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  1. Jun 3, 2020 · In 1896, "apergy" was used by writer/philanthropist Clara Jessup Bloomfield-Moore for the force behind John Ernst Worrell Keely 's Vibrodyne (aka Keely's Motor). In her "Some Truths About Keely", Bloomfield-Moore identifies apergy as "one of the currents of a triune polar stream of force". Keely and his Vibrodyne.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Anti-gravityAnti-gravity - Wikipedia

    The inventor describes apergy as "a force obtained by blending positive and negative electricity with ultheic, the third element or state of electric energy" and calls apergy a "second phase of gravity," hinting at a third phase as well.

  3. hatch.kookscience.com › wiki › ApergyApergy - Kook Science

    Apergy is a hypothetical repulsive force that represents an opposition to gravitation as an attractive force, sometimes described as the centripetal force to gravity's centrifugal force.

  4. Replacing force by force per unit mass and force per unit charge allows us to take over the Feynman-Dyson proof of the Maxwell Equations and extend it to weak gravity.

  5. A related nineteenth-century coinage is Apergy, the antigravity principle used to propel a spacecraft from Earth to Mars in Percy Greg's Across the Zodiac (1880) and borrowed for the same purpose by John Jacob Astor in A Journey in Other Worlds (1894).

  6. In an article, Man’s Greatest Achievement, Tesla outlined his Dynamic Theory of Gravity by saying that the luminiferous ether fills all space. The ether is acted upon by the life-giving creative force and is thrown into “ infinitesimal whirls ” (“ micro helices “) at near the speed of light, becoming ponderable matter.

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  8. Jun 21, 2024 · Gravity - Force, Physics, Theory: The Newtonian theory of gravity is based on an assumed force acting between all pairs of bodies—i.e., an action at a distance. When a mass moves, the force acting on other masses had been considered to adjust instantaneously to the new location of the displaced mass. That, however, is inconsistent with ...