Review Article

Antigravity, an Answer to Nature’s Phenomena including the Expansion of the Universe

Figure 1

Figure extracted from reference [2]—Experimental set-up to observe movement of heat-evaporated iodine vapor in vacuum.(a) Vacuum deposition chamber. (b) A layer of iodine was gradually heat evaporated (ejected downward direction) inside the vacuum chamber. The electrical heater plate itself covers the iodine particles moving directly in upward direction. The iodine source was surrounded with a paper jacket in order to capture the deposition geometry of iodine. The paper was placed 50 mm radially away from the iodine source. Pressure in the chamber was ~1 × 10−5 mbar, average mean free path is greater than 6.6 m, and air density was approximately 12.6 ng m−3. Pressure at the top of the chamber was higher than at the bottom , .(c) Photograph of deposited iodine on the inner top part of the paper. Reprinted from “Antigravity—Is it already under our nose?” by C. K. G. Piyadasa, 2011, Canadian Journal of Pure and Applied Sciences, Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 1586, Reprinted by permission of SENRA Academic Publishers, 5919 129 B.