Page 14 - 2020SEP30 Brief Booklet C
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This brief is written to inform the reader of the foundation, as well as my continued efforts to
successfully decrease and/or eliminate entropy within a thermodynamic system, by
overcoming losses in the system through the use of a highly engineered, paired (matched),
permanent magnetic field, and a micro energy control system, which induces angular
momentum, and then continues to accelerate a flywheel energy storage device. The flywheel
and attenuator in no way physically connected. The flywheel is driven solely by a magnetic
field.
Two significant technological events have occurred since my research began when I was in my
20s. I am now 62 years of age. First, the discovery that rare earth combinations could be
arranged to produce what is commonly called today a “rare earth magnet” (herein “REM”).
While misnamed, because in fact they are common worldwide, rare earth or more commonly
known as rare earth elements (herein “REE”), are a group of elements, also known as
Lanthanoids, and have been increasing in value over the last two decades, due to their
increased use in a variety of technologies, especially electronics. The second, is the continuous,
and rapid improvement of the microcomputer, and its declining energy consumption, which
since the early 1990s, is being adapted for use in a variety of machine control languages. In this
brief I have to these technological advances as processing speed, Control System, or (herein
“MCPS” its), for microcomputer processing speed.
REM’s are shown to have two specific sources of original inspiration. First originating in the
1960’s at our country’s Atomic National Laboratory located in Oak Ridge Tennessee, and then
later through the work of James Kennedy as adapted through the company “NEO” which was
originally founded and operated by General Motors Corporation, but then unwisely sold to a
Chinese business. This development is well documented in the book “Sellout”, written by
Victoria Bruce and published in 2017. This is an important book that centers around the
development of the rare earth magnet. The second source of original inspiration comes from
Japanese engineer, Masato Sagawa, and is well documented in the book “The Elements of
Power”, written by David Abraham and published in 2015.
I included these two very important books, to establish a few crucial points. Rare earth magnets
were developed in the 1960s, and then dramatically improved in the 1970s, and constantly and
consistently improved since then to bring the technology to where it is today. An analogy that I
like to use is this; picture two magnets that measure exactly 1 in.³. 1” x 1” x 1”. One is a ferrite
magnet, (a simple iron magnet), that has existed for hundreds of years, and let’s equate its
strength (attraction and repulsion) equal to 1 gallon of gasoline. Simple. Now that same
magnet, (magnet number 2), in neodymium, blended with small amounts of cobalt, and still
pg. 14 A Demonstration of Induced Angular Momentum in a Flywheel Energy Storage and Harvesting Device Through the Elimination and Control of Entropy in a Thermodynamic System
in the Presence of a Paired Permanent Magnetic Field
Copyright 2020 Dennis M. Danzik All Rights Reserved
By Dennis M. Danzik