@thebrilliantarmy
  @thebrilliantarmy
The Brilliant | Inventors With Mysterious Inventions Who Strangely Disappeared @thebrilliantarmy | Uploaded August 2024 | Updated October 2024, 57 minutes ago.
Many previous inventions were never realized because they were regarded too risky or would, in the long run, prohibit some companies from making large profits. Join us as we explore inventors with mysterious inventions who strangely disappeared.

► Subscribe For New Videos! ► goo.gl/UpeqAc

Watch our "Hitler's Last Secrets Revealed Thanks To Never Before Seen Archives"
video here:youtu.be/tAZKYU6TWdE
Watch our "This Disease Turned 5 Million People Into Statues And Then Vanished"
video here:youtu.be/ley3fSDYdrs
Watch our "Passenger Filmed A Flying UFO , Then This Happened"
video here:youtu.be/scqt5kGawg4

Dr Ning Lee

Ning Li was a Chinese American scientist. She was born in Shandong, graduated from Peking University's Department of Physics, and immigrated to the United States with her family from China in 1983. She is well-known for her physics and antigravity research. In the 1990s, Li was a research scientist at the University of Alabama's Center for Space Plasma and Aeronomic Research in Huntsville. In 1999, she left the university to start her own company, AC Gravity LLC, to pursue anti-gravity research. In a series of publications co-authored with colleague university physicist Douglas Torr and published between 1991 and 1993, she claimed a workable method for producing anti-gravity effects. She proposed that rotating ions could induce an antigravity effect by generating a gravitomagnetic field perpendicular to their spin axis. According to her theory, aligning numerous ions would result in a powerful gravitomagnetic field, which would produce a significant repulsive force. The alignment could be accomplished by trapping superconductor ions in a lattice structure within a high-temperature superconducting disc.

"Madman Mike" Marcum

An eccentric inventor known as "Madman Mike" mysteriously vanished while testing what he thought was a time machine. Mike Marcum built the apparatus on his porch in Stanberry, Missouri, in early 1995, with the idea of profiting from future winning lottery numbers. When he was 21, he started experimenting with a contraption known as the "Jacob's ladder" while studying electrical engineering. Mike claimed to have seen a circular vortex while playing with the device, so he decided to test the effect by adding a metal screw and seeing what happened. Mike said that it vanished into thin air and reappeared a few feet away seconds later. He imagined the metal screw had been transported through time and would reappear when time caught up. However, he faced a severe problem in his experiments: he needed a lot of power to make it work.
Inventors With Mysterious Inventions Who Strangely Disappeared20 Scientists Discover Shocking New Details In Pompeii That Change Everything!The Only Machine Gun on The Planet That Can Turn Tanks Into ScrapThe Worst Alcoholics in Hollywood History, He Is #1 by FarMost Painful Punishments in Human HistoryThe Single Most Important Military Aircraft Ever Shot Down20 Last Known Photos of Animals That Went ExtinctThe Secret Invention That Changed World War 220 Mariana Trench Creatures That Are Scarier Than Megalodon20 Terrifying New Discoveries Made In Africa That Change Everything!20 Real Alien Sightings Caught On Tape!Navy Pilot Reveals Classified UFO Dogfight Story (With Proof)

Inventors With Mysterious Inventions Who Strangely Disappeared @thebrilliantarmy

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER