I just took a look at the TPU, starting with the synthesis on Rexresearch.
- there is a point on the explosion (implosion?) of a 1960s CRT, the presumed cause of which would be an effect similar to that of a TPU, which occurred by misfortune and killed a child. But there was no TV explosion since the glass of more modern CRT is made much thicker, while the deflection circuits of cathode ray tubes are still manufactured on the same models.
- the magnetic field of a nuclear explosion is presented as if it could share a mysterious common principle with the TPU, a principle that would be unknown. That's not true, the principle is known:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_electromagnetic_pulseAs with the mention of the CRT explosion, and also of old Edison DC generators that would have killed workers, this confirms the need to regulate the system that generates this immeasurable power, without which the risks would be enormous, we risk dying in agony.
- it is said: "It is common scientific knowledge that if you have a piece of wire and first run electricity through it you will have a small kick when first energized. The kick is universally attributed to the earth's magnetic field."
A piece of wire that is not yet connected to a voltage source does not have the same potential. In addition, like any conductor, it is a capacity. Once connected, a current flows to charge this capacitive conductor until its potential is equal to that of the source. This kick has never been "universally" attributed to the Earth's field.
Since the different frequencies are supposed to provide this kick, and this kick has nothing to do with an unexplainable anomaly, either it cannot be a specific effect of the TPU, or Steven Mark didn't at all understand what he faced.
I obviously cannot try to make a technical analysis, since nothing is presented methodically, there is no science on youtube, only popularization. So I analyzed (I admit it quickly) with a method called "zététique" in French, not common in English nevertheless I found that:
zeteticism. ). It can be applied not only to the scientific questions as indicated at the link, but also to the non-scientific ones (people credibility, psychology and so on).
I don't see any Steven Mark technical description documents, only vague explanations and videos. I may conclude that Steven Mark is not trying to inform us but, in view of the above, to impress and condition us to think in a certain way, whether he really found something or nothing. Dr. Schinzinger, who certified the experiments, is surely respectable and credible, but he could very well have been manipulated. Scientists are not the best at detecting fraud, they have little experience in this field. According to the zeteticism, the best for this task are the "magicians", it is their job.
However, not everything is negative. The idea of rotating fields thanks to superpositions linked to different frequencies is surely a path to explore, because fields can be "moved" at the phase velocity, which has no limit.
It reminded me of that experiment of H Ardavan:
"
Experimental demonstration of a new radiation mechanism: emission by an oscillating, accelerated, superluminal polarization current"
Capacities instead of coils are sequentially powered, generating a polarization current in a dielectric, which can have a much faster velocity than an ordinary current. This generates a wave that at a given location, can come from different emission moments that will therefore accumulate (a "kick"?). This idea gave rise to the
US2017323697A1 patent.