Approved For Release 2003/09/09: CIA-R%F3FQW5R001900680014-4 The Bohm-Aharonov Effect,, Scalar Inferferometry, and S0081'Weaponizatimon T. E. Bearden Si'TAR WAHN NOW! April 24, 1984 All rights reserved. T. E. Bearden 198.4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09: CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT I wish to thank Drs. Harold Faretto and Jack Dea for invaluable assistance, and basic information on building a precision scalar wave detector. In addition,.I am most grateful to Mr. Hal Crawford for his marvelous special drawings and his kind permission to include them. Arid I owe a very special debt to Mr. John Bedini for his fundamental laboratory and bench work and his willingness to share his results and insights with me Also, I wis@ to express my deepest appreciation to Mr. Josh Reynolds, Essentia.Research, and the Association of Distinguished American Scientists for financial support on this Project. without the invaluabla-, assistance of these persons, this effort would not have been possible. Tom Bearden April 23, 1984 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 TABLE OF CONTENTS Item Tit le page 1. Acknowledgement ................................ i 2. Table of Contents .............................. j. List of Figures ............................... 4. List of Tables ................................. 5. Abstract ....................................... 6. The Bohm-Aharonov EffeCt ................... .. 7. Scalar Electromagnetics ..................... :.. 2 8. Wireless Transmission of Energy at a Distance . 4 9. Some Characteristics of a Scalar Wave Beam .... 5 10. A Sensitive Scalar Wave Detector .............. 7 .11. Scalar Interferometry and Weaponization ....... 9 12. Vacuum Theory .................................. 12 13. EXtraction of Distant En(,.@rgy: A New Concept ... 12 14. Massive Testing of "Cold Explosions .. .......... 15 15. The Perfect Missile Shield .................... 16 16. Massive Soviet Weaponization .................. 16 17. Soviet Weather Engineering .................... 16 18. Conclusion ..................................... 18 19. References .................. ................. 24 2,0.. Appendix I: Typical Incidents and Related Information .............. ................... 26 LIST OF FIGURES Figure Title page 1. Scalar 6--wave production ....................... 3 s tanCe ................. Creating energy at a di. 6 Artist's concept of a large scalar interferometer transmitter .................. 6 4. Linear, uncurved laboratory frame ............. 8 5. Rotating the longitudinal wave produces a transverse component ....................... 8 6. Bending the liaboratory spacetime frame pro- duces a transverse component ................ 8 7. A Sensitive Scalar Wave Detector .............. 8 8. Tactical air-to-ground usage ................. 1.1 9. Ground-to-air usage ........................... 11 10. Mushroom cloud from sea off Japan near Russian test: area ............................ 13 11. Network of virtual transmitters .............. 19 12. Virtual transmitters in the interference grid . 19 1.3. Giant radial related to a virtual transmitter - 20 2.4. Formation of a single giant radial ............ 20 1.5. Formation of a double giant radial ............ 21 1.6. Detection of transverse and longitudinal waves 21 1.7. Twin giant radial pattern ..................... 22 U Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA klDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 LIS.T 01F TABLES Table Title page 1. Conservation of' anenergy: an expanded energy conservation law ............................. 3 2. Mushroom cloud rising from sea ................ 13 3.- Mushroom cloud from sea off Japan .............. 14 4. Plumes noted in satellite photos in Soviet Arctic (77 since 1974) ........................ 14 5. Khrushchev's 1960 statement ................... 17 6. Brezhnev's 1975 proposal ...................... 17 7. Twin giant radials ............................. 22 8. Radiation of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow ....... 23 9. Lysenko's 1982 statement ...................... 23 ABSTRACT - The Bohm-Aharonov Effect shows that, even in the absence of electrical and magnetic fields, the potentials cause real effects to occur in the field-free regions. Using this principle, beams of pure potential without vector force fields (without E and H fields) may be deliberately produced and intersected at a distani.-e to cause effects in the interference zone, in con-tradiction to classical mechanics. These effects are in fact required by quantum mechanics. Essentially, energy may be produced directly at the distant interference site o:r extracted from it, without energy transmission through space. Implications for weapons built on these concepts are giv(--@n, and several types of such scalar electromagnetics weapons are discussed. The use of the "cold explosion" is detailed and evidence of its extE?TlSiVE@ testing is giv@-n. The basic mechanism for Soviet weather control over North America is briefly presented and a raore extensive reference given. Evidence of massive Soviet weaponization of these effects for nearly three decades and of Soviet scalar electromagnetics weapons te-sting on a global scale exists in the open literature. Selected examples and related information are given in thC1 Appendix. Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 STAR WARS NOW! The Bohm-Aharonov Effect, Scalar Interferometry, and Soviet Weaponization (D 1984 T. E. Bearden - The Bohryi-Aharanox,, Effect - Originally electrical and magnetics experiments and ideas developed primarily in terms of statics, and grE!at difficulty was experienced in combining the two and passing to a more dynamic theoretical representation. With the advent. of' Maxwell's equations, electricity and magnetism were combined into an elegant electromagnetic theory, and these equations then served as the basis for the development of modern theory. Gradually Potentials were relegated to a. POs-Ition of inferior importance, and they even came to be regarded as purely mathematical conveniences by most scientists. .However, with the advent of Aharonov and Bohm's seminal paper [a], it became crystal clear that potentials are in fact real entities, and they can directly affect and control charged particle systems even in a region where all -the fields and hence the forces or) the particles have vanish(,.