

If such a substance existed, you could simply put it under one side of a heavy flywheel and get perpetual motion.Īlthough Wells doesn't point it out explicitly, he seems to have been aware of the problem. Wells' famous book, The First Men in the Moon. An example of such a material, cavorite, is a major deus ex machina of H. It may seem reasonable to postulate a material that shields against gravity or otherwise interferes with the force. Christopher Thomas 22:20, (UTC) Cavorite "seems reasonable?" No. If anyone has specific names, dates, and details about the claims in the "Anti-gravity in the context of non-mainstream physics" section, please add them, as the original version of the article was a bit vague about them. It's now much more readable, and should be NPOV enough to satisfy everybody. I've attempted to restore the links removed by Pjacobi while re-framing the article into a form more likely to be acceptable. 53 Replaced GR with general relativity throughout.


41 Justification for References – Project Existence Literature.34 Material on fiction by Wells and Niven removed.32.1 Thanks User:Duae_Quartunciae, see.32 The accelerating expansion of the universe.24 Gary Stephenson: Considerable Works on Anti Gravity.17 note for editors:Do not delete under pretenses of "Pseudoscience".14.1 Anti-gravity in the context of non-mainstream physics.12 Violation of First Law of Thermodynamics?.8 Large non-encyclopedic addition reverted.6 A negative mass object would not be repelled by a positive mass object.
