Hi all,
I was "Exnihiloest" in the past and I am now back with my ham radio callsign. I left for reasons that are no longer valid today, so I am very happy to be back among you, especially since some of you asked me to on ou.com, and I greet the former contributors I have known here, as well as the new ones.
This thread caught my attention because I'm experimenting on dielectrics. For me parametric systems like non-linear capacitors cannot a priori give overunity because it takes energy to change a parameter, like reducing a capacitance to increase its energy by virtue of W=Q/C. The energy required to reduce C is exactly the electrical energy that will be recovered in W, this is easily verified for a parallel plate capacitor.
But what if the capacitor is "open" and the energy for parametric change can be drawn from the environment? Then non-linear capacitors could be the gateway to the hidden source, which could be ambient heat (Maxwell's demon), LENR, ZPE or other unknown sources... I am now investigating the first case, according to Zaev's idea, and so I am looking for a dielectric whose permittivity decreases when the temperature increases. Did you find one? Because in general, what we find is the opposite. If anyone has an idea, I'm a taker.
On my side I started to test ferrites as dielectrics. It is known that they have a high permeability but less known that they also have a high permittivity, depending on frequency (and perhaps temperature?). NiZn ferrites are the first ones I test. There are other types such as MnZn with higher permittivity but with too many losses because they are not insulating enough. I think this is a little explored field, including interactions when the two magnetic and electric fields superpose in ferrites and could have cross parametric effects. Just an idea.
François
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"Open your mind, but not like a trash bin"
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