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Is It Possible to Produce Micro-Gravity in Our Own Lab?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

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Wouldn't it be nice to have some kind of laboratory hood in which gravity is greatly reduced so we could grow more perfect crystals or do biological experiments without having to go into orbit. There was a report in Science last year which hinted that gravity cancellation or modification just might be possible some day, but I doubt that any of our readers noticed it. The title was “Inertia: Does Empty Space Put Up the Resistance?”. One has to read this news report carefully to find that physicists have long pondered the connection between the inertial property of mass and the gravitational attraction between masses and that the work quoted here, suggests that once inertia is understood it might be controlled, even canceled. Upon inquiry the editor, Robert Matthews found other physicists believed that the ability to modify inertia could soon be tested experimentally but remarked that “it is a bit too early to be talking about inertia free star ships.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 1995

References

1. “Inertia: Does Empty Space Put Up the Resistance?” report by Robert Matthews ed., Science vol 263 pgs 612-13, February 4,1994.

2. “Inertia as a zero-point-field Lorentz force” Haisch, Rueda and Puthoff, Physical Rev. A, voi 49 #2, pgs 678-94, February 1994.

3. “Gravity as a zero-point-fluctuation force” H. E. Puthoff, Physical Rev. A vol 39 #5, pgs. 2333-42, March 1, 1989.

4. A.D. Sakharov, Dokl. Akad. Nauk. SSSR [Sov. Phys.-Dokl. 12.1040 (1968)].

5 “The New Physics” Edited by Paul Davies, Especially chapter 13 by Abdus Salam on overview of particle physics, Cambridge U. Press, 1989.

6. “Scenes From'a Marriage of Optics and Electronics” a meeting report by Robert F. Service, Science vol 268 pgs 1702-3, June 23,1995.