Wednesday 11 February 2009

The Negative Resistor: A Close-Looped "CBS and Shuttle" System




Figure 2 shows the close-looping of the device shown in Figure 1, in such manner that, once stable operation is underway and the load
and input stabilized, the ordinary power supply for the CBS can be switched out of the circuit. In this case, the circuit operates as a
self-powered overunity device; i.e., as a negative resistor.
A normal resistor receives an ordered energy flow from its external circuit and scatters this energy as work out to the vacuum. I.e., it
receives i = (Ø+ Ø)/dt (dm/dt) (scatters the excess ( Ø)/dt component (i.e., of the dq/dt passing into it from the high potential
side) by radiating it away to the surrounding vacuum as scattered photons (heat)), and outputs inert (no excess ( Ø) component)
electron current dq/dt into the ground side.
A negative resistor does exactly the opposite: it accepts inert incoming electrons from its "ground" side, also accepts incoming
(converging) dØ/dt energy from the vacuum as virtual photons being absorbed upon these inert electrons so that a Ø is added to
the electron current, creating an excited, excess energy-carrying i = (Ø+ Ø)/dt (dm/dt), and passes this excited current out of its
high side and out into the external circuit to power the circuit. In other words, the negative resistor becomes a self-contained free
power source, once brought up to stable operation.
In Figure 1, all that needs to be done is simply to extract some of the secondary power and feed it back to create the power input
consumed by the CBS and the other normal components of the primary circuit side of the transformer.
Multitaps can be added to the secondary side, to provide varying voltage power supplies for loads requiring different voltages.
Energy is conserved in the device, because it always functions as an open circuit, receiving excess energy from an external source (the
surrounding vacuum, in its virtual photon exchange with the charges in the system). It is far from thermodynamic equilibrium, and
classical thermodynamics (including the second law) does not apply.
It is simply a continuous free power supply: it is a negative resistor.
Far more complicated units can be designed and produced. The basic point is that this type of overunity power supply is continuous
and self-powered, driven by the violent exchange of energy from the vacuum, and simply collecting and gating some of that energy to
the load to power the load.

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