@i3g2000cwc.googlegroups.com...
http://www.oswirus.krakow.pl/cat_14/gyroscope/
A symmetric harnessed gyroscope accelerated to a given spinning
frequency takes different time periods to stop, depending on the
direction of previous spins. For repeated alternating, anticlockwise
and clockwise spinning, the rotation period in both directions
significantly increases, which is not the case when the gyroscope is
repeatedly rotated in the same direction. Using the measurements it was
observed, that the time of gyroscope's rotation was significantly
lengthened or shortened, what indicates that it either increased or
decreased the movement resistance of the gyroscope. The presented
experimental results suggest the existence of anomalous movement
resistance and demonstrate that a fixed spinning gyroscope displays
unusual history-dependent movement resistance effects. The effect is
real, large, reproducible and does not follow from experimental error
The influence of mixing "Unmemorized" with "Memorized"
rotors with ditto spindles and ditto bearings was not tested.
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.physics/browse_frm/thread/fe59091e437f1fc4/
Dirk Vdm
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "Douglas Eagleson" |
|
| Title: Re: "memory"effects !? |
18 Nov 2006 07:22:11 AM |
|
|
wrote:
http://www.oswirus.krakow.pl/cat_14/gyroscope/
A symmetric harnessed gyroscope accelerated to a given spinning
frequency takes different time periods to stop, depending on the
direction of previous spins. For repeated alternating, anticlockwise
and clockwise spinning, the rotation period in both directions
significantly increases, which is not the case when the gyroscope is
repeatedly rotated in the same direction. Using the measurements it was
observed, that the time of gyroscope's rotation was significantly
lengthened or shortened, what indicates that it either increased or
decreased the movement resistance of the gyroscope. The presented
experimental results suggest the existence of anomalous movement
resistance and demonstrate that a fixed spinning gyroscope displays
unusual history-dependent movement resistance effects. The effect is
real, large, reproducible and does not follow from experimental error
A rotation variation with period relative effect?
Given a mass, what element of it alters? A basic change to the system
appears the cause and to identify a history effect then makes the
completed theory to accompany the experiment, necessary.
An exquisite measure will show the moons effect causing the time of day
confounder common to many time experiments. About ten extra spins for
the gyroscope at a nice several thousand rpm initial state.
So if the history is real nice work, you might be seeing this General
Relativity effect.
How do you measure spin exactly?
Correlate the measure to the exact earth relation. Make your measure
at midnight, earth location opposite the sun, time, with the moon full
overhead for example, always. And the confounder will either disappear
or not.
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "Boris Mohar" |
|
| Title: Re: "memory"effects !? |
14 Oct 2006 03:42:42 PM |
|
|
On 14 Oct 2006 10:14:59 -0700, wrote:
http://www.oswirus.krakow.pl/cat_14/gyroscope/
A symmetric harnessed gyroscope accelerated to a given spinning
frequency takes different time periods to stop, depending on the
direction of previous spins. For repeated alternating, anticlockwise
and clockwise spinning, the rotation period in both directions
significantly increases, which is not the case when the gyroscope is
repeatedly rotated in the same direction. Using the measurements it was
observed, that the time of gyroscope's rotation was significantly
lengthened or shortened, what indicates that it either increased or
decreased the movement resistance of the gyroscope. The presented
experimental results suggest the existence of anomalous movement
resistance and demonstrate that a fixed spinning gyroscope displays
unusual history-dependent movement resistance effects. The effect is
real, large, reproducible and does not follow from experimental error
Try magnetic levitation or air bearings.
--
Boris Mohar
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
.
|
|
|
| User: "" |
|
| Title: Re: "memory"effects !? |
23 Oct 2006 11:49:17 AM |
|
|
Those effects strongly depend on material
(substance) of the rotor's disk, for example they are
great for the rotor's disk made in teflon and small one
for the rotor's disk made in plexiglas.
.
|
|
|
| User: "" |
|
| Title: Re: "memory"effects !? |
18 Nov 2006 03:47:13 AM |
|
|
We made measurements for different settings of rotor, for example the
spindle of the rotor was laid horizontally. The effect always exists
and is large. For the same bearings and the same dimensions of rotor
we have observed different size of the effects. The effect is small if
the disk of the rotor is made of plexiglas, and very large if the disk
of the rotor is made of teflon.
.
|
|
|
| User: "" |
|
| Title: Re: "memory"effects !? |
22 Nov 2006 11:14:05 AM |
|
|
napisal(a):
We made measurements for different settings of rotor, for example the
spindle of the rotor was laid horizontally. The effect always exists
and is large. For the same bearings and the same dimensions of rotor
we have observed different size of the effects. The effect is small if
the disk of the rotor is made of plexiglas, and very large if the disk
of the rotor is made of teflon.
it is a memory effects of rotor's material
.
|
|
|
| User: "Dirk Van de moortel" |
|
| Title: Re: "memory"effects !? |
22 Nov 2006 01:15:45 PM |
|
|
<top9@gazeta.pl> wrote in message news:1164215645.389063.4740@j44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
top9@gazeta.pl napisal(a):
We made measurements for different settings of rotor, for example the
spindle of the rotor was laid horizontally. The effect always exists
and is large. For the same bearings and the same dimensions of rotor
we have observed different size of the effects. The effect is small if
the disk of the rotor is made of plexiglas, and very large if the disk
of the rotor is made of teflon.
it is a memory effects of rotor's material
Have you still not tested the influence of mixing "Unmemorized"
with "Memorized" rotors with ditto spindles and ditto bearings?
There are 8 possible experiments. You did only two of them.
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.physics/browse_frm/thread/fe59091e437f1fc4/
Dirk Vdm
.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|

|
Related Articles |
Re: It is a "memory" effects in solids? "Memory" effects of a spinning disk Anomalous "memory" effects It is a "memory" effects in solids? Memory requirement, prime counting clincher Candles have "memory?" Magnetoelectronics enhance memory Group Memory Test
| Engineers Visualize Electric Memory As It Fades FLASH MEMORY BOOSTS, SIZE SHRINKS ORTEC interface (trump-pci and dual port memory) doesn't work on a P4 pc. Causation/Causality, Memory, and Convolution Causation/Causality, Memory, and Convolution 2: t2 - t1 or t - t1 Causation/Causality, Memory, and Convolution 3: Integral Equations Causation/Causality, Memory, and Convolution 4: Memory vs Complexity
|
|
|