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Allais Effect and the Iasoberg Model – A presentation on the eclipse experiment

Annular Solar eclipse

Credit & Copyright: Stefan Seip

A presentation given on what the scientists were researching on during the eclipse by Ed Oberg and Prof. Hector Munera .

Edward Oberg, mechanical engineer / project manager (retired), Sydney, Australia
He is here to observe the progress of the pendulum experiments during the solar eclipse and to correlate the results with the Iasoberg Model (www.iasoberg.com), a proposed pattern which he has developed for the pattern of the Allais effect across the Earth’s surface, that makes predictions for severe weather events and earthquakes. He is also coordinating data collection during the eclipse from a number of gravimeter stations around the Indian Ocean, for integration into his model.

Hector Munera, professor of physics (Newtonian mechanics), National University, Bogota, Colombia (retired)
Currently, Prof. Munera is devoted full-time to his main passion: research into the foundations of classical physics. He is in Maldives to witness the operation of the various pendulums that will be gathering data during the solar eclipse. He will use that data to determine if there are aspects of the dynamical behaviour of the pendulums during the eclipse that cannot be explained by current gravitational theory, and, if the answer is positive, to try develop an appropriate theoretical model.

Date: Sunday, 17 January 2010
Time: 20:30 – 22:00
Location: Mandhu College (ex MES school)
Update: Reference link : http://minivannews.com/environment/2010/01/18/visiting-scientists-say-maldives-eclipse-could-rewrite-laws-of-physics/
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Discussion

3 comments for “Allais Effect and the Iasoberg Model – A presentation on the eclipse experiment”

  1. Well I’ll be damned- an eclipse that will not come for another thousand years, was clearest over these masveri waters.

    Even got Dhivehi Raaje on a Science radar ;)

    Posted by Dejoker | January 19, 2010, 2:00 pm
  2. I wish to caution readers that these lectures should be taken in with a healthy bit of scepticism. This is hardly mainstream science. People still try to discredit relativity and one approach is to question the Michelson and Morley experiments by invoking solar phenomena. One should note the “Newtonian Mechanics”, in Prof. Hector Munera’s title, could be followed by “as opposed to relativistic mechanics”. Relativity is here to stay for the foreseeable future.

    Posted by Muthasim Fahmy | January 20, 2010, 2:11 pm
  3. we have organised a science club in our school.We invite the suggestions and ideas to develop and run sucessfully our club activities

    Posted by Gemanafushischool | February 11, 2010, 4:28 pm

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