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Steron industries of Dublin Ireland have created energy out of nothing. Here's there info:http://www.steorn.net/en/technology.aspx?p=5. If true this technology could end the worlds need for oil. Will this technology be developed or bought up by the oil industry to be hidden away?

2006-08-18 19:50:34 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

7 answers

No, I do not think this technology will be hidden by the oil companies or anyone else.

However, there is no description of how the technology works, what principles it uses and how it successfully violates what are currently understood to be immutable laws of the universe.

This is unfortunate, because it should be straighforward to provide all of these things. After all, Einstein did not say "hey guys, I have this new idea that overturns all of the ideas of classical physics, but I'm not telling you what it is".

So I think you should reserve some healthy skepticism at the moment. It could just as well be a reality TV show.

2006-08-18 20:38:21 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I have every confidence that this technology will be developed for its intended purpose. The intended purpose is a stock scam rather than an energy technology. The verification phase will inevitably encounter a series of delays and mishaps which ensure that no objective test is ever done by any reputable scientist. Meanwhile the promoters will attempt to fleece the unwary. If the promoters have a viable technology with patents filed, then they can publish in a reviewed scientific journal. Although I am sceptical, l can be persuaded by experimental evidence that is reproducible in my own lab.

2006-08-19 03:47:30 · answer #2 · answered by d/dx+d/dy+d/dz 6 · 1 0

They have invented a magnetic motion generator. If it doesn't move it will not create electricity. The motion is not part of the device, but without motion the device doesn't produce power. A sail is also free energy but without wind, it just sits there.

The low current produced is not enough to drive a vehicle. It will power a radio or wrist watch if you are walking around.

Even if it was powerful enough to drive an engine, the world still uses oil for most chemical processes.

McCarthy said: ""What we have developed is a way to construct magnetic fields so that when you travel round the magnetic fields, starting and stopping at the same position, you have gained energy" I think the energy gained is less that all the energy used to 'travel around' what ever is traveling.
;-D I hope they can make one that uses the Earth's spin to create power. That would be good. But the Earth's magnetic field is weak. It can barely move a compass needle.

2006-08-19 03:11:54 · answer #3 · answered by China Jon 6 · 2 1

If such a utopic option exists, it will probably be adopted by all except the USA because Bush and Cheney have too many interests in the Oil Industry..

2006-08-19 12:47:27 · answer #4 · answered by Smarty Vero 3 · 0 0

It's bullshit. They don't say a single thing about how their 'technology' works, so the simplest explaination is that it doesn't work at all. Instead of inviting chosen scientists, why don't they just submit it to a peer-reviewed journal like everybody else and let the entire scientific community judge?

2006-08-19 02:56:37 · answer #5 · answered by Richard H 2 · 0 0

It's nothing more than a publicity stunt on yahoo answers & their own website

2006-08-19 03:02:59 · answer #6 · answered by the rock 1 · 1 0

isnt there some law of conservation of matter and energy that would make this all impossible?

if yes, then no.

2006-08-19 02:55:09 · answer #7 · answered by James 2 · 0 0

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