NET KINETIC ENERGY DIFFERENTIAL GUIDANCE AND PROPULSION SYSTEM FOR SATELLITES AND SPACE VEHICLES




The smallest stable rotating tetrahedron of four particles is formed from two basic dipoles, Figure 2.


The smallest stable rotating octahedron of six basic particles is formed either from three basic dipoles of matter, Figure 3, or from four basic particles of matter of one charge and two basic particles of matter of opposite charge, Figure 4. The dipoles of matter form into tetrahedrons, Figure 2, and octahedrons, Figures 3 and 4, or larger combinations Figure 5, that arrange themselves into helical-like spirals, Figure 6, when they are emitted from larger particles of matter. In the OCTM Theory of Matter, these smallest arrangements of basic particles of matter continue to build into larger arrangements of basic particles, essentially maintaining the one "minus" particle for each "plus" particle with a few odd "plus" or "minus" particles in the outer layers of the particles of matter until a sufficiently large number of particles have combined to form the hydrogen atom and isotopes of hydrogen. As taught by the OCTM Theory of Matter, deep space is filled with hydrogen and isotopes of hydrogen. All elements can be formed from the particles of matter in hydrogen.

The combinations of particles of matter can be in the form of, (A) a crystal or solid, (B) a liquid, (C) a gas or, (D) very regular helical like spirals of particles of matter, Figure 6. Radio waves and other electromagnetic spectrum waves, including light, are comprised of regular helical spirals, where simple and complex "twinning" of the common latticework occurs regularly. Spirals of matter are emitted when Newton's laws of motion overcome Coulomb's law of charges. On Earth, probably the most common way spirals of matter are being emitted is the illumination of solids and liquids with light rays. When the emitted spirals of matter are of visible wave lengths, our eyes detect the spirals of matter, and we "see" the solids and liquids. J. J. Gilman in Art and Science of Growing Crystals on page 47, figure 10, displayed pictures made by Brenner in 1957 of helical like spirals of copper crystal tetrahedrons and octahedrons condensed from copper halides2E US Patent 4,650,424 describes how dipoles of matter go together forming these copper crystal spirals of tetrahedrons and octahedrons and the helical like spiral waves of particles of matter in light and the rest of the electromagnetic spectrum of particles.

The emitted spiral waves of particles of matter have a very high degree of order. The orientation of the untwinned domains of octahedrons and tetrahedrons have a very regular arrangement around and along the centerline of the emitted ray.


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