11/22/02 6:36:38 PM Pacific Standard Time
Dearborn teens create antigravity machine
By Jodi Rempala, Senior Staff Writer
Three Dearborn teenagers are among the first high school students to
develop
an "antigravity machine."
The Dearborn High School students have been working on the project for
several
months and plan to enter it in the Detroit Science Fair in
May.
According to its creators, the lightweight, triangle-shaped craft
defies
Newtonâs third law of gravity and flies without the aid
of fans, jets or even
an engine.
Many people have doubted that the boysâ machine can fly,
saying it must be
magic, have strings attached or be done with smoke and mirrors.
But they say itâs not so. With a combination of a power
supply, a positive
line and a negative line, the power transfers, lifting the machine up into
the
air.
During an interview with the team, The Press & Guide did not get to see
the
machine fly or hover. The team said they were unsure if their power
supply
would work on the machine and did not want to risk a crash
landing.
Luke Duncan, 16, said the purpose of their project is to determine if
the
machine is really antigravity or if thereâs something else
going on.
"Our main focus is to determine whether this is antigravity or
another
phenomenon we donât really know about, like superconductors,"
Duncan said.
One theory that came up was that it was an ion wind causing the machine
to
rise into the air.
However, a recent experiment at Purdue University in Indiana proved
that
theory wrong, according to the teamâs research.
Researchers at the college put a similar craft into a vacuum tube and
the
machine still flew. If it had been created by ion winds, it would not
have
flown in the vacuum tube.
The Dearborn machine works on about 60 watts of power.
In fact, once the craft is hooked up to a power supply it has to be
tethered
down so it doesnât fly up and crash.
There have been a few crashes in the first few runs that have broken
the
delicate machine, made of balsa wood and aluminum foil.
Duncan said the trio may add sections of aluminum foil to the corners of
the
triangle-shaped craft to help control its flight path.
Jim Bergen, 16, said the machine works similarly to a helicopter when it
takes
off and the reason it sometimes flips and crashes is because the energy
shift
is not equal.
Ethan Rein, 18, has also been working on the craft.
He said the team is in the process of making more models, including a
smaller
scale one to display at the spring science fair.
The team is also going to experiment with shapes. They chose the
triangle
because it creates a pretty strong structure.
It cost between $300-$400 to create the machine. The team hopes to power
it
with a 12-volt motorcycle battery.
Each of the boys has a strong support system including family, and said
their
parents think itâs incredible what they are
learning.
Bergen said if development of these machines is successful, it
is
theoretically possible that it could be used for a B-52 bomber.
"This technology could usher in a new era, just like the computer did.
Itâs
cutting edge," he said.
To see the antigravity machine fly, visit
http://www.wdhsvideo.org.
LIFT QUOTES:
#1
"Our main focus is to determine whether this is antigravity or
another
phenomenon we donât really know about, like superconductors."
Luke Duncan
LIFT Quote #2
"This technology could usher in a new era, just like the computer did.
Itâs
cutting edge." Jim Bergen