KHNUM77
Junior Member
Posts: 51
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Country: USA
Age: Reincarnated
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Post by KHNUM77 on May 19, 2018 9:41:45 GMT
It seems as though electro-magnetism played a large part in the development of making a carpet that can really fly. One of the most unlikely vehicles to be realistic in many tales is that of a flying carpet. I mean come on, it's hard to believe that the ancients and even people of the near distant past could perform feats of engineering that could make mechanical vessels such as planes, helicopters, probes, saucers, etc. etc. fly, let alone a carpet ! Yet strangely enough, electro-magnetism in relation to the magnetic fields of the earth and the magnetic material that was inlaid/infused into carpets is what enabled them to actually fly. The research is in and it's conclusive, its most definitely a possibility that with the proper science, engineering, technological construction, and developments, carpets can and will fly. [Legend has it that the Queen of Sheba gifted King Solomon a green and gold flying carpet studded with precious jewels, as a token of her love. It is said that a flying carpet was woven on an ordinary loom, but its dyes held spectacular powers. Made from a special type of clay with magnetic properties (and since the earth is a magnet) it held the ability to hover several hundreds of feet above the ground.] excerpt in parenthesis from blog section of nazmiyalantiquerugs.com
[ Ulf Leonhardt and his colleague Thomas Philbin, at St Andrew’s University UK., realised that a property could also be exploited to levitate extremely small objects. They propose inserting a metamaterial between two so-called Casimir plates. When two such plates are brought very close together, the vacuum between them becomes filled with quantum fluctuations of the electromagnetic field. As two plates are brought closer together, fewer fluctuations can occur within the gap between them, but on the outer sides of the plates, the fluctuations are unconstrained. This causes a pressure difference on either side of the plates, forcing the plates to stick together, in a phenomenon called the Casimir effect. Federico Capasso, an expert on the Casimir effect at Harvard University in Boston, is impressed.’Using metamaterials to reverse the Casimir effect is a very clever idea,’ he says, but difficult and hardly possible to engineer.] excerpt in parenthesis from mini-IMDUMB.com/1225/view-solution/reading/three-ways-to-levitate-a-magic-carpet
We very well know that many advancements and almost all technological achievements from the present and past at one time or another were considered nearly impossible to be brought into existence, but through the expansion of knowledge via science and engineering these technological breakthroughs were and are no longer considered a dream but a reality.
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