Tesla was developing a method for wireless transmission of electricity. It is believed that he failed to translate his ideas into reality. But recently a text was published in which the scientist admits that the experiment was carried out. And its consequences were monstrous.
This unknown manuscript of the great scientist, was accidentally acquired in New York at a street sale, and was inside an old fireman's helmet. It was in poor condition, but enthusiasts managed to restore the text. It turned out that with a high degree of probability it can be argued that this notebook is nothing more than a part of Nikola Tesla's diary. Of course, it cannot be ruled out that this is just a clever forgery, but the handwriting and manner of presentation coincide with the famous manuscripts of the scientist.
In his diary, Tesla writes a lot about the properties of the ether - matter or field, which, in his opinion, fills the universe and serves as a medium for the propagation of electromagnetic and gravitational interactions. He is arguing in absentia with Einstein, who, like most scientists, did not recognize the existence of the ether. Tesla describes a series of preliminary experiments that allowed him to understand some of the properties of the ether. Based on his research, he creates a generator of etheric vortex rings and decides to test it, conducting a grandiose experiment to transfer energy over a distance of thousands of kilometers.
He conducted the tests during a difficult period of his life, when his scientific work lost funding, contracts were terminated, and creditors demanded the return of debts. Nevertheless, Tesla managed to carry out his plan. He decided to direct the etheric vortex rings to the Moon, so that, after being reflected from its electrostatic field, they returned to the Earth at a considerable distance from the transmitter.
But some factors worried the scientist. He's writing:
Choosing a place where the energy will be sent, Tesla settled on the vastness of Siberia, since he believed that this territory was practically not inhabited. Here is what he says about how he expected to concentrate energy:
He conducted the experiment, observing the strictest secrecy. Tesla writes about the extraordinary excitement with which he awaited its end. How then I looked in the newspapers for reports of unusual atmospheric phenomena, and how shocked I was when I saw an article about the explosion of the Tunguska meteorite.
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He decided to destroy the equipment and manuscripts with his calculations, so that no one could use his invention. Tesla writes that he is grateful to Einstein and the rest of the scientific community, who “with their erroneous theories took humanity away from this dangerous path along which I was walking. And maybe this is their main merit."