@d. While this, of course, is completely counter to the conclusions of classical mechanics [a, P. 4851, it follows inescapably from quantum mechanics. With Chambers's direct expe-rimental proof of the predicted Bohm-.Aharonov effects in 1960 [b], this new viewpoint was firmly established for quantum mechanics and quantum electromagnetics in genera-I. Indeed, the Bohm-Aharonov effect even affects gauge theories, ,requiring the concept of nonintegrable phase fact-ors and global formulation of gauge fields. [c] Thus increasingly it is the potentials that are primary physical entities, and the fields ar7e of secondary, derived importance in modern quantum electrodynamics. Yet the full weapon implications of the Bohm-Aharonov discovery have not yet penetrated the minds a nd ConSCiousnesses of western physicists, electrical engineers, and weapons analysts. Indeed, an extended treatment of s uc h implications has not even been addressed in the literature. Th-110, may be somewhat understandable, since it required over 30 years for physicists to realiZe the primary actuality of the potentials in the firs-t plaCe [d, p. 15-121. Nobelist Feynman states it succinctly: 111 t is interesting that something like this can be around for thixty years but, because of certain prejudices of what is and is not significant, continues to be ignored." [d, p. 15-12.1 Slowly, however, the overwhelming im]' -)ortance of t. h Ei:,@ Scalar electromagne-tics indicated by Bohm and Aharonov has been rioted by this analyst, ,:tnd work to inveStigate and app,ly Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 this rich new region of quantum electrodynamics is now most certainly warranted. Indeed, it is imperative that an effort of the highest priority be niountE@d immediately, for our very survival is gravely threatEMed by scalar electromagnetics weapons already in thE! hands of the Soviet Union. And at this moment we have abso'lUtely @no defense whatsoevex against them. - Scalar Electromagnetics - We first define scalar electromagnetics as the quant'am inechanical effects and influences that can be accomplished :by electrical and magnetic scalar potentials, even in the absence of electric and magnetic fields, or - in other words -- that can occur even in otherwise zero-E (electric) and zero-B (magnetic) force-field regions. Note that thIs definition includes as subsets both the ordinary classical EM field approach and the more fundamental approach of quantum electrodynamics. In the lat-,:er approach, one replaces the fields E and B in modern theory with the 0 (electrostatic scalar potential) and A (magnetic vector potential), with the- view that these potentials create the E and B fields in the first place. The Bohm-Aharonov effect shows that the E and B fields can remain zero, and yet. the potentials can stil.11 cause,physical effects. Thus scalar electromagnetics encompasses two cases: (i) the normal case, in which the potentials are viewed as first creating the fields E and B, and these force fields in turn produce physical effects on charged particle systems; and (2) the case in which fields E and E, are zero, yet potentials still exist and produce physical effects on charged particle systems. Indeed, we assume total primacy of scalar potentials, after the work of Whittaker [e], holding that all the effects of present electrodynamics can be produced by utilization and interference of two or more scalar potentials. Note particularly that one may deliberately create the zero--field, pure potential ccindition by opposing magnetic and or electrical fields so that they sum to zero. .(Figure 1). That is, the "zero fields" can be rtasultant vector zeros, where the combining vector comr)on(-.?nts still exist. In this case one creates a deliberate, artificial s@@alar potential which cont ,ains all the energies of the separate infolded [Bohrals term] vector fields used to make the resultant vector zero.. All this infolded e.,nergy has been transformed to stress of spacetime, or pure potential. (Table 1). HOWeV(@r, it does not have a randomized substructure as is usual. in quantum electrodynamics, but has a determined, known substructure consisting of the constructed infolded E and B field vectors. Conceptually, a magnetic pole_@ is such a s.patiotemporal. stress potential -- but usually with a randomized subs tructure --- as is an electric;al charge. Now it is fundamental that only the envelope is "observable, and the infolded substructure has become 11virtual." But by having a deliberately designed and Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 -2- Approved For Release 200 lf@fltlW RV1107@11R-OW@e Figure E- HO 076 4-10 00 -10 VIRTUAL GROUND COMPRESSIVIF S TRESS SPINNING CHARGED PARTICLE WILL NOT PRECESS "WTRESS LEVEL ON SPACE TIME Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 controlled substructure, one. h as turned quantuin mechanicn3 inside out. One can now control and engineer the probabilities themselves, and even determine which eigenvector state of a propagating Shr*o*dinger wave will be produced in the collapse of the wave function. indeed, i n theory one can control when the wave function collapses, and under what circumstances. Einstein was correct Eifter all.; once-we discover His more subtle control mechanism, God does not actually play dice with the universe. I strongly point out that this is a fundamental change to present quantum mechanics itself. in the axioms of quantum mechanics, the basic virtual state background activity of the universe is assumed to be totally statistical. If it can be made deterministic, then one should be able to "engineer" the presently probabilistic quantum interactions as desired. In short, one would have. directly implemented David Bohm's "hidden variables" in a controlled, non-statistical. manrier. Awesome implications follow from such capability; literally one can directly engineer the present quantum mechanical. structure of physical reality itself, since one can engineer, affect, and control the fundamentaa virtual processes of nature. A potential is a "point" function, an 'd it can be used to penetrate to any degree of fineness desired. Simply by making and UtiliZing artificial. potentials with deliberate substructures, one can engineer the virtual particle interactions that produce all the physical forces of nature, bind the nucleus together, and control and CREATE the world of macroscopic changes',we think we inhabit. Conceptually, a magnetic pole is such a spatiotemporal stress potential -- but usually with a randomized substructure -- as is an electrical charge. Note also that, if one rhythmically varies all the individual summation vectors in the substructure by the same factor, one produces pure potential stress waves -- scalar waves -- without ever, creating external electric and m *agnetic fields. These are pure waves of spacetime, and -they are oscillating curvatures Of SpilCetiTne itself. They are pure waves of compression and rarefaction of the massless charge of spacetime, and are properly represented as longitudinal waves rather than transverse waves. Thus they are nonHertzian in nature. Among other things, they may be USed to gerierate mass and inertial fiel.d directly,, but that i. s beyond the scope of this paper. .