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Bernhard Haisch is a staff scientist at the Lockheed Martin Solar and



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lettreexplicativeEsther
Bernhard Haisch is a staff scientist at the Lockheed Martin Solar and
Astrophysics Laboratory in California and a regular visiting fellow at the
Max-Planck-Institut fuer extraterrestrische Physik in Garching, Germany.
Alfonso Rueda is a professor of electrical engineering at California
State University in Long Beach.
H. E. Puthoff is director of the Institute for Advanced Studies at Austin,
Texas.




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Pity the astronomers and physicists. They toss and turn at night wondering
why the universe is lumpy, and rack their brains trying to unify the four
fundamental forces of nature. Now anew theory, which claims to solve both
problems at once, will probably cost them more sleep.
The most fundamental equation in physics is the relation between force, mass, and acceleration which Isaac Newton postulated over three centuries ago F=ma. It defines the concept of inertia, the resistance that an object puts up to a change in motion. To make something move faster or slower, you need to apply a force, and the force you need to apply is greater for larger masses. This is such a simple, intuitive fact that it seems more foolish than profound to ask, Why is it true Why do objects have inertia As fundamental as this question is, a convincing answer has eluded the likes of Albert Einstein and Richard Feynman. Ideas about inertia have fallen into two schools. Newton himself argued it is an intrinsic property of matter, capable of no further explanation. To tell whether an object possesses inertia, you do not have to measure its motion with respect to external reference points you need only look for the telltale distortions that occur whenever a body that has inertia accelerates. Rotation, for example, is one form of acceleration. As Earth rotates, its equator bulges out -- a dead giveaway that our planet possesses inertia. Newtons idea of absolute acceleration, one that did not need external objects to define it, bothered many scientists -- among them the 19th-century Austrian physicist and philosopher Ernst Mach, whose ideas helped to inspire Einsteins theories of relativity. Mach argued that all motion is relative. If Earth were all alone in a hypothetical universe devoid of other matter, how would it know whether it was rotating And if Earth did not know whether it was rotating,



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