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UFO Propulsion Systems

The document discusses how particle accelerators like those used at CERN could potentially power the propulsion systems of UFOs if miniaturized. It describes how early particle accelerators evolved from handheld devices to kilometers-long machines. Modern chip-based accelerators could produce billions of electronvolts per meter and accelerate particles outward to propel a craft. The circular motion of particles in a synchrotron accelerator could also generate magnetic fields to counter gravity. If the quantum mechanics employed at CERN were applied at smaller scales, it suggests particle accelerators may explain observed UFO technologies.

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Samuel Trevino
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
131 views3 pages

UFO Propulsion Systems

The document discusses how particle accelerators like those used at CERN could potentially power the propulsion systems of UFOs if miniaturized. It describes how early particle accelerators evolved from handheld devices to kilometers-long machines. Modern chip-based accelerators could produce billions of electronvolts per meter and accelerate particles outward to propel a craft. The circular motion of particles in a synchrotron accelerator could also generate magnetic fields to counter gravity. If the quantum mechanics employed at CERN were applied at smaller scales, it suggests particle accelerators may explain observed UFO technologies.

Uploaded by

Samuel Trevino
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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UFO Propulsion Systems

By
Anthony Patch

Imagine if you will, scaling down the circular Large Hadron Collider
conjoined with its AWAKE linear accelerator at CERN, and encasing of each
machine within a “typical” UFO some forty feet in diameter.
Dr. Ernest O. Lawrence, namesake to both the Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, in the early 1930s
prototyped a circular cyclotron particle accelerator formed of brass, wire and
sealing wax, only four inches in diameter. Literally, it was a hand-held accelerator.
On January 2, 1931, he realized 1.22 MeV (1.22 million electronvolts) of
accelerated proton energy from an 11-inch cyclotron prototype. Today, a 17-mile
long circular Sychrotron particle accelerator terminates a daisy chain of ring-based
and linear accelerators positioned 300 feet below grade near the Franco-Swiss
border at CERN. The European Organization for Nuclear Research. Thus far
yielding nearly 14 TeV (14 trillion, tera, electronvolts).

On May 24, 2011, Christopher McGuinness of the SLAC National


Accelerator Laboratory (formerly, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center) presented a
particle accelerator on a chip. A half-millimeter long fused silica glass chip
composed of half-micron-high channels patterned into nanoscale ridges. Using an
ultra-fast pulsed infrared laser illuminating the pattern generates electrical fields,
interacting with electrons accelerating at a rate 10 times that of conventional linear
accelerators, similar to Stanford’s own 2-mile-long SLAC. Their goal in 2011,
was to produce 1GeV (1 billion electronvolts) per meter length, having already
achieved 300MeV (300 million electronvolts) per meter.
At CERN, a larger 10-meter version of this chip-based accelerator known as
The Proton Driven Plasma Wakefield Acceleration Experiment (AWAKE) will
produce 20PeV (20 quadrillion electronvolts) when conjoined with the 17-mile
Main Ring of the Large Hadron Collider. An ionizing laser sets the initial phase of
a wakefield while accepting pre-accelerated proton bunches from the Super Proton
Synchrotron accelerator positioned in line with the Main Ring.

Given the initial smaller scales of both the circular Synchrotron and linear
accelerators paralleling today’s technological advancements in microprocessors,
and now quantum bits (qubits), the same could be said to be true of CERN’s own
large-scale accelerators.

A ring-based Sychrotron holds accelerated particles moving through a


magnetic field to a circular pathway. In so doing, magnetic lines of force are
produced orthogonal (right angles) to this pathway and to the ring itself. These
can be utilized in opposing the force of gravity.

A linear accelerator projects particles in much the same way a rocket motor
produces thrust.

Given the present state of technology, it seems only reasonable to expect the
utilization of both forms of accelerators in the propulsion of UFOs. Their
scalability is proven both empirically and experimentally. Their direct application
to the general topic of UFOs admittedly is speculative.

And yet, the popular reverse-engineering discussions of such craft are


viewed as acceptable to researchers, and a growing segment of the general
population at large.

Therefore, it is not at all hyperbole to give credence to the concepts of


quantum mechanics employed in the form of particle accelerators. A practical
example lies with the circular, Synchrotron particle accelerator housed within the
Advanced Light Source Building of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Radiating out from the machine are straight pipes referred to as Beam Lines.
These contain streams of particles accelerated within the curved path of the
Synchrotron itself. Sized down to “UFO-scale”, these beamlines may be employed
in a modified form as both acceleration and deceleration, as well as directional
devices.
The second aspect with regard to an onboard Sychrotron are the production
of magnetic lines of force at right angles to its circular ring. These counter the
force of gravity, itself 1040 times weaker than electromagnetism.

Finally, in lieu of actual beam lines radiating from the circular ring of a
Synchrotron, actual chip-scale linear accelerators would be more practical. These
providing the aforementioned propulsion of accelerated particles outward from the
craft.

Perhaps if and when “Full Disclosure”, which appears imminent, takes place
we will learn if the machines of CERN have indeed been scaled-to-fit.

- Anthony Patch

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