- Wireless Transmission of Energy at a Distance -- To illustrate one remarkable though typical implication of this new breakthrough area, we point out Utlat, by changing the potentials while keeping the force-fields zero, one call d i rectly produce energy a t a distance as if it were transported through space without losses, even though no energy transmIssion through space in the normal fashion occurs as such. Indeed, it may even be, possible to utilize pure potential uraves to " t r a n s po r t "the energy at a n y Approved For Release 2003/09/09 :_qlA-RDP96-00788 ROO 1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 velocity -- not limited by the speed of light -- since 1 n some cases a potential ( f o r e xa mp l'a r electrostatic scalar potential) can be regarde,J as having infinite velocity, simply appearing "everywhere at once." [f] Electrostatic scalar potential, tor. example, may bE@ regarded as a sort of "locked-in stress energy" of vacuum, as can any other vacuum potential. Changing the potefttial in a regton or at a point changes the amount of "locked-in" or "infolded" vacuum energy available or stored in that region or at that point. Yet simply changing the potential at tha t: point or in that region need not involve any local expenditure of work there; the work may be expended elsewhere, and the results realized directly at a distant region by a change in that region's potential, according to the Bohm-)@haronov effect. In the remote region, charged particles are imbedded in vacuum potential by their virtual. particle charge flux, and in the induced potential gra.dients the imbedded particles move, producing electrical arid magnetic forces and fields and ,Performing work. This is somewhat analogous to "puttirig energy in be rE@ and "extracting it out there" without. any travel or losses in between -,-- Nikola Tesla's old "wireless transmission o f energy at a distance without losses" idea. Note that, quantum mechanically, we may take tbe view that this is a very special class of macroscopic Ifenergy tunneling" phei@@omena, as illustra-ted in Aharonov and Bohm's. or'lginal papcr - (a). Essentially energy is put into the system at the locations where the scalar potentials are produced, and is rec:c.,vered at the distant interference zone where., particle effects are produced (Figure 2).. To pursue this single example and further show its implicaticns, we point out that in theory one may deliberately make a beam containing zero electric arid magnEltiC fields, simply by properly phase-locking together two or more beams of oscillating orrdinary E-R electrical energy, all at the same frequency. I In the perfe(--,t hypothetical case, for example., two single-frequency beams phase-locked together 180 degrees apart would create such a zero-field or scalar-wave beam (Figure 1). In the real ,-.t ,,s containing narrow world, (Me d be phase-log i a wcx_b@g_qnj bandwidths,-and -how@1i'u,@c-S--i-6ro-field beam is obtained a t t h e center of the bandwidth would depend on the "Q" (sharpness) of each beam. To purify the beam, it could first be transinitted through a grounded Faraday shield, which wo'--Ld @ 's - onents not proper remove most o t e zeroed. By successive Faraday "stripping" of the beam, a scalar beam as pure as desired can be obtained. Hal C'rawfordl_s artistic concept of a 'Large scalar interferometer weapon is shown.in Figure 3. Some Characteristics of a Scalar Wave Beam Such a beam is totally undetectable by a normal E--H detector, since it does not produce normat 1 f'orce.-field-induced accelerations of particles (such as the free electron gas in an antenna or the conduction electrons Approved For.Release 2003/09/09 @,qLA-RDP96-00788 ROO 1900680014-4 Approved For FZptpa-%af Iff9ri tft u, r e 2. UE-A WfftfOl 4-4 SCALAR XMTR 1 "VECTOR ENERGYZONE XNERGY BOTTLE) SCALAR SCALAR SCALAR INTERFEROMETER XMTR #2 vq@ Courtesy Hal Crawford. Approved For Release 2003/09/09 ClAxRDP96-00788R001900680014-4 FigurE@ 3. ARTIST'S CONCEPT OF A LARGE SCALAR INTERFEROMETER TRANSMITTER. @Zl rw- 4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 in a Faraday shield). Thus this wave is usual1y nondetectable except by unique detectors specificali1v designed to detect 0 and A potential @n the condition of zero E and Ff. This scalar beam also :is capable of strong penetration of ocean water, since free ions do not absorb nearly so much of it as for an ordinary E-11 field beam, Thus one'may speak Of T6egahertz and even gigahertz beams and signals tranSTnitted throuqh t1ae ocean (and through the earth). In fact, all associate of the author appears to have developed a prototype underwater transmission system, including a sensitive scalar wave detector. Even an underwater radar appears quite feasible. - A Sensitive Scalar Wave Detector - Very briefly we present a method of making a very sensitive scalar wave detector so that. direct- measurement and quantization can be established. First, we regard one oscillation (one wavelength) of the scalar potential wave as a longitudinal photon. Note that thi s photon contains a sulh,)s tructure which , may be deliberately determined (when artificially made) or randomized (when naturally made in the idealized case). For convenience we represent: normal linearized vacuum (spacetime) as a horizontal or longitudinal vector (Figure 4), implying the direction of motion of the wave in the laboratory frame. By horizontal position in our diagram, we imply a linear, uncurved spacetime and a non-rotated frame. We represent the longitudinal scalar wave as a horizontal vector,, and the usual Hertzian wave as a vertical or "transverse" vector. We visualize a normal detector as detecting only a vertical or "-transverse" vector, as we have illustrated in Figure 4. As can be seen, in a linear, unrotated or uncurved spacetime a pure scalar wave has no vert.-ical component projected upon the laboratory fraMe vector, so it ds not detectable by normal detectors. To detect the scalar. wave, of course we could bend it so that it has a projected vertical component in the laboratory frame (Figure 5). However, this would be an impure wave, not a pure scalar wave, and that is not what we wish. A better way is to bend or curve spacetime itself in a small rogion, so that a longitudinal wave that passes through that region now possesses a vertical component with respect to that region (Figure 6). Thus a normal detector there will detect that vertical component. We conduct the detection current out of the "bent spacetime" region to an- outside (normal) detector, and we then have a scalar wave detector. To illustrate, we show conceptually how this has been successfully done. Figure 7 shows the concept. First, w e utilize a magnetic pole to provide the infolded energy (potential) to bend or curve spacetime. To reach good sensitivity, we need a pole strength connected with a magnetic field strength of 40,000 Gauss or higher. Tvq e uiti.lize a small superconducting magnet, which can reach field Approved For Release 2003/09/09 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approvedfor Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788 ROO 1900680014-4 Hertzian Wave Scalar Wave Direction of Wave Motion in Lab Frame Figure 4. Linear, uncurved laboratory frame. VMS Bent Longitudinal Scalar Wave Transverse Projection .J -ab Frame Figure 5. Rotating the longitudinal wave produces a transverse component. 41 Longitudinal Scalar 'Wave t? t Apparent Transverse Projection ,C Figure 6. Bending the laboratory spacetime frame- produces a transverse component. Oscilloscope Faraday Shield Super- 0s, Conducting Magnet Wire Insulateci Plug Shielded Cable 0/ Resc_)nant ?Pre-ai Tuni ng Pre-amp Circuit Figure 7. A sensitive scalar wave detector. Approved For Release 2003/09iO-4-: CIA-RDP96-00788 ROO 1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4. strengths of from 40,000 to 80,000 Gauss. Then to prevent detoctio-Irl of superfluous 14no.