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potential density

"The potential gradient actually is a change to the ambient potential, and so it contains an excess energy density (the magnitude may be either positive or negative). We then collect this potential (actually this potential density) on a certain number of coulombs, which places tiny little gradients of potential across (coupled to) each free electron. The local excess energy density of the potential gradient multiplied by the amount of collecting mass gives the amount of excess energy collected (on the interacting charges/coulombs)." [Bearden, The Final Secret of Free Energy]

See Also


Apparatus For Producing Electric Currents of High Frequency and Potential - 568176
Chart of Locked Potentials
Chart of Locked Potentials - See Also
cold multiplies electric potential
density
electric potential
electrostatic scalar potential
energy density
energy-flux density
equipotential environments
ether density
Figure 12.04 - Locked Potential Points Relations and Descriptions
Figure 12.10 - Russells Locked Potential Wave
Figure 12.11 - Russells Locked Potential Full Ten Octave Gamut
Figure 3.13 - Orthogonal Vector Potentials
Figure 3.5 - Conflicting and Opposing Vector Potentials
Figure 9.12 - Scale of Locked Potentials over Time
heat divides electric potential
Locked Potentials and Subdivisions
Locked Potentials and the Square Law
magnetostatic scalar potential
multiplication of electric potential
Part 12 - Russells Locked Potentials
Potential
potential gradient
potentialize
rings of electric potential
scalar electromagnetic potential
Scalar Potential
Scale of Locked Potentials
stress potential wave
Vector Potential
12.01 - Scale of Locked Potentials
12.04 - Locked Potentials and the Square Law
12.27 - Potentials
3.22 - Quantum Leap Delta equivalent to Locked Potentials Delta
6.13 - Density Differentiation

Created by Dale Pond. Last Modification: Sunday April 15, 2018 04:27:43 MDT by Dale Pond.