This is for those of you who sat through Electromagnetic Fields and actually understood what is going on. The idea is to use a wire with a whole lot of current to create an upward force using the earth?s magnetic field. I did some quick calculations in my head and using a magnetic field of .00005 Tesla a wire, or coil of wires, with 1000000-ampere turns should produce about 50 pounds of upward force. For this to be practical to get anything off the ground a superconductor would be needed, so it's not going to happen any time soon, but I would like some confirmation if the idea will work.
The idea: You have a rectangle of wire in the earth?s magnetic field as shown on this page.
http://library.thinkquest.org/16600/advanced/magneticfields.shtml
If the B field is parallel to the ground then the force on one horizontal wire will be up and the force on the other will be down. Both forces will be equal so the net force will be zero but it will create a couple. Apply a torque to the rectangular wire that opposes the couple and it should create a net force on the entire rectangle. Now if the rectangle is allowed to spin past a plane perpendicular to the B field then the net force on the rectangle will reverse, but if you reverse the current when this happens then you will always have a net force in the same direction.
This net force in the same direction is basically a way to ride on a magnetic field. This could be used to fly on the earth?s magnetic field instead of flying on air, but some kind of superconductor would be required. It could also be used with satellites or space vehicles that have an infinite source of electricity via solar panels. It would be used with low current and low force but over enough time, possibly circling the sun which has a much larger magnetic field then the earth, it could build up enough speed to slingshot itself out into space.
If anyone has any ideas why this would not work, how it could work better, or just comments I'd like to hear them.
The idea: You have a rectangle of wire in the earth?s magnetic field as shown on this page.
http://library.thinkquest.org/16600/advanced/magneticfields.shtml
If the B field is parallel to the ground then the force on one horizontal wire will be up and the force on the other will be down. Both forces will be equal so the net force will be zero but it will create a couple. Apply a torque to the rectangular wire that opposes the couple and it should create a net force on the entire rectangle. Now if the rectangle is allowed to spin past a plane perpendicular to the B field then the net force on the rectangle will reverse, but if you reverse the current when this happens then you will always have a net force in the same direction.
This net force in the same direction is basically a way to ride on a magnetic field. This could be used to fly on the earth?s magnetic field instead of flying on air, but some kind of superconductor would be required. It could also be used with satellites or space vehicles that have an infinite source of electricity via solar panels. It would be used with low current and low force but over enough time, possibly circling the sun which has a much larger magnetic field then the earth, it could build up enough speed to slingshot itself out into space.
If anyone has any ideas why this would not work, how it could work better, or just comments I'd like to hear them.