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2006-07-11 11:42:35 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

13 answers

Not at all. However, something interesting happens all around that goes unnoticed giving the deceptive appearance of free energy. With the vacuum (not the cleaner device) particles and antiparticles of all types spontaneously come into existence for only a brief moment. Then the annihilate each other. If you were able to capture one and repeat the process several billion times you could have a free source of potentially high energy particles.

This is actually the what happens at the event horizon of black holes giving rise to hawking radiation.

It's also referred to as zero point energy. Make it happen, buddy.

2006-07-11 19:06:36 · answer #1 · answered by Nick N 3 · 0 1

Not according to our current (and very experimentally validated) understanding of thermodynamics. Nothing is impossible in science but there is not one shred of evidence that free energy can be had. The laws of thermodynamics have held up completely under scrutiny so at this point it's hard to believe they could be inaccurate.

PS: To those that think our solar system is an example of perpetual motion. It is not. A few billion years is not perpetuity and eventually the system will collapse as its energy is being converted slowly into a different form. Perpetual means forever and nothing is forever.

2006-07-11 11:47:00 · answer #2 · answered by Hillbillies are... 5 · 0 1

We all have heard of Newton's laws about other than thermodynamics meaning motion. An object in motion will remain in that state of motion unless acted upon by an outside force. Well, there is ALWAYS some sort of outside force. There is no system or object anywhere that is not being acted upon by an outside force. So, in order to compensate for this force causing the perpetual motion to stop/slow/differ, energy must be supplied to compensate, which kills the true idea of perpetual motion.

2006-07-11 13:42:05 · answer #3 · answered by quntmphys238 6 · 0 1

Honestly , I read every answer here and almost all of it amounts to this..... "it tastes gross" , "have you tasted it ?" , "no , but I know it tastes gross" ... queststore is the only person to give a good , open minded answer. Kudos to you queststore .... Any smart person will never say something doesn't exist , unless he has looked everywhere in the universe first and determined that it is not there. Until then , he cannot make a good decision. Saying something does exist is much easier because you would have seen it , measured it and triple verified it.

Perpetual motion by Newtonian mechanics is not possible. That is because energy can only be converted or transferred by a source within the 4 dimensions that Isaac Newton included. But Zero-point energy does exist and only the bleeding edge of physics such as String Theory or Fractal Gear Theory can explain it. It does not violate the laws of conservation because it interfaces with the higher dimensions of space as predicted by String Theory. Newtonian Mechanics and most of Quantum Field Theory only deal with the 4 dimensions in which we live. When you apply the conservation of energy principle to all 11 dimensions , you will learn that there are energy sources outside of what we can see and measure in the 4 dimensional space we live. So Zero-point energy can exist because it draws energy from higher dimensions by a space-time geometry interface.

There are two free energy systems that are real but without explanatory theories; Rodin Coil , SEG generator

There is one free energy system that is real with explanatory theory and it is new for 2015. The theory is called Fractal Gear Theory and the system is called Fractal Wheel.

All of them use ancient number systems as their underlying principles. The ancient number systems existed since 10,000 years ago. This indicates that there was a civilization before us that knew about , and used this technology.

This link describes more about it and how the ancient Egyptians and others used it and understood it..... https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/fractalgears/fractal-gears-a-revolutionary-idea .... It is hard to believe as Einstein's Theory of Relativity was hard to believe in the beginning , but if you scroll down the info , you will find a mechanism there doing something that is unexplainable by modern science and it is the first ever proof of string theory. It is the Fractal Gears , a fundamental geometry used to interface with Energy Fields beyond our 4 dimensions. And that is where the free energy comes from.

2015-11-04 02:32:23 · answer #4 · answered by shareef 1 · 0 0

Perpetual motion happens all the time. (Planets orbiting the sun, eg)

It has no relationship to "free energy". The only thing approaching free energy is the conversion of matter into energy via E = mc2, but then the matter is gone. All other energy is just converting one form of it to another.

2006-07-11 11:55:35 · answer #5 · answered by Steve 7 · 0 1

Depends on the type of energy you are wanting to generate or create.
For example when you carry out actions that were derived from an energy source of thought, or thinking, you have created an outcome of energy that has stimulated other earth patterns physically. And so on.
The question must be rephrased, there is an anormous amount of unseen energy that is circling our world presently. Nothing is free if it currently exists. It just needs redirected to suite our needs.
Great discoveries are on the horizon.
A hint: Colors of the light spectrum, Crystal prisms, what we thought wasn't there is actually there.
Good day

2006-07-12 04:06:51 · answer #6 · answered by velocityfirst 2 · 1 0

no. perpetual motion violates law of Energy Conservation

There exist renewable sources of energy (sun, wind, hydro power), but the hardware to capture this energy is not free - it must be manufactured, installed and maintained.

2006-07-11 11:44:26 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No. There is a vast collection of experimental evidence which supports the idea that it is not possible. The laws of thermodynamics include an explicit denial, and these laws have been used successfully for decades to design machinery -- thus, we're pretty sure they're right.

2006-07-11 11:48:37 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

No due to the laws of thermodynamics and entropy. However, 21 centuries of failed alchemy isn't really proof of some thing not being possible, only that it's not been discovered yet. We went quite a while without transistors. Does this mean they don't exist?

2006-07-11 12:31:48 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Free energy is possible but the equations to prove this are still locked away in our onboard memory for a few more years.

2006-07-11 20:08:19 · answer #10 · answered by Questore 2 · 1 0

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