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http://pesn.com/2009/07/23/9501555_Keshe_space_exploration_energy/
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Keshe launching energy generation and space exploration plasma technology
An interview with the inventor of what could be the next generation of commercial space travel and clean energy generation, said to be ready for licensing. We're talking super fast and cheap travel, and super cheap energy. 3 kW units are available for viewing or testing by qualified licensing parties.
| CORRECTION: No demos until
March 2010 |
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Artist concept of the Keshe craft and
habitation pod, both containing the Keshe apparatus as it presently
appears. |
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by Sterling
D. Allan
Pure Energy Systems News
Copyright © 2009
While the world commemorates the Apollo astronauts' landing on the moon 40 years ago, I was privileged Monday, on the moon landing
anniversary, to interview
nuclear engineer, Mehran T. Keshe of the Keshe Foundation, who on that momentous day
had sent out notice to government leaders around the world that he has a plasma technology
in Belgium with anti-gravity
(not his terminology) and energy-generating ramifications that could lead the way to commercially viable journeys into space and to the moon, along with generating affordable, renewable energy both for transportation and electricity.
He plans to publicly demonstrate the technology to thousands of people in major cities around the world next year; and he plans to start booking flights for space travel
e.g. up 60 km above the earth by 2014, and for flights to the moon by 2016, transporting thousands of people to
those destinations for a small fraction of the cost of what fuel-based shuttle
services are projecting. He'll even be accepting down payments with guarantees
for both flight opportunities. You'll be able to put 20% of $50,000 Euros down to reserve
your seat on a trip to the moon. "It may even end up costing less
than that." Wait a while longer (past 2016) and you could even get to
Mars in a matter of a few days, rather than months. http://KesheSpace.com
is being set up for booking flights. If you're worried about
plunking down the 20% deposit, Keshe says that the deposits are guaranteed with
bank backing to be refunded upon request or in case the flights do not
materialize.
In the interview, Keshe briefly explained the science behind the
technology. "It's not anti-gravity," he corrected me.
Rather, what happens is that his plasma reactor creates a local imitation of the
Earth's magnetic-gravitational properties, complete with magnetosphere, providing
protection from the cosmic rays that can otherwise be deadly outside of the
Earth's atmosphere. Because the phenomenon is local to the reactor, a
gravitational force of 1-G is maintained for all craft occupants, including
during acceleration and deceleration.
Existing craft, such as a 747, minus the wings (they get in the way), could
serve as the transport shell, once fitted with the plasma reactor; though
spherical craft would be better. Weight is no issue. Number of
passengers is no issue. And no specialized training would be required for
the pilots of such craft.
And the transport capabilities are not just for space. Imagine going from
New York to Paris in a matter of minutes, rather than half a day. Imagine
having one of these to beat the traffic to work. Imagine living in some
remote location in the Alps, powered by the same technology, and commuting to
Australia -- or to the moon, to help build a colony there. The trucking
industry would no longer involve highways, but would be point-to-point specific,
rapid, and involve no fuel costs.
Speaking of fuel, one of my primary interests in this technology is its claims
for cheap, clean energy generation. Keshe claims that his reactors
can produce on the level of kilowatts of electricity, with no fuel, drawing
energy from the environment where it is replenished from an inexhaustible source
using principles of plasma. And he says that these reactors (in the range
of 3 kW output, continuous) are available
presently for interested parties (e.g. for potential licensing) to inspect or to
test for themselves.
He told me that the technology is far enough advanced, and simple enough that a
licensing party could be in production in a matter of several weeks, not
including the 2-3 month training period for learning the technology. Given
the regulatory hoops alone, I find that a bit hard to believe, but I'm intrigued
by the principle of simplicity. He said that the quantity of units
presently deployed numbers in the hundreds. Those entering into
negotiations for licenses do so under NDA, and will be required to provide proof of financial capability of payment for setting up factories and paying for
licensing.
While the demonstration units will be expensive (e.g.
$50k Euros to purchase for testing), once mass produced, Keshe thinks the price for these kilowatt
generators could be in the few hundreds of dollars -- like ten times cheaper
than the cheapest energy sources available today of any variety; and they would
last for decades. For example, a 3-5 kilowatt unit might cost $200 Euros
and last 20-30 years.
Eventually, each community or even each home could be fitted with one, and each
vehicle. The technology wouldn't really scale down smaller than that, so
you'll still need cords, batteries or some kind of inductive coupling for your
portable devices and appliances.
I have asked Keshe if I can contact some of the people who have tested his
technology, and he is in process of receiving permissions to do so, as the
contract as it is written grants confidentiality.
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Keshe has filed at least two international patents.
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I asked Keshe about the gravity modification capabilities of his technology in
terms of what he's actually accomplished, beyond just theoretical
speculation. He said that he has elevated a 100+ kg mass -- himself.
Apparently, in his book, he describes how he damaged a system by jumping on it last year while it was flying.
He sent me a link to a confidential video showing a 9 kg mass changing to 8 kg,
and a 7 kg mass changing to 6 kg. He claims to have been able to figure
out not only the elevation control, but also the direction of motion control.
