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Steorn Begin Free Energy Validation in London
!-Comment-! The UK Economist magazine has
written this response to the idea of free energy systems based on
Steorn's cancellation of the demonstration in London recently. This
article of course fails to examine the numerous testimonies we have
from scientists, inventors, insiders and contactees regarding the
utilisation of limitless energy from the quantum field. Dan Willis from
the Disclosure Project can provide examples of threats to inventors and
their families and even deaths all carried out to maintain the fossil
fuel domination of global energy supplies. What would the Economist
have to write about if energy systems shifted overnight to free sources
that involved the eradication of fees and profit?!
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Perpetual nonsense: There's no free lunch in supplying energy
BEYOND the suburbs of science dwell all manner of amateur inventors,
would-be Einsteins, saviours of the planet and other well-meaning
crackpots. The one thing they invariably share is a fascination with
science and a less than rigorous grounding in its fundamentals. A good
number seem bent on bequeathing some marvel of engineering that can
generate an endless supply of free energy-in short, a perpetual-motion
machine.
Nowadays the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO)
refuses to review a perpetual-motion machine unless it is accompanied
by a working prototype. In the past too many inventors had used patents
to convince gullible investors that their machines had been "officially
approved" by no less an authority than the USPTO. Other such tinkerers
are sincere and often genuinely puzzled by the way their devices appear
to work. As a rule, however, there's a belief that, somehow, the laws
of physics do not apply to their particular contraption.
A year ago an Irish company called Steorn captured headlines around
the world after running a whole-page advert in The Economist, claiming
to have developed a machine that generated free energy. Recently
Steorn's founder, Sean McCarthy, offered to demonstrate the device to
the public. A ten-day event, starting on July 6th, was to be held at
the Kinetica Museum in London. At the last minute, however, the
demonstration was cancelled, owing to a technical defect caused
(ostensibly) by heat from the lights used to illuminate the machine for
the cameras. A new demonstration has yet to be scheduled.
The device, called "Orbo", is said to comprise a rotor, with
powerful magnets around its outer surface, which spins within a casing
that has magnets on its inner surface. Mr McCarthy admits that, if Orbo
really works, then it must defy the law of conservation of energy. This
law, one of the cornerstones of science, says that energy can neither
be created nor destroyed, but merely changed from one form into
another-from, say, heat into light, sound or motion.
Many would-be builders of perpetual-motion machines see scientific
laws, like the conservation of energy, as mere dogma waiting to be
overthrown by radical freethinkers. But science had its reformation
centuries ago. A select number of its indisputable axioms have been
designated as laws. These are not man-made rules or opinions, but
universal truths prised loose from nature by painstaking observation
and experiment, and hammered on the anvil of experience by repeated
testing. As such, they have survived every challenge thrown at them
over the centuries.
Magnets, yes. Perpetual motion, no.
None more so than the first and second laws of thermodynamics: the
science of machines and the physical processes associated with them.
There are actually four laws of thermodynamics. For our purposes, the
zeroth and the third laws are of more academic than practical interest.
Understanding how the first and second laws operate is important
because they underpin so much of our everyday world, and allow us to
suss out quickly what's hocus and what's not.
The first law of thermodynamics-essentially a restatement of the
conservation of energy-deals with energy, work and heat. A machine
needs energy to work or else it just sits there doing nothing. If it is
to be useful, it can do one of two things with the energy put into it:
perform work or generate waste heat-or, in the real world, a bit of
both. That means the energy input has to equal the output of work and
waste heat. In short, the energy of the total system is conserved.
The second law of thermodynamics is more subtle still. It is built
around the concept of entropy-a measure, if you will, of how energy
gets dispersed. It can be thought of as nature's instinctive tendency
towards disorder. In other words, it defines the irreversibility of
processes involving heat and energy.
Thus, according to the second law, a process can occur only if it
increases the total amount of entropy involved. It also means that heat
cannot flow from something that's cold to something that's hot-that is
to say, heat flows only along an irreversible one-way street. Most
crucially, the second law makes it clear that heat cannot be converted
completely into work. Some of the thermal energy has to be passed on to
something at a lower temperature. The implication is that any device
that needs energy to work can never be 100% efficient.
By their very definition, perpetual-motion machines are required to
be at least 100% efficient. Thus, to continue running indefinitely,
they violate either the first law (by promising something for nothing
instead of merely conserving energy) or the second law (by implying
that they convert all their energy into work). And that's nonsense.
Remember: the first law says the best you can do is break even, while
the second law adds, forget it, you can't even do that! Keep those two
principles in mind, and you'll never go far wrong.
View the original article
On 4th July 2007 Steorn opened a ten-day
demonstration of it's free energy technology, Orbo. Based on magnetic
field interaction, Orbo allows the production of clean, free and
constant energy. The technology can be applied to virtually all devices
that require energy, from electronic gadgets to cars.On 18th August
2006, we placed an ad in the Economist which issued a challenge to the
scientific community to come and validate our technology. Twenty-two
scientists were appointed and the testing began in January 2007. Steorn
will publish the results of this process as soon as it is completed.
View their video on the broader issues of ecology and free energy - fundamental issues to exopolitics.
http://www.steorn.com/orbo/validation/challenge/
Our Claim
Orbo produces free, clean and
constant energy - that is our claim. By free we mean that the energy
produced is done so without recourse to external source. By clean we
mean that during operation the technology produces no emissions. By
constant we mean that with the exception of mechanical failure the
technology will continue to operate indefinitely.
The
sum of these claims for our Orbo technology is a violation of the
principle of conservation of energy, perhaps the most fundamental of
scientific principles. The principle of the conservation of energy
states that energy can neither be created or destroyed, it can only
change form.
Because of the revolutionary nature of
our claim, not only to the world of science but to the world in
general, Steorn issued a challenge to the scientific community in
August 2006 to test our technology and report their findings. The
process of validation that has resulted from this challenge is
currently underway, with results expected by the end of 2007.
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