ORMUS and Energy
Roughly half of all electrical energy generated is wasted through transmission line
losses. Though there are some technical barriers to this idea they are not insurmountable. First, I am only aware
of two different solid forms for the ORMUS elements. They are either a white powder or they are a clear glass. The
white powder form would require electrical "pipes" filled with white powder. The glass form might be more practical
if some way can be discovered to make ORMUS glass less brittle. We have already "wired" much of the world with
fiber optic cable which is essentially made of silica glass.
Another consideration here is the nature of superconductivity. A superconductive transmission
line would not simply be hooked up to a copper (or silver) buss wire at each end since there is no true "electron
flow" in a superconductor. Superconductors, particularly of the ORMUS type, are probably Bose-Einstein Condensates
(BECs). As BECs the entire superconducting structure would "behave" as if it were a single atom.
In order to get electricity into a superconductor you must use the resonance coupling phenomenon
which works by pumping energy into the superconductor by exposing it to a magnetic field which is fluctuating at
the resonance frequency of the superconductor. You pump the energy back out of the superconductor at the other end
of the line by reversing this process. In a sense the superconductor is acting as a great long battery which is
being charged at one end and is being discharged at the other end.
You must take electricity off of a normal conductor as fast as you are putting it on at the
generator end. With a superconductor, you can fill it up with energy one day and take the energy out the next day.
This would provide a marvelous load leveling and energy storage capacity for our electrical distribution system.
Power plants could operate at peak efficiency or not at all. Energy could be stored in the system during off-peak
hours to be retrieved when the demand is highest.
In my value system this is one of the most positive uses for the ORMUS elements that I can think
of. The only downside might be if the profusion of Meissner fields near transmission lines was harmful to
individuals or the environment.
|