Gravity and the 1st law of thermodynamics
I have been reading the responses to the possibility of non-linear energy conversion and I too am skeptical of many, if not all of the claims out there. However, I have recently published a web page that you might find interesting
http://www.geocities.com/joeiii63/
My angle is simple and straight forward. If the value of the inertial mass (read apparent mass) in an isolated system is varied during the system's cycle, then the effect is exactly the same as if the gravitational field affecting it were fluctuated between weak and strong. This can be used to cause a weight to behave as though it were lighter on its way up and heavier on its way down.
This invitation has been extended to researchers, university physics depts. (including MIT and Cambridge) and skeptics worldwide. As of yet, no one has indicated why this system wouldn't or can't work (invoking the 1st Law of Thermodynamics in this case is no different than saying that since humans can't fly, airplanes must be impossible because they would allow humans to fly).
So far the responses have been mostly polite, but similar; they all want more time to review the idea. If you understand physics, its just not that complicated.
AFTER YOU READ THE WEB PAGE, THIS MAY BE HELPFUL:
What is meant by reversing the system is this: The weight doesn't
fall up, it is lifted by the kinetic energy stored in the flywheel and the upward momentum of the weight. At the start, the weight falls in a normal flywheel configuration and its potential energy is divided between the flywheel and the weight. At the end of this half cycle, the motion of the weight is reversed, possibly by a spring, and it re-enters the system on the other side of the flywheel axle (the upward side). Yes, some velocity (and thus kinetic energy) will be lost, but not enough to overcome the large advantage provided by the fact that as the weight is raised, its deceleration due to the pull of gravity diminishes as it gets higher. Because the weight is being lifted by the variable inertia configuration, its deceleration drops from 0.5g at the bottom to 0.2g at the top. It's exactly as though the gravitational field acting on the weight is weakening.
Remember, when the weight fell, it was connected to the flywheel in the non-variable (normal) configuration, and it had a constant acceleration of 0.5g.
This means that using the variable inertia configuration, a weight can be lifted to a higher elevation than it falls from, using nothing more than the kinetic energy produced by its own fall through a non-varying inertia configuration.
If anyone should insist on knowing where the extra energy
comes from when the system is reversed, they need only to figure out where the missing energy
goes when the system is operated in the direction described on the web page. Therein lies the answer. It doesn't go anywhere. It just disappears. And when the system is reversed, energy simply appears. It was never anywhere.