-mal" radiation, we shield the entire magnet in a grounded Faraday c@age, as shown in the fi Hertzian waves will bi- igure. grounded in this shield, while scalar waves will readily penetrate it undiminished. In other words, -the Faraday caqc, serves as a 11stripper," to @;_;trip away the ordinary waves, leaving only the scalar waves to penetrate inside. 2% 11 ordinary wire lies at the top of the magnetic pole, i 11 prOKiM.ity to it. The wire runs out of the Faraday cage through an insulated port to a resonant tuning circuit, which is sharply tunable over the range of frequencies we are interested in. A preamp amplifies the output of the tunerp and in turn feeds the input of an oscilloscope or o t h el- detector. With this detecto we can select the frequency desired, and detect any passing scalar waves of that frequency. By other variations of amps and preamps, regene.1-ative circuits, etc. we can obtain all the sensitivity desired, and utilize ordinary detection equipment already well-known and highly developed. Scalar Interferometry and Weapon i,,,,a t ion )%ccording to the Bohm-Aharonov effect, if two zero-field scalar wave beams are crossed in a, distant region, real physical effects exist in that distant interference zone. In short, one may create "transmitting scalar interferometers" (Figure 2) to produce energetic effects at: a distance, in a specified region. For a theoretically perfect scalar inter f E@ronieter, all the enercly fed into the remote transmitters is exhibited in the effects eXPE!rienced in the interference zone, without "traveling through the space in between." This can be comprebende-C] by, :realizing that energy at the -transmitter sites is transformed into stress-energy of vacuum (i.e., pure potential), and it is the potential variation that is accomplished, not transmission of energy 'through space per se We stre;s that locked-in or infOlded vacuum energy in -a potential and vector energy i n transition are two qu i t o different aspects of the same thing, just as energy and mass are t:wo different aspects of one thing. In the interference zone of two intersecting scalar beams, the out-of-phase regions no longer have sum-zeroed substructure components, so E and .13 fields appear there, created by the now out-of-phase substructure superpositions. If ather E and B fields are already there, these new fields superpose w i th them, either constructively or destructiVE!ly. If they add,, the existing fields are augmented and increasE@d. _r" tht-21-P -___1 0 @Pose' the existing fields are diminished or negated. Thus the transmitting scalar interferometer can create or extinguish electromagnetic fields at a di&tance. In 'other words, it can 1@rodu.ce enerqy, in t lie t_a r_g e.t interference zone _D:r- extract enerqV- from it. Continuous input cf energy at the transmitter sites Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA--RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 produces con t i nulous emergenci--@ of energy a t the r e m e interference site. A continuous-wave jammer using this inode, for example, will place all its transmitted power in a small volume around the targeted radar at a distance (Figure 8). The drastic increase in lethality of the jammer is obvious; therEl is no square-law loss, but * only a volumetric dilution around the target itself. IndeE,d, this type of j amm i n 9 can be applied to disable and destroy electromagnetic circuits of all types, in widely varying equipments such as tanks, aircraft, communications centers, vehicles, command posts, etc. It is also quite lethal against human beings. Of course a ground radar can be utilized in a scalar interferometer mode and fire back at the aerial attacker, ZIS shown in Figure 9. . If a highly energetic s ca 1 a r pulse is synchronously transmitted by each of two remote transmitters, then in the distant interference zone where the two pulses intersect, a ri impulsive emergence of ordinary electromagnetic energy occurs. This can produce an electromagnetic explosion at the distant intersection Site, With concomitant electromagnetic pulse being radiated, etc. Fven in the hard vacuum of space, such an electrical explosion and EMP are produced, since the electromagnetic energy produced in the interference 1@one i S sufficient to lift Dirac electrons and othe:Y: Dirac matter from the Dirac sea, producing a plasma very similar to a nuclear explosion, except for the absence of gamma radiation and nuclear residues. Evidence of' Soviet weaponization of such effects is widespread in the open-source literature. [g] Again, the I 'ethality of the jammer/transmitter is vastly expanded by such adaptation.. Indeed, jammer/tra.,psmitters using scalar interferometer techniques are capable of attacking mpst military targets, such as tanks, aircraft, vehi(-.,les, installations, f uel dumps, arm-nun i t i on dumps, inflammable supplies, personnel, etc. The jammer/transmitter itself becomes a totally new kind of directed energy weapon having nearly ubiquitous military application. These and other implications of scalar E!lectroinagnetics have already been pointed out by this rCISE!a.rcher [hl[il. Examples of testing of scalar electromagnetics weapons are given in Appendix I. If continuous energy is fbd into the trar.smitters of the scalar interferometer, then continuous energy emerges in the distant interference zone. For very narrow beams and substantial input energy, the d.istant energy density can be made quite high. Physical destruction of distant targets call be accomplished in this fashion; and the effects can be- produced directly inside bunkerS, buildings, tanks and armored vehicles, aircraft, nuclear-tipped missiles, ships, etc. Relativistic effects such as a change in the rate of flow of time, in the inertia of an object, and in the mass of all object can also be obtained, at least in tbeo-ry. (j] In theory the speed of light in vacuuo can also be changed, and there is already experimental evidence of this effect. [k] _10- Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Aplyoved ForgR!Ieain ft7er cl@-(5prg-0078 n.V900680014-4 T cl u r E' NV I ........... ,3 p@ V 'Ar 'TARGET AIRCRAFT MODIFIED TRACK RADAR Figure 8. TACTICAL AIR-TO-GROUND USAGE't RADAR TARGE-7 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 V a cu u m Th e o r v Since in thEl modern view the vacuum is composed o f mas@-Iess charge, it can be rEgarded a s a single g i a n ele(:t:rostatic scalar potential and magnetostatic scalar potential combined, with zero E and H fieids. If one we--;', developing weaponry based on the new scalar electromagnetics, then.one might expect to find an energetics theory dealiric with such a vacuum and based on scalar concepts. One might even utilize a type of field thi_:@cry based on a fundamental particle conceptualized as a ".little piece of vacuum medium". Indeed, evidence for -just such a theory exists in the Soviet literature (11, and direct evidence of the Soviet view of the importance of such a concept was certainly provided by t1he Petukov-1.11oth affair. [m] -Extraction of Distant Energy: A New Concept - A second highly strategic implication of scal.;.it. electromagnetics is that a scalar interferometer connectiDn between transmitter sites and i,,-l distant interference zone can be viewed somewhat as a sort of "electrical ground 36 wire" or 11common potential" connection between the pr03ectors and t`ie interference site. That is, it represents a "zero-fiel(@ . connection between them. By ec'tablishing a resonance between the distant site and the projector sites, randomized field' zeroing that occurs in the nEltural temperature oscillations :1t the distant site can be utilizad to extract energy frr ', fn the SitE? to the projectors. That is, one may extracz electromagnetic energy from =-I distance target or ri@gion, well as produce energy at a distance. Again, the ener(,-.