@ARTICLE{ virtstate,
abstract = "Experimental evidence of zero-point energy of vacuum has been established
beyond question. Soviet direct measurement of this energy has been reported.
Prigogine's Nobel Prize work confirms that in theory a highly disordered,
chaotic, virtual state, zero-point energy can be cohered to crosstalk into
observable quantum change and even macroscopic energy production. Several
simple devices can be demonstrated to observably tap zero-point energy.
Extension of the theory onto even a simplified hyperspace model indicates
direct applications in certain specialized amplifiers. Consideration of
multiple simultaneous observation (Everett's interpretation of quantum
mechanics) ties together virtual and observable states into the same time
change, allowing superposition of virtual state into observable state. By
considering virtual state patterns to be carried by the individual photon,
then superposition effects can be obtained upon a target radiated by a
radar beam if each and every photon of the radar beam contains one virtual
state pattern in common, added into its other (incoherent) virtual state
patterns. Sufficient superposition of the coherent pattern in the .target
produces real observable changes which may have significant applications.
Such applications include electron current dissolution (dudding of electro-
magnetic circuits), cancellation of electromagnetic fields, de-activation
(dudding) of nuclear warheads by transmutation of fissionable materials,
and simple production of particle beams of enormuous power density. Electron
current dissolution is also effective against the nervous systems of
biological targets. It thus appears that electromagnetic radiators such as
radars could possibly be made into universal, all-purpose weapons effective
against every major battle element. A mechanism and a theory for direct
amplification of the virtual state into observable state is given. At
least one known device, Moray's free-energy apparatus, successfully applied
virtual state engineering to produce 55 kilowatts of power from a 55-pound
device by tapping zero-point energy.",
original = "orig/virtstate.djvu",
author = "T. E. Bearden",
title = "Virtual State Engineering and its Implications",
journal = "NTIS ADA065762",
year = "1978"
}