Keshe told me that his device is a "simple nuclear reactor," but that
it doesn't involve controlled nuclear isotopes, but that it involves materials
that could be found in a home, having minute levels of radioactivity. Part
of the process apparently involves extracting hydrogen from the atmosphere, so I
presume that space travel would require storage tanks of some kind. Keshe
said that even the "human body is a miniature nuclear reactor",
involving nitrogen.
These principles of energy generation and gravity modification are articulated
in the book Keshe recently published: The Universal Order of Creation of Matters,
He has also posted five youtube movies explaining the key concepts described in
the book.
You will also notice on the KesheFoundation
YouTube channel that there are a number Coke bottle demonstration videos.
Keshe said that hundreds of people have replicated the plasma creation and
graphene-coating capabilities demonstrated in this simple proof of concept
experiment. This demonstration apparently mimics on a micro level what
happens on the macro level in a solar system or in a galaxy -- the microcosm mimicking
the macrocosm.
Keshe said that there are thousands of scientists from around the world who
have been working on various elements of this technology for years, helping to
bring the technology to the point that it is at now. He specifically
mentioned U.C.L.A., and said that some governments have also been involved in
replicating and refining the design. He told me in an email that the
technology was reviewed by team of professors in Belgium in 2005 for seven months,
and by another Belgian university considering the nano technology, which was
also reviewed by nano institutes. The technology has also been reviewed by
a government nuclear research center in Europ, by top universities in Iran,
China, Korea, "and I think DARPA has [a] full report where we have been and
[a] copy of all reports."
As exciting as the above claims are about gravity modification and energy
generation, Keshe is even more enthusiastic about the health ramifications of
the technology. He said that the carbon coating on the nervous system can
be improved, helping conditions such as M.S. or chronic fatigue, just by
drinking treated water.
I didn't quite catch why, but apparently some Belgian news outlet has a vendetta
against Keshe because he would not sell out his technology some years ago, nor
subject himself to the system of bribes involved in the European energy
industry; and
they vowed a media blackout of his technology, which apparently they have been successful
thus far in enforcing. As of today, our coverage at Examiner.com
is the only thing that pulls up in a Google
news search for recent news stories on Keshe.
On the less malevolent level, Keshe said that NASA asked him to remove some
claims from his site about rapid transport between destinations on earth, due to
the disruptive ramifications of that statement. There are a lot of
existing industries that would be rendered obsolete but such technology -- if it
is real, if they don't adopt it -- including NASA. Keshe told me he is
some 30-60 years ahead of NASA (not including the affiliated black ops who have
been using UFO-like craft around for decades).
At the end of our interview, I asked Keshe about the irony of his being
Iranian, with Iran being a point of potential war erupting soon. In
defense of his native country, he said that Iran is "a peaceful
nation," and the Iranian government has been very supportive of his
technology. The irony is found in that Keshe, may have the very technology
that would not only render war obsolete by introducing abundance where there has
been scarcity, but also by removing borders because of how easy it will be to
travel between any two points.
It's likely that many of these assertions about the Keshe technology capability
and price are on the way optimistic end of the spectrum, per the inventor pride
that is common. However, there seems to be enough compelling aspects to
this account that make it worth investigating further.
# # #
Links Mentioned
Keshe Interview Audio
Feedback
- Feel free to view or add your own comments to the publication of this
article at Examiner.com
Replicating the Coke bottle experiment
On July 24, 2009, Arthur Manelas wrote:
Here's how I replicate the Keshe Plasma Reactor. Parts that I used:
1. Four pieces of #14 copper wire 8" long.
2. One plastic clear bottle with a screw cap.
3. 1/2 cup of Seven-Up.
4. 1 tsp. of koh-2 (potassium hydrate)
5. 1 tube of clear silicone.
6. 1 volt meter.
7. 3 resistors, 1 25k , 1 50k and1 100k.
Making the plasma reactor:
Remove the bottle cap from the bottle; drill 4 holes 3/32nd of an inch 90 degrees apart.. Insert the 4 electrodes in each hole. Silicone the holes so that it will make an air tight connection. Make sure the electrodes do not touch one another. Insulate if needed. Take the 1/2 cup of seven-up and mix it with koh-2 and allow 10 minutes for the catalyst to perform. Insert the electrode assembly in the bottle and screw cap tight. Turn bottle on its side and make sure the electrodes do not immerse in the solution. Take the volt meter, set it to measure millivolts. Find out the highest output by touching the different electrodes. It should read around 100 - 175 millivolts. Apply 100 k resistor to the load. Meter should read 120
millivolts; with a 50 k it should be 80 millivolts, and with a 25 k it will read 40 millivolts.
Conclusion:
The creation of electrical energy in this reactor is achieved by simple process of hydrogen ionization.
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Other PESN Coverage
See also
PESWiki.com pages:
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Page composed by Sterling
D. Allan July 21, 2009
Last updated April 06, 2011
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