- extracted is not transport 'ed through space as normal electromagnetic energy, but as pu:re scalar potential. The mechanism for this may easily be seen if cre recognizes that, when fields zero by opposition, the vectors comprising the opposition at. that point: also comprise a special value of scalar potential. Since each single fiej'(' vector in -the opposition has energy, then the energies' of the opposing vectors are "locke@d-in" as spatiotemporal stress of the scalar potential at -that opposit-ion point. Thus "ordinary energy" has been converted to "stress of spacetim(@.:" (scalar potential). That POTENTIAL, which is simply massless charge, can then directly aj-fE-,,ct a distant system [a] and can even do it: inStantaneousIv. [f] Thus the scalar potential can be used, bv interferometry, to directly produce energy in a distani-- targ(:t or extract energy di.rE?CtlV from that target. Indeed, because of this hitherto unknown effect, th,. present conservat3on of enerqy law is but a s ,oecial. case of "Pore fundamental stress canservation law. This mo r fundamental stress conservation law has already been derived by Uiis researcher. [i, pp. 10-11, 43] See Table 1 f o r a synops.-I.S. Approved For Release 2003/09/09 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Figu 700 1900680014-4 f4pprpy9d For OFF JAPAN NEAR RUSSIAN TEST AREA 150 Mi. VIA. 200 ML FROM TOKYO 5:14 PS1 SOUTH OF KURIL ISLANDS 9_APRIL 1984 Ta b 1 E@ MUSHROOM CLOUD RIS11913% FROM SEA Ito 0514 HRS, 9 APRIL 1984 o GRAY-WHITE CLOUD APPEARED ROSE 60,000 FTIN 2 MIN. 180 Mi. S.E. OF HOKKAIDO rp LOO Mi. FROM TOKYO S SOUTH OF KURIL ISLANDS ISOVIET MISSILETESTING SCHEOULED ABOUT 350 Mi. AWAY, AT 2100 [IRS 9 APR 198-4 Approved For Release 2003109109: CIA-RDP96-0078.8ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 T b.1 3. MUSHROOM CLOUD FROM SEA OFF JAPAN FIVE BOEING 747'S FLEW TH, ROUGH OR NEAR THE CLOUD. - NO CONTAMINATION . NON-NUC'LEAR OCEAN 21,000 F"I DEEP TOO DEEP FOR SUBMARINE VOLCANOTO CAUSE CLOUD INDICATES MAN-MADE PHENOMENON 77 OTHER SUCH I-PLUMES SINCE '1974 - IN SOVIET ARCTIC - IN NON-VOLCANIC AREA - NON-NUCLEAR Table 4. PLUMES NOTED IN SATELLITE PHOTOS IN SOVIET ARCTIC 77 SINCE 19741 Approved For Release 2003/09tO94 -CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 - Massive 1'(--@stinc of "Cold Ex -p I c s @ orl s " - Direct evidence for a c3eca@.ie of massive Soviet test i nc@ Of Such "energy extraction" strategic systerns has recently become apparent. In, p. 8) Since 19,14, very large, anomalous mushroom-shaped ice cloud forinations have been repeatedly produced over the Soviet Arc-tic and detected by U.S-. weather SatEA.lites. These formations arise suddenly and are very much colder than the surrounding air. They appear to be the result of firing a large scalar interferorneter in an e n e rz y extraction" mode; in other words, a "cold explosion" occurs at the distant interference site. Recently a most drainatic example o f such a cold explosion occurred near a pre-i-.innounced Soviet weapons test zone off -Japan. In) (See Figure 10 and Tables 2, 3, 4). The mushroom cloud reached 60, 000 feet altitude in about 2 minutes, and had a diameter of 150 in 1- 1 es. @@everal BoeinQi 747s were in the area, and were later checked ful radioactivity with neqative results. In fact, the U.S. has detected at least 78 such Soviet tests [n, p. 8] since 1974, w i t 1-,@ far less than continuous satellite coverage and little more than cursory imagery examination. Two or three times as many such Soviet "cold explosion" tests may actually have occurred. The direct implication for worldwide weather engineering by the Soviet Union is obvious. Note also that a "cold explosion" of over 150 miles diainetdr represents an interference zone of about the size of the heart of the inain troop deployments in the NATO Central Reg i on. J'k s i ng.le' shot of su ch a weapon coufd almost instantly freeze every NATO soldier in that area into a block of Jce. Note also that the heat energy is extr ' acted throughout the spacetime of the ai-ea; insulation or external heat sources are no defense. The heat literally i s " suck ecl out" of the interior of bodies in the interference zonE!. Several such "cold explosion" shots could finish off the entire NATO central region ---- again, in seconds or minutes. .And r@ince the Soviets would have (given NATO no huclear provocation, it is doubtful that: (a U.S. President would launc-h a strategic nuclear attack against the Soviet Union in such a n eventuality. P a r t. i c u 1 & r i y if monstz:oUs "cold explosions" appeared without warning in densely populated regic@ris of the U.S. In fact, onc@ inay argue that the Western military and civilian leaders wolald not. even (grasp what w a s, being clone to thern, or who was doing It! Of course the, saine scalar illt-P-rferometer can be used i n the "produce energy" mode, in which case it: can jam or knock out almost all electronic equipuient in the target zone,, detonat.E@ explosive materials therein, etc. Note that a massive electrical fireball -- say several inegatons over, New York. City would give all the "desirable" effects of a nuclear weapon, without any of the "undesirable" effects. I t would aive the thermal. radiation, the blast wave, and the EMI-P effects, but would not give the ca iation and nuclear ;;mma rad f a]. I Out. So it would burn up i-.1 n d blow down things, kill people, and knock out electrical s y s t em sn, but would not Approved For Release 2003/09/OP . PIA-RDP96-00788RO01 900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 c or, ta m:'L n a t e the area . This, of course, would be ve imp(.;rtzint to the Soviets if they w i shed t o salvage t) WeStE!1:11 farmland without nucLear contamination. - The Perfect Mi;SSile Shield - By utilizing three-dimensional trLincated-- Fo u r -4,L r expansion techniques with multiple transmitted frequencies, the scalar interferometer beams can be made to interfere in specific geometric patterns, such as giant hemispheric shej"."s of glowing energy, quite useful in a strategic AB11 defense (:,..f a large area. Such tests of such giant ABM shields have actually been observed by competent. witnesses. 