Tuesday, April 11, 2006

The Hutchison Effect



The Hutchison Effect -- An Explanation



by Mark A. Solis



People often ask, "What exactly is the Hutchison Effect?"

This brief essay is an attempt to answer that question to the satisfaction of the majority.

First of all, the Hutchison Effect is a collection of phenomena which were discovered accidentally by John Kenneth Hutchison

during attempts to study the longitudinal waves of Tesla back in 1979. In other words, the Hutchison Effect is not simply a

singular effect. It is many.

The Hutchison Effect occurs as the result of radio wave interferences in a zone of spatial volume encompassed by high

voltage sources, usually a Van de Graff generator, and two or more Tesla coils.

The effects produced include levitation of heavy objects, fusion of dissimilar materials such as metal and wood (exactly

as portrayed in the movie, "The Philadelphia Experiment"), the anomalous heating of metals without burning adjacent material,

spontaneous fracturing of metals (which separate by sliding in a sideways fashion), and both temporary and permanent changes

in the crystalline structure and physical properties of metals.

The levitation of heavy objects by the Hutchison Effect is not---repeat not---the result of simple electrostatic or

electromagnetic levitation...

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