Balder Ex-Libris - Tag - PhysicsReview of books rare and missing2024-03-27T00:16:02+00:00urn:md5:aa728a70505b2fae05796923271581c2DotclearMeyl Konstantin - Scalar wave transponderurn:md5:ab14ec5ad541c8007529237ac901137b2016-02-08T07:02:00+00:002016-02-08T07:26:53+00:00balderMeyl KonstantinPhysicsSatanismeScience <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Meyl_Konstantin_-_Scalar_wave_transponder.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Meyl Konstantin</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Scalar wave transponder Field-physical basis for electrically coupled bi-directional far range transponder</strong><br />
Year : 2006<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook2/Meyl_Konstantin_-_Scalar_wave_transponder.zip">Meyl_Konstantin_-_Scalar_wave_transponder.zip</a><br />
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Current RFID technology explains how the transfer of energy takes place on a chip card by means of longitudinal wave components in close range of the transmitting antenna. It is scalar waves which spread towards the electrical or the magnetic field pointer. That provides the better explanation. Using the wave equation proposed by Maxwell's field equations these wave components were set to zero. Why were only the postulated model computations provided after which the range is limited to the sixth part of the wavelength. Meyl in this text proposes instead the rationale for scalar wave components in the wave equation of Laplace. Physical conditions for the development of scalar wave transponders become operable well beyond the close range. Scalar wave information and energy is transferred with the same carrier wave and not carried over two separated ways as with RFID systems. Bi-directional signal transmission with energy transfer in both directions is achieved when there is a resonant coupling between transmitter and receiver. The first far range transponders developed on the basis of the extended field equations are already functional as prototypes. (Prof Dr. Ray Turner). <strong>...</strong></p>Meyl Konstantin - Potential vortex Volume 4urn:md5:6bea8b4f663b69068cceb5d7a6bfd0f12016-02-08T07:00:00+00:002016-02-08T07:26:53+00:00balderMeyl KonstantinPhysicsSatanismeScience <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Meyl_Konstantin_-_Potential_vortex_Volume_4.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Meyl Konstantin</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Potential vortex Volume 4 From nuclear physics and fusion to nanotechnology</strong><br />
Year : 2012<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook2/Meyl_Konstantin_-_Potential_vortex_Volume_4.zip">Meyl_Konstantin_-_Potential_vortex_Volume_4.zip</a><br />
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Derivation and calculation of atomic nuclei, periodic table of elements, and monoatomic elements at nano scale, based on recently discovered potential vortices. <strong>...</strong></p>Meyl Konstantin - Potential vortex Volume 1urn:md5:06f52428f2cf170dc842e858c5fd480b2016-02-08T06:18:00+00:002016-02-08T07:26:53+00:00balderMeyl KonstantinEugenicsPhysicsRacialismScience <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Meyl_Konstantin_-_Potential_vortex_Volume_1.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Meyl Konstantin</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Potential vortex Volume 1 From vortex physics to the world equation</strong><br />
Year : 1990<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook2/Meyl_Konstantin_-_Potential_vortex_Volume_1.zip">Meyl_Konstantin_-_Potential_vortex_Volume_1.zip</a><br />
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Contributions to the scientific discussion and interpretation, its physical and technical application, based on the mathematical calculation of recently discovered potential vortices. <strong>...</strong></p>Le Bon Gustave - The evolution of matterurn:md5:0fdfe25f8700100cc29a893e60a401bb2012-08-15T01:16:00+01:002014-05-05T15:55:11+01:00balderLe Bon GustavePhysics <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img/.Le_Bon_Gustave_-_The_evolution_of_matter_s.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Le Bon Gustave</strong><br />
Title : <strong>The evolution of matter</strong><br />
Year : 1907<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook/Le_Bon_Gustave_-_The_evolution_of_matter.zip">Le_Bon_Gustave_-_The_evolution_of_matter.zip</a><br />
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There is, fortunately, no need for me to introduce Dr. Gustave Le Bon to the British public, inasmuch as his works on psychology have a European reputation, and his Psychology of Crowds (long since translated into English) has become, in some sort, a classic. About ten years ago, however, he began to turn his attention to physical science, with ifhe result that he entered upon the long course of experimental research which is summarized in the following pages. This led him to the conclusion—to put the affair in its simplest form—that all matter is radio-active in the same manner as uranium, radium, and the other so-called radio-active metals, and that this radioactivity is but a step in the process by which it gradually sinks back into the ether from which it was originally formed. To this he has lately added the corollary that, in the course of this disintegration, energies of an intensity transcending anything of the kind previously observed are very slowly and gradually liberated. Conclusions so subversive of all that formerly passed under the name of scientific teaching could hardly be promulgated without causing an uproar, and that which followed the first ventilation of them left nothing to be desired on the score of vehemence. In France, even more than in England, it has always been considered an impertinence for any one not engaged in the tuition of youth to possess original ideas on any scientific subject, and the violence of Dr. Le Bon's adversaries -was only equalled by the volubility with which they contradicted themselves and each other. How this storm gradually abated, and was succeeded first by impartial consideration and then by a pretty general acceptance of his theories, he tells us at sufficient length in the book itself. But I may perhaps remark here that his earliest adherents on the Continent were drawn from the ranks of those who—as was my own case until some two years ago—had no other acquaintance with him than through his writings. In our own country the same thing occurred on a smaller scale and with a difference. No sooner had the volume of which this is a translation reached England than it was assailed, with more rashness than ingenuousness, by two of the younger