We have presented a brief history of the Biefeld-Brown effect: a net force is observed on anasymmetric capacitor when a high voltage bias is applied. The physical mechanism responsiblefor this effect is unknown. In section 4, we have presented estimates of the force on thecapacitor due to the effect of an ionic wind and due to charge drift between capacitor electrodes.The force due to ionic wind is at least three orders of magnitude too small. The force due tocharge drift is plausible, however, the estimates are only scaling estimates, not a microscopicmodel.
A page is a good candidate for deletion if:
- it is clearly and beyond a doubt spam or complete nonsense (nonsense like "asd asdffasewsjh asdfl" and similar sequences of characters)
- it's a redirect page whose title has nothing to do with the page it redirects to
-- As an example, we had a page titled My resume containing someone's resume. All pages pointing to My resume were updated to point to the user's resume, and all pages that pointed to it were updated to reflect the new title.
Another example: a page named How to cook using only sunlight that redirects to Arduino controller schematics doesn't make sense. Either redirect it to a page that deals with the subject of cooking using only sunlight, or delete it.
This example...
http://www.instructables.com/id/Asymmetrical-Capacitor-Thrusters-the-Biefeld-Brow/
...shows the capacitors producing force perpendicular to gravity. This example...
http://www.doctorkoontz.com/Antigravity/Test_of_Biefeld_Brown_Effect.htm
...shows the capacitors producing force parallel to gravity.
That would seem to leave an observer with the impression that the force is determined by the orientation of the capacitors...which seems to strongly imply the force has nothing to do with gravity, since that didn't change direction.
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