101 Ty p i c al examples of a variety of tests cif weapons usinq this mode are given in Appendix I. - Mass'ive Soviet We@aponization The Soviets have been engaged in weaponizing scalar electromagnetics for nearly three decades, as evidenced by Khrushchev's eerie 1960 annOUncement [p] of a fantast@lc weapon, more terrible and perfeCt than rockets and 4missiles. (See Table 5). In addition, such weapons may be what Brezhnev was referring to when the Soviet team at the SALT talks. in 1-975 introduced the strange proposal that we should also consider outlawing the development of n cnv; elect-romagnetic weapons of a most terrible nature -- more frightful -than the mind of man had ever imagined. (See T a 1) 1,- Ocalar electromagnetic weapons are directly applicable to nearly all phases of warfare, both tactical and strategic, and both offensive and def EMS i VE- . They can be used t: o accomplish nearly 100% ABM defc-risc-., of -very large areas a n 6 they can destroy ICBMs, TBMs, cruise missiles, aircraft., ordnance, tanks, weapons carriersf personnel carriers, submarines, SLBMs, surface ships, c o min u n i c a t i o n s equipment, fuel supplies, ammunition supplies, nuclear warheads, and r personnel with ease and efficienc:y. Chey can be made large or small -- indeed, one can hie made as small as a large pistol, and carried in the hand. The "Buck Roqers" ray Pistol is now a reality. With such weapons vast areas can be completely destroyed 0 r neutralized within in i n u t e s , without permanent contamination. These weapons can also be used to accomplish weather and climate control on a worldwide scale, as well as to cause earthquakes, and they have been already been e,mployed in both modes by the Soviet Union. - Soviet Weather Engineering -- Essentially, in the "produce enE!rgy" mode a powerful scalar interferometer can produc-E, a large high pressure area or "licit: spot" at a given d is t a n t target area. In the 11extract energy" mode, a large low p r es s ur e area o r "cold spot" chn 'be produced at a given distant tal-QE?t area. Each of theSE! spots can be moved by "sweeping" the inL.erferometer Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 a b I e 5 r*'%HRU0""HCHEV""' 1960 z@iATEYIENT (Spe8king to the PreSidi=j WE HAVE A, NEW WEAPON, JUST WITHIN THE PORTFOLIO OF OUR SCIENTISTS . . . SO POWERFUL THAT, IF UNRESTHAINEDLY USED, IT COULD IVIPE OUT ALL LIFE ON -EAR.-TH1 Table 6. BRIENNEV'S 1975 i,nOPOSAL AT THE SALT TALKS ON JUNE 13, 1975: THE SOVIETS URGED THE U.S. TO AGREE ON A BAN (IF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPPlENT OF NEW KINDS OF WEAPONS MORE TERRIBLE THAN ANYTHINGTHE-WORLD HAS KNOWNI -17- Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 1) e 3@ I @ s SrD a -s tC@ n a e tne a L i o n the d i s t- a n t int,erf-erence zone. ("hat is, un_e s@Ynchronously rotates t,. I t- intel'fE2rofneter beams so as to ,jradually change the locati,,-In of the distant interference zone, which ..s creating the spct . ) B @y u s i n a multiple t: r a n s m i t t e r s and fairly b r o,-.i d bear's, an interference grid can be created over an entire continent or substantial portions of it-1. (Fiqure 11). Tr) each grid block in the interfE@rence, zone, energ-Y can e prodClCed cr extracted. (Figure 12). Direct evidence f or such usage by the Soviets over North An-ter i ca has be n presc-Jited. [q] Certain "signatures" of the Soviet weathf.r control. interferometry grid system have been observed all over the U..S. (Figures 13, 14, 1-5, 17, Table 7), and one major signature has been photographed ov e r Huntsville, Alabama by this author. I t is stressed t'l h a t our normal instruments do not usually det(--_@ct the directly active scaiar beams, unless we detE@Ct long_@tudinal waves as shown in Figure 1.6. A more definitive p a p (-a r o n this overt weather engineering over North America is in preparation. - Conc.lusion - A s can be seen, the 11 eW (to the Westl scalar e 1 e c t r o ma q n e t i c s is a rea I. i ty, as evidenced by the Bohm-Aharonov work and its direct- eXperimental proof. The implications for weaponization on a ma ss i v e strategic and tactical scale are obvious, and unfortunately the Soviet Union has already developer.1 several generations of such wc2apons. At least- one oth-f_@!r country has also developet-3 scalar electromagnetics weaponry. The Soviet scalar electromagnetics weapons de"I@velopment program appears to have been well underway at the time of th@-:@ beginning of -the "microwave radiation" of the U.S. Embassy Moscow, about 1959 or 1960. (T, a b I e 8 '). A good dE?Scription of the history of this microwa,,.,e r-adiation has been given 1) y Brodeur from a normal electrr_,magnetics viewpoint. [r) Note that. "twin beams" were utilized in the radiation, at least, from tj.ME@ to time, and a va--iet", of systemological difficulties were induced in personnel in the Emb as sy' A s .;.ate as 1982, major Sovie-: reiDresentatives continued announce warnings of the impendiny, use of new Soviet weap C) n s more powerful. than nuclear a)-Senals. (Table 9). A variety of other potential incidents of overi: Soviet use of scalar wav weapons against the U.S.. has been presented by this author. [s)[t). Typical examples are given in Appendix 1. To repeat, evidence of massive So,-iet testing of scalar E@lectromaqnetics weapons on a clooal ,-; c a 1 c abounds in t h e open literature. The Soviets .rJave been deploying arid repeatedly testing these WE?af)OrIS I-Or nearlv three decades, without being recognized by the WestL= intelligence and scientific communities for what thev were. The West is almost totally defensel ess against these frightful Soviet scalar elc-ctromaqnet._iCs weapons, and a n immediate "Manhatt-an Project" to develc-,) defenses on a crash basis is urgently needed if We afe to survive at all. --18- Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Figure 11. NETWORK OF- VIRTUAL TRANSMITTERS Spr-.L Figure 12. VIRTUAL TRANSMITTERS IN THE INTERFERENCE GRID Note: May be troughs instead of Peaks. 1, n that caser enej,gy is extracted. Energy peaks t.cansmitters) 19- Approved For Release 2003/09/09 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 GIANT RADIAL RELATED TO A VIRTUAL TRANSMITTER ,\@\ @,g Fall 1.983: Florida, A 1 a 1) ama, I.Figure 14. FORMATION OF A SINGLE GIANT RADIAL INTENSE PEAK OF NORMAL ENERGY ERY SMALL PEAKS CLOUD @,---GLOUD RADIALS RING 5 Mi. DIA /I 20MILES X LONG qL\ Earlv 1-984: C f orn i a, I-,a I a A laliama, ;00 Wiles west of t@,,ernphis. 'z SCALAR INTERFERENCE G FA I D PAVT L R N Approved For Release 2003/09/09 Gl.@,@@P96-00788RO01900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Fi c u r e 1.5 . FORMATION OF A DJUBLE GIAN't dBAL rATTUIN INI E NSE PEAK OF I KING NORMAL ENERGY INTENSF PEAK OF NORM4L ENERGY CENTRAL RING SAPPEARS DI A- J@A BOATTAILED Two sightings over Huntsville, Alabama Z SCALAR1N7 LRFERENCE G FI I D PATT E.R N Figure 16. DETECI"ION OF THANSVE'RSE AND LONGITUDINAL WAVES ANT NORMAL 'atrans v e r.-!,, e NORMAL. rDW XMTR EM wa v e NO 1114A L longitudia.:il XL TRIXM TR ---L----,----.-.--.- -1 --. EM transverse oscillations induced in electron gz@s DETECTION AN T no detection F-. -1 NORMAL J* LDETECTOR no trans vers ':e e SPECIAL nt [DETECTOR c'sclilbotions induced Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO190068OOq49-40cts -21- Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 FiQUXE@? 