members of the University of Cambridge. As I have dealt elsewhere, with the one of them who constituted himself the spokesman of the two, there is no occasion for me to re-open the polemic; but it may be noted that this time Dr. Le Bon's assailants admitted that his theory was (to use their own words) "in the main correct," and contented them-selves with challenging the sufficiency of nis experiments and the originality of his doctrine. To those who have studied without prejudice the controversies which have raged round nearly every scientific generalization on its first appearance, this will doubtless appear but a premonitory symptom of its universal acceptance in the near future. They will be confirmed in this view by the fact that over 12,000 copies of this book have been sold in France since its publication in June 1905, which, in the present state of the book market, may be considered an extraordinary event. The rendering of the work into English has been in a double sense a labour of love, my task having been much facilitated by Dr. Le Bon's bold and positive style, as well as by his clear and excellent French. But, while an author necessarily and justly looks upon his translator as a traducer, it is seldom, perhaps, that a translator imbued with the critical spirit for long remains satisfied with the literary workmanship of his author. I do not venture to say, therefore, that there is nothing in these pages that would have been better left unsaid, or even nothing that could have been more clearly stated. What I would recommend to the reader, and especially to the expert reader who feels himself attracted by them, is to go from their study to the original memoirs on which they are based, and of which a list is appended. He will there find among the deviations and slips which usually attend our first faltering steps on the path to scientific truth many shrewd and pregnant hints that of necessity have made their escape in the process of compression into the present volume. To Dr. Le Bon's original text I have added a few notes, designed for the most part to collate his conclusions with the latest researches on their subject, and these notes can be distinguished from the author's by my initials. F. LEGGE. Royal Institution of Great Britain, December 1906. <strong>...</strong></p>Le Bon Gustave - The evolution of forcesurn:md5:a5c67024b6be3ba9cc60a68eeac3abd52012-08-15T01:12:00+01:002014-05-05T15:55:07+01:00balderLe Bon GustavePhysics <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img/.Le_Bon_Gustave_-_The_evolution_of_forces_s.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Le Bon Gustave</strong><br />
Title : <strong>The evolution of forces</strong><br />
Year : 1908<br />
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Link download : <a href="https://balderexlibris.com/public/ebook/Le_Bon_Gustave_-_The_evolution_of_forces.zip">Le_Bon_Gustave_-_The_evolution_of_forces.zip</a><br />
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In the following pages, Dr. Gustave Le Bon develops further the strikingly novel and original theories put forward by him in L'Involution de la Matiirc} As in the last-named work, he enunciated the doctrine, which he was the first to deduce, that all matter is continually in a state of dissociation and decay, so in this he goes in detail into the corollary, there only briefly stated, that the atom is a great reservoir of energy, and itself the source of most of the forces of the universe. In support of this position, he calls in the aid of his earlier researches into the nature of invisible radiations, phosphorescence, and the Hertzian waves, all which, with several related phenomena, he declares to be explicable by the hypothesis that the atom, on dissociating, sets free, either wholly or in part, the energy stored up within it on its formation. Yet he is careful to declare that this is rather suggested than demonstrated by his researches, and that the conclusive proof of the vahdity of his assertion must be delayed for the result of further experiments by himself or others. In the meantime, it is :well to notice that both Dr. Le Bon's original thesis and its corollary have received approval from an unexpected quarter. Every new scientific theory, if sufiBciently farreaching, is received with disapproval by those brought up on the ideas it would supplant, and Dr. Le Bon's assertion of the universal dissociation" of matter formed no exception to this rule. In France, as he reminds us in L'involution cle la Matidre, his first discovery of the phenomena which he classed together under the odd name of " Black Light," aroused a perfect storm of obloquy which has long since died away. In England, whither his theories penetrated only after they had been in great part accepted by the scientific world, this was not the case ; but two members of the Cavendish Laboratory at Cambridge took upon themselves, upon the appearance of L'J^volution cle la Matiere, to assail its teaching as well as its novelty with more virulence than force.^ It is therefore pleasing to find Mr. P. D. Innes, himself a member of the Cavendish Laboratory, writing, with the apparent approval of its Director, in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, with regard to radio-active phenomena, that " the only theory which can satisfactorily account for the phenomena observed is that of atomic disintegration, a process that is apparently going on in several, if not in all, of the elements " ; and further (p. 443), " that there is a great store of energy in the atom seems now beyond question, and if this reservoir could only become available, all our present conditions might be completely revolutionised." This is exactly—as any one can see for himself —the position taken up by Dr. Le Bon in L'Evolution de la Mature, and further defined and emphasized by him in the present work. There seems therefore good reason to suppose that Dr. Le Bon's later theories, as well as his earlier ones, are now widely accepted by men of science, and that before long this acceptance will be extended to all points of his doctrine. It should be added that the present work was written expressly for the International Scientific Series, and was intended to appear simultaneously in England and France. Difficulties connected witli the reproduction of the illustrations have caused the appearance of this version to lag some months behind the French, of which eight editions of 1000 copies apiece have been rapidly exhausted. The delay has not been useless, as it has enabled me to add a few corrections and notes, together with indexes, which are wanting in the French editions. F. LEGGE. Royal Institution of Gekat Bbitain, February, 1908. <strong>...</strong></p>