Prior to publication significant portions of this book was also reviewed by Dr. Martin Tajmar, formerly a professor of micropropulsion physics in Austria and now at KAIST (Korea’s Institute of Science and Technology). Drs. Tajmar and de Matos did the original experiments at ARC/AIT (the largest research institute in Austria) demonstrating a dipolar (attractive and repulsive) gravitomagnetic-like field in the laboratory that was as strong as the naturally occurring field of a white dwarf star – and with a strength 18 orders of magnitude larger than predicted by general relativity.
The book was also reviewed by Prof. Dr. rer.nat. Jochem Hauser. Dr. Hauser is a Professor of High Performance Computing in Suderburg, Germany. In 2007 he was a Visiting Scientist at the Institute of Mechanics at the Technical University of Clausthal, Clausthal-Zellerfeld, Germany, teaching plasma physics and performing research in advanced space propulsion through gravitomagnetic fields. He is an Advanced Space Propulsion Consultant in the field of aerodynamic simulation and high-performance computing for the European Union and the European Space Agency, and from 1988-1992 headed the Aerothermodynamics Section at the European Space Research and Technology Center (ESTEC) of the European Space Agency in Noordwijk, The Netherlands.
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SPESIF 2011
Gravity 2.0 was mentioned in the 2011 SPESIF Conference held March 15-17 at the University of Maryland. The presenter, Dr. Jochem Hauser, was presenting a paper for the American Institute of Physics on Extended Heim Theory (the physics focus of my book) and has been very generous in his time to review my book before publication. The conference was organized in cooperation with the the American Astronautical Society (AAS), the “premier independent scientific and technical group in the United States exclusively dedicated to the advancement of space science and exploration.”
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Gravity-Superconductor Interactions: Theory and Experiment
Gravity 2.0 was mentioned in the review of Gravity-Superconductor Interactions: Theory and Experiment, Editors: G. Modanese, G. A. Robertson, Bentham Publishers, 2012. The reviewer was Prof. Dr. rer.nat. Jochem Hauser, saying that “Readers looking for an elementary non-mathematical introduction into this emerging and exciting field are referred to the recent book by G. Daigle, Gravity 2.0 (available through Amazon). ”
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