ActionLab: A new type of levitation that isn't found in textbooks anywhere because the phenomenon isn't widely known.

Aug 31, 2025 · 12:34 PM UTC

Replying to @CymaticJoule
wtf I asked my physics professor about this exact thing and he said it was impossible
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My wheelhouse of personality traits would have responded to said physics teacher as such:
Replying to @CymaticJoule
"...new type of levitation that isn't found in textbooks...because...isn't widely known." - Doubt it's "new" and doubt that's the reason it's not in textbooks. Not suggesting the one making the video isn't sincere in his belief of what he states. Just doubt it. Seems unlikely.
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Indeed. You just verbalized the unsaid that permeates new discoveries, which are simply new rememberings of awarenesses intentionally disappeared but not forgotten.
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
If everything has a field......well, I guess we can make meatsacks float.
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
This tweet is unavailable
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
This levitating vehicle lifted 400 pounds with spinning N-S NdFeB magnets over a sheet of aluminum. Rotors lifted about 2inches (5 cm) off the surface. [📹Vanderbilt University Engineering] x.com/ali_alsama7i/status/19…
Replying to @CymaticJoule
Magnetic bearings, especially active magnetic bearings (AMBs) enable frictionless, high-speed rotation, which is crucial for gas centrifuge technology used in uranium enrichment. That's why it isn't found in textbooks.
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
Not a new phenomenon, it's just suppressed due to anti-gravity physics (rotating magnetic fields). The field application would be described using Magneto-hydrodynamics (toroid accelerators and "IONS"), as discovered in UFO crash recoveries:
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
Experiment shows actions of Major and Pocket vortex at Nuclear Magnetic Field Centre illustration, perhaps
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
Oh it's known long ago in secret realm by US Russia and China but people didn't do proper research.
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
I remember doing this in public school, dafuq you mean its new and not in textbooks 🤣 Fucking engagement bait nonsense
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
Is this how the Earth holds the moon? @nobulart @EthicalSkeptic
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
This isn't new. How old is this fucking video? Spin stabilized magnetic levitation has been patented since the 80's.
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
It's not new, and yes, it is widely known.
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
@JustXAshton Not “new”. Certainly “suppressed”.
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
It's in several textbooks. They're just specialized engineering textbooks
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
Yes this has been suppressed. Add temp to go deeper. As we learn more about magnetic fields, next is the generators & fluctuators. What we will find is as above so below in the end I still summize. What does measurement do to the particles in double slit keeps coming to mind.
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
> could have > important role ?
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
This isnt new
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
It's not "new", it's been hidden from the public for decades
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
The first maglev train was opened in 1984.
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
Is there any other model/image/description that could show the geometry of the magnetic field? And is there anything known regarding the phenomenon relative to higher magnetic field strengths or higher masses for the suspended body?
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
applications in spintronics for sure
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
how did you think maglev trains work?
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
Levitating trains and cars not a thing yet with this?
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Replying to @CymaticJoule
isn't widely known because it's a whole lot simpler to rotate an electromagnetic field -- aka AC -- than spin a magnet mechanically?
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