17. TWIN GUANTRADIAL PATTERN NORTH HUNTSVILLE, AL 6 JAN 84 PROBABLE SYSIFEIV MOVING GRID WEST AT 20-30APH CENTER t 4- OBSERVERS 9 PROBABLE GRID C ENTER c7 APPROXIMATELY 20 POILES NO T I CISCALE Table 7. TWIN GIAINT RADIALS SYSTEM MOVING% WEST , 20-30 MPI-i REMNANTS OF A SECOND TWIN GIANT RADIAL SYSTEM SEEPS! IN SAME AREA -1-1130-1145 HRS Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA,-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved F I as IfO rylt V%-RDP96-00788 ROO 1900680014-4 Tab.--e B. MUM 0, I-51BA00f IN Moscow SINCE 1959 OR 11166 ~ HIGH LEVEL TAfiGET IU.S. AMBASSADOR] ~ GUARANTEES PERSONAL ATTIENTION OF PRESIDENT NSA. CIA, DIA TOP CONSULTING SCIENTISTS STATE DEPARTMENT LEADING SCIENTIFIC iNSTITUTIONS NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL ETC. ~ REACTION REVEALS U.S. KNOWLEDGE OF TESLA ELECTRONIAGNETICS 41 FOUR U.S. PRESIDENTS REQUESTED SOVIETS TO CEASE - CUT FROM 18 @,WATTS/CM2TO 2 - THEN AGAIN INCREP,SED Table 9. LYSENKO'S 1982 STATEMENT WORLD FUTURES CONFERENCE WASHINGTON, D. C. 20 JULY 1982 * LYSENKO (FIRST NAME UNIQ * USSR REP (SOVIETEMBASSY, WASHINGTON, D.C.) * STATED WILL SHORTLY SEE DEVELOPMENT OF' NEW WEAPONS - MORE POWI"--:RFUL THAN NUCO'LEAR WEAPON11`3 - WILL. BE NONVERIFIABLE Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-R6@56-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 R E: IFE R _F'N C E S ZI Y Aharonov an6 3 Bohm, "Signif icance c, f Electromagnetic Potentials i n the Quantum Theory, -Rev., Second Series, Vol. 115, No. 3, August 1, 1959, PI.D. 48 .55-4 91. 1). R. G,. Chambers, Phys. Rev. Lett., Vol. 5, @1960, 3. C. Tai Tsun Wu and C1-jen Ning Yarg, "Concept of nonintegrable phase factors and global formulation- of gau( ' le fie2ds," Phys. Rev. D, Vol. 12, No. 12, 15 December 1975, pID. 3 8 4 E - _3 E. 5 d. Richard P. Feynman, Robert B. Leighton, and Matthew Sands, The FeVnman Lectures-r.)n-2hysics, Volume II, Section 15 - 5 1 P 17. -1 -5- -8-t _o"_1 5 - 2 4 . e. E. T. Whittaker, "On an Expression of the Electromagnetic Field Due to Electrons by Means of Two Scalar Potential Functions," Proc. Lond. Math. Soc., Vol. 1, 190-31 pp. 367--372. 1* f. JohT) David Jackson, Classical Electrodynamics, '177-57 1 2'@ Second Edition, Wiley, New York, r 9. "Scientists Fail to Solve Vela Mystery," Science, Vol. 2011, .1 February 1980, pp. 50/1--506. "Satellite Evidence Shows 'Possibility,of Nuclear T(-,@st, DOD Says," Aerospace Dailv, October 29, 1979, 1). 286. "A Flash o?"-ET-g-ty; -ir, T_e@@_F.Ueek, November 5, 1979, pp. 6,1-65. "Was It a Nuclea.r Device?", Newsweek, July 21, 1980, p. 19. "Diverging Views," Washington'-Roundup, Aviation Week & Space Technology, July 21, 1980, p. 15. Philip J. Klass, no - e-stin -e 9 d -c7'6 -a r Test Doubted," Aviation Week & S ace Tc-,!chnology, August 11, 1980, pp. 67, 6 9, 71-72. "Debate C o n the Bomb That Wasn't," Science, Vol. 209, 1 August 1980, pp. 572-573. "Navy La@7'_,onc`ludes the Vela Saw & Bomb," Science, Vol. 209, 29 August, 1980, pp. 996-997. h. T. E. Bearden, "Toward a New Electromagnetics: P a r t III: Clarifying the Vector Concept," Tesla Dook Co., 1580 Magnolia, Millbrae, CA 940301 1933. 4 Part @_ T. E. Bearden, "Toward a New Electromaqnetics: IV: Vectors and Mechanisms Clarified," Tesla Book Co., Mill'Orae, CA, 1.983. Ingram Bloch & 11 o r a c Crater, Lo r en tz - i nva r i a z-i t@ potenL'Lals and the non--reiativistic limit," -Am. J. Vol. 49, No. 1, January 1981, p.p. 67-75. k B. N. Belyaev, "On Izandom Fluctuations of the Velocit@y of Light in Vacuum," %z ve s t i y a Vy s sh i k h Uchebnykh @ZavedElrlii, Fizika, No. 11, Nov. @1980, pp. 3-7-42. 4A-RDP96-00788RO01 900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09- IC Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 A. K. Lapkovskii, "Relativistic Kin,@?mat-ic E q u a t i o n.- and th@@, Theor-y of Continuous Mej'Aa, Soviet, P,,vsil--s Journai, Vol., 21, No. 6, June-1978. M. Martin Ebon, "Moscow, June .1-1, 19717," in his Psych-@-, Warfare: Threat or T11usion, McGraw-Hill book Co. , N w NY, 1983, pp. n . Greg Rippee, "Mushroom cloud siqt,.-,@-@j ol--f Japan," Angeles Daily News, 11. April. 1934, pp. 1, 0. Gwynne Roberts, "Witne:ss to E@ S u I-) e Weapon?", T h e Sung@.@I@j@ies, London, England, L7 August 1930. p. Max Frankel, "Khrushchev Says Sovie: will Cut Forcc@:, a Third; Sees 'Fantastic' Weapon," NE?%N,,.,,-Yo,r-k-,-Times, 15 Januar'." 1960, 1). 1. q.. T. E. Bearden, S ov i e t We a t h E.-., Engineering," T C)S presentation on C@2en ind Show, Radio Station KABC, Angeles, Califorr;ia March 24, 1984. (AudJotape available from Radio Station KABC, 3321 South La-' i enega B9.vd., Los Angeles, CA 90016.) Also 7'. 1@; Bea rden, "Soviet Weathel-- Engineering Over North Amer i ca , i n p r ep ar a@ t- i o 1-1 . (To L) e presE@nted at the 'U.S. Psycnotronics A s s o c i a tL@ i o n A n n u a 1 Symposium, Oglethorpe College, Atlanta, GA in june 1984.) r . Paul Brodeur, The Zi3pujj@q of' America, W. W. Norton & Co., New York, 1977. S. T. E. Bearden, "Solutions to Tesla's Secrets and tal"Ie Soviet: Tesla Weapons," Tesla Book Co., 151,30 Magnolia, Millbrae, CA 94030, 1981. t.. T. E. Bearden, videotape, "Tesla's Secret and the Soviet Iresla Weapons," presented in absentia a t the F i r s 4-. International Unorthodox Energy Symposium, Toronto, Canada, 1981. Available from Tesla Book Co., Millbrae, CA. -2.5- Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 APPEN1-.)IX I: TYPICAL INCIDENTS ANILD PELATED 1Nh'JRMATION I tem e, pa ge I resla Weapon at Saryshagan (Scalar Potential Interferometer) .............................. 27 2. "Nuclear" Flashes off the Coast of Africa 27 3. Yugoslavian Earthquake .......................... 28 4. Quake in Tangshan, China ...................... 28 5. Giant ABM Shield Seen frorr Afghanist--an ....... 29 6. Tesla Shield ...... 29 7. Continuous Tesla reba 1 .............. ....... 30 8@ Mysterious Light over North Paciffic ........... 30 9. Continuous Tesla EMP Globe ..... - ****'' 31 10. lesla ABM Defenses ............................. 31 11. Hemisphere and Globes ............ ..... I ...... 32 12. East Coast Aerial Blasts (1-3 i 9 hBu r s t Registrations?) .............................. 33 13. Booms in Delaware ............................... 33 14. 2.969 Virgin Islands Incident .................. o 34 15. Expanding Dome-Like Phenomenon ..... -..- .... 35 16. Two Aics in the Sky ............................ 35 17. . "Laser" Blinding of U.S. Satellites ........... 36 18. Extreme Intensity Sky Briglitening ............. 36 19. Radar Invisibility ...................... o ..... 37 20. CI-E@ating an Inertial Field k(Antigravity) ..... 37 21. Eightning Wall ................................ 38 2.2. Anomalous Burns and Underwater Sounds ......... 38 23. "Cloud Arc" .................................... 39 24. Needed: Immediate Crash Prooram ............... 39 -26- Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 'Item 1 TESLA WEAPOK AT SARTSHAGAN ISCALAR POTENTIAL, INTERFEROVIETER1 __1 FOURIER TRANSF ORPA SECTIONS (12 YWAVELI-NGTHS EACH) SCALAfl ANT SCALAR ANT REFERENCE CON I ROL 9, PH kSI1jG POWE R Foil PULSE MODES COMPUTER ACTLITY 1:110 1 El 11-11111 [A I I--] 11:111-111--] 1 n- 111 EXPLOSIVE GENERATORS BANK POWER FOR CONTINUOUS [I E] [-] MODES LJ L] [A 1,--' [A MORAY POWER ONITS EXTRA GENEAATon POW F RS COMPU TE R I-] FACILITY Item 2. S "NUCLEAH" FLASHES OFF THE CDAI T OF A Ffi I C A Bcz)orris off U.S. east coast. Flashes; over Atlantic, off southWE!St coast of Africa, T detected by Vela satellites. Many Other test incidents. T1 "AN T3 TO T, TESL jQ-WITZ Aj@ @ -( -RDP96-00788 ROO 1900680014-4 A I i_ M T[o --27.