Flying in this manner above Earth, from the outside, the saucer can fly at any speed, exhibiting no inertia, making right-angle turns, and demonstrating extremely high maneuverability. The flight path appears very strange to Earthlings," Suldair corrected my understanding.
"What exactly powers the flying saucer? How is it able to move at the speed of light, or how does its mass become zero?" I was still trying to clarify the issue. "The propulsion system of flying saucers fundamentally involves the transformation between electromagnetic and gravitational fields. Both uniform linear motion and accelerated motion of a charge can generate a gravitational field, adhering to two basic principles.
One is that charges in uniform linear motion produce positive and negative gravitational fields distributed on a curved surface in the opposite direction of motion.
The other is that the magnetic field generated by accelerating charges is variable. When the distribution of the magnetic field on the curved surface changes, it can generate linear gravitational and electric fields along the edge of the curve. At a certain moment, the changing magnetic field, the generated electric field, and the gravitational field are perpendicular to each other.
The gravitational field produced by moving charges is continuously distributed, while the gravitational field produced by universal gravitation is symmetrically distributed around a point. The key is how to transform the continuously distributed gravitational field into a point-symmetric gravitational field." Suldair provided me with an answer. Then, Norton told me:
"Your Earth scientist Faraday’s discovery of electromagnetism, converting electricity into magnetism and vice versa, has led to the widespread use of electric power on Earth, profoundly impacting your world.
Faraday stated that changing magnetic fields produces perpendicular electric fields. In fact, a gravitational field is also produced in another perpendicular direction. At this time, the changing magnetic field, electric field, and gravitational field are perpendicular to each other.
The principle of flying saucer flight utilizes the transformation between electromagnetic and gravitational fields. Changing electromagnetic fields can produce positive and negative gravitational fields, especially the anti-gravitational field that, when applied to an object, can reduce its mass, even to zero. Once an object’s mass reaches zero, it enters an excited state and suddenly starts moving at the speed of light. This is why flying saucers can fly at the speed of light.
On Earth, electricity is widely used, whereas, on our planet, we do not use
electricity but artificial field scanning. The positive and negative gravitational fields generated by changing electromagnetic fields, working under computer control, are referred to as artificial field scanning.
If Earthlings mastered the transformation between electromagnetic and gravitational fields, not only could they build light-speed flying saucers, but they could also develop artificial field scanning technology. Artificial field scanning is not just about making objects’ masses reach zero to move at light speed and creating light-speed flying saucers; it has many other incredible applications.
These include large-scale cold welding in construction and industrial manufacturing, treating diseases under computer control, enabling objects to disappear instantly, establishing a global movement network, creating solar energy concentrators for cheap, clean energy, and more.
Artificial field scanning can also create many products that change time and space, manufacture virtual buildings and holographic human bodies, process information, read and store human thoughts and consciousness, and enable people to communicate directly through the brain over long distances…"
The explanations given by Norton and others were difficult for me to understand, and I decided not to ask further about flying saucers.
"So, you often pilot flying saucers to explore other planets, right?"
"Yes, we have come to your Earth many times," Norton confirmed my guess. "You have also been a subject of our long-term observation."