- T T I.. E. c ABN Shi-I@J n i S t::@ r - Approved For Release 2003/09/6§ CIA-RDP96-00788kOOl9OO680014-4 Deep -4. t i, .Ln S o v i e t UIn i o ri 'J@ loward Saryshagan M i ss i le Test Range Nick Downie describes the E:trance lurid glow -that: f lared silently aver the HindU KU,--;h. The Sundav Times, London, 17 Auqust 1930 Mult-iple incidents in September 1979. N o t e 91--oxilfli ty @11 timet f i r s t. " f It a S h detec---ed by Velc-l satel .11 Item 6. "rESLA SHIELD f 1-7 A: Court,asy Hal Crawford. Approved For Release 2003/09/09 L, 9@4,-RDP96-00788 ROO 1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Item 3. YUGOSLAVIAN EARTHQUAKt [TEST OF A TBOLA HOWITZE1 ?I 0 YUGOSLAVIAN EARTHQUAKE 15 APRIL 1979 0 7.2 ON RICHTER S('.lj5tl-E 0 EPICENTER 33 kin DEEP a MORE THAN 10CI AFTERSHOCKS a AT KAMENARI: ADRIATIC SEA MUSHROOMED UP LIKE ATOMIC BOMB EXPLOSION a ADDITIONAL DETAILS NEEDED Item 4. QUAKE IN TANGSHAN, CHINA 28 JLJI.-'Y''1976 0 7.8 ON RICHTE-R SCALE 0 HUNDREDS 01: THOUSANDS KILLED I 0 ACCOMPANIED BY LIGHT, ELECTRICAL EFFECTS 3TO5DAYSBEFORE COMMUNICATIONS INTERFERENCE WITHIN 250 km SKY LIGHTING 01ELISE-11VED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 ApprT. pd For Releasf'#ffl%l t.'19,,%-IT96-0078~afglVLIL80014-4 eni u i LITHUANIA 10 SEP 197G BRITISH EUROPEA14 AIRWAYS FLIGHT :*831 BETWEEN MOSCOW AND LONDON 'Courtesy Hal Crawford. CIA REPORT RFLEASED UNDER FOIA Item 8. MYSTERIOUS LIGHT OVER NORTH PACIFIC ASAIII EVENING NFWS ,TOKYO JUNE 22, 1982 18-27km a JUNE 10, 1982 * NORTH PACIFIC 0 700 kni EASH OF KUSHIRO a JAL Fi-iGH r 403 4 JAL FLIGHT 421 continuous Tesl.a EMP 91obe and giant ABM sh i eld. SEEN FROM 42D N LAT 1630 E LONG Approved For Release 2003/09/09 CiW-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 r tITI 9 A 'AW40680014-4 Approv d For JAW2- MAWUZ 41907 e TEHERAN, IRAN 17 JUNE 1966 SEEN FROM HEAR MEIIRKBAD AIRPORT OBSERVED 4-5 MINUTES SEER, BY 2 AIR!"O'BAFT CIA REPORT RELEASED UNDER fOIA item 10. TESLA ABM DEFENSES CONTINUOUS DETECTION A140 TESLA EMP GLOBE TRACKING (DUBS ELECTflONICSI TESLA FIREBALL ICONTINUDW- IVAPORIZES VEHICLE) TESLAFIBERAII IFULSE] TESLA EARTH'S SURFACE d For Release 2003/09/09 CIA-RDP96-00788RO01 TESLA SHIELD 00680014-4 HOWIT"T!". Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 T tem 11-. HEMISPHERE AND GLOBES 1977 08S15 GMT 24 MAR, 1977 (AOT TO SCALE) 231)05' N, 17025'W m.v. KINPURNIE CASTLE' MODERATELY LUMINOUS PiE-111SHERE FORMED FOR 10 SECONDS, SEARCHLIGHT SHINED DOWN BRIGHT LUMINOUS PAIC14 (11) D I A) DISAPPEARED AHER, JO.MINUTES tWIMLABSER&R, 48:21-22, 1978 214 MAR 19-17-17 NOF31-14 ATLANTIC 0855 .. 0902 * "SEARCH LIGHT" APPEARED 200 ABOVE HORIZON * SHINED DOWN FOR 11) SECONDS * EXTINGUISHED; REPLACED BYLUMINOUS PATCH 10 IN DIA. 0 SEMICIRCLE OF MODERATE LUMINOSITY FORMED ABOUT PATCH (3 MIN) 0 ANOTHER LUMINESCENT PATCH OBSERVED ABOVE SEMICIFICLIE' 0 AFTER TOTAL OF 7MIN, DISAPPEARED Approved For Release 2003/09/09-:-'6A-RDP96-00788 ROO 1900680014-4 SECOND LUMINOUS PATCH Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 I tem 12. EAST COAST AERIAL BLASTS IHIGH BURST REGISTRATION?] DFC77 -JAN 78 2 DEC Az - 10:00 AM OFF SOUTH CAF7101-INA - 3,46 PM OFF NE COAST (NJ AND CONN) 15 DEC - 0:30 -- 10:30 AM FIVE BLASTS OFF SOUTH CAROLINA a 20 DEC - EVENING - 3 LOU D_ EXPLOSIONS, BALL OF F !RE (CONN) 0 21 DEC - 2:00 AM LOUD EXPLOSION AND iNTENSE GLOBULAR LIGHT IN SKY (NJ) (SMOKE DETECTOR WENT OFF SECONDS BEFORE@@ - 7:00 I'M EXPLOSIONS OVER SEACOAST(NJ) 0 22 DEC - 1 NEWJERSEY .- 8:15 CHARLESTON, SC & 13 JAN - 2:00 PM LOUD BOOMS, CHARLESTON, SG I tem 13. BOOMS IN DEI.AWARE 16 NOV 111982 FIVE MYSTERIOUS MORNING BOOMS 8:0618:0718:11,8:112 8:45 41 WITHIN 139-MINUTEPERIOD 0 ROCKED SUSSEX COUNTY RECORDED ON GEORGE-1-OWN SEISMOGRAPHS NO SUPERSONIC FLIGHTS Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : UA 9DP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 I Lem 14. 1969 VIRGIN ISLANDS INCIDENT 8 : 1 S PN THURSDAY U AUG 19(19 VIRGIN ISL)kNDS SEEN BY MANY HESIM.NTS POssible Tesla shield. CURVED EDGE FAINTLY LUMMEI@CENT NORTH 1-UM1141DIJS ABC 22 AUG 1969 WEST INDIES ~ LUMINOUS AREASIGHTED ~ BEARING 310 DEGREES ~ GREW IN SIZE, FIOSE IN ALTITUDE ~ TURNED INTO AMAH OR CRESCENT MARINE OBSERVER 40:107,11970 -34- Approved For Release 2003109/09: CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Item 15. EXPANDING DORIE-LIKE PHENOMENON MAR 20, 1969 MARINE OIISERVER 40:17, 19@0 CARRIBEAN A14D WESTERN NnPTH ATI APJTtr MOON lesla shield. SEMICIRCLE MILKY WHITE LIGHT QUITE, BRIGHT AT FIRST DIMMED AS ENLARGED LASTED 10 MINUTES I t m. 16. TWO AIR S IN THE OSKY MARINE OBSERVER 32:64.1962 18011 GMT JUNE 1, IWO VERY BRIGHT ARC Double concentric INDIAN OCE AN Tesla Shields. 10 MIN LAiER, 2nd (DIMMERI ARC APPEARED --- -- ----- 3 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved E Rrh-5effffijffft@@?P9 -4 It em 1 7. ffnyg,?,;q068OO14 AT LEAST FOUR INCIDENTS IN LPTER 1975 Item 18. EXTREME INTENSITY SKY BRIGHTENING WESTERN ALASKA 15 MAY 19-172 * WEATHER: OVERCAS,r * ENTIRE SKY SUDDENLY BRIGHTENED TO FULL DAYLIGHT INTENSITY * I-IKE A SUDDEN FLASIABULC,, * LASTED ABOUT 2 - 7-SE(-6'DNDS * TWO CLOSE LY-SPACEID FL,,*klc,:HES NOTED * CHANGEDCOLOR - BLUE TO GREENTO WHITE - FADING TO ORANGE OR REDDISH sKdy A ve -F-ar%rILIN Appro ease 61199186'@11C134ibP96-00788 ROO 1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Item 1.9. HADAH INVISIBILITY energy capturedij (no refloctiorl) ACQ RADAR 17 TRA CK RADAR TV, -A EMER 13 YBOTTLE Unterferance Pattern between fourler expansion patterns) Ittem 20. CREATING AN INERTIAL FIELD (AN-nGRAVITY) owns" INER TIA L FORCEF TEST A OBJECT- XLTR #3 XL TR #I Scalar resonance phenC,Plen0n: uni- directional forces DEM ONS TRA TION induced on all PLA -rFORM 60eleoris XL TR 2 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 _qA-RDP96-00788 ROO 1900680014-4 1 -, Approved For, Rblopse 214*49T-lk-RW6W7AP@ 1900680014-4 % 1959-1 glia REPORT FROM PATROL PLANE CONiMANDER PRIVATE FILES OF U.S. NAVY P5 AIRCRAFT T. E. 9FARDEN ATLANTIC OCEAN 200 M. EASST (IF NOUKK ate ~ UNDERWATER, Off- CORNWALL ~ SEALS AND FISH DISC:O\,,IERED - DYING - MYSTERIOUS BUFIN MARKS DIVERS AND REPORTERS INVESTIGATED - HEARD SOUNDS (-INI.')il. R WATER - V011CES IN FRENCH, ENGILISH, RUSSIAN - CLASSICAL MUSI":, (I.:,F'.A,HMS, RACHMANIOFF) UNNERVING BUZZING THICK BLACK SLUDGE: YELLOWISH MAT'l ENGLISH CHEMICAL WARFARE STATION ON COAST AT THIS POINT AppMWgjgqT,RAMqs-.p,2W(P9/09: CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4 7 Item 23. GLOUD ARG" STRAIT OF GIBRALTAR JULY 12, 198C "A MOST PECULIAR CLOUD ARCH" Tesla dome effect. 1825 GM7 sEnVER 51: L--- .-- MaY have been an ice 107 - 108, 1981 test in @ndotherrr,@ic mode. -- ARC OF "CLOUDS" IN OTHERWISE CLOUDLESS SKY L SHARP PREEZURE AND BUILDINGS 1 EMP GRADIENTS 2mi 2 mi Item 24. F 0 NEEDED: IMMEDIAT1. CRASH Pfli GRAM Approved For Release 2003/09/09 CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1900680014-4