01.16.2005

 
   

Plasma Beam Induces Transparency in Matter


Hurtubise Says Invention Sees Through Walls (also interviewed on American Antigravity)

By Phil Novak for BayToday.ca
January 16, 2005

Troy Hurtubise has done the seemingly impossible with his newest invention and defied all known rules of physics, he says.

The Angel Light - Hurtubise claims the concept came to him in a recurring dream - can reportedly see through walls, as if there was no barrier at all. That's not all, though.

Hurtubise, 41, said the device detects stealth technology. And he's done the tests to prove it, with the covert help of scientists at the famed Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Hurtubise said. If that's not enough, Hurtubise also said the French government sent representatives to North Bay to witness a demonstration of the Angel Light.

Hurtubise said the reps were so impressed with the eight-foot long device they paid him $40,000 in cash to put the finishing touches on it. The French, Hurtubise adds, have also agreed to pay him a "substantial" amount of money for the technology if it passes rigorous tests in France.

"They couldn't believe what they saw," Hurtubise told BayToday.ca. "One of them told me it was as if I'd discovered a new universe."

Gary Dryfoos, a consultant and former long-time instructor at MIT, said "there's a Nobel Prize" for Hurtubise if the Angel Light really performs as described.

"There are laws of physics waiting to be written for what he's talking about," Dryfoos said.

The French aren't the only ones interested in Hurtubise's innovations. BayToday.ca has obtained documentation confirming that the former head of Saudi counter-intelligence, who asked that his name not be used, has been in regular contact with Hurtubise regarding the Angel Light, fire paste, and the Light Infantry Military Blast Cushions (LIMBC).

While Hurtubise's claims appear, on the surface, to strain credulity, he has now placed himself miles ahead in the quest by high-tech companies to invent something that will do the same thing.

Motorola Inc. for example, has set its sights on emerging technology that could allow first responders and Special Forces to see through building walls, the Washington Technology Web site reports.

Camero Inc., an Israeli firm founded by technology and intelligence veterans, received $5 million from Motorola and other investors to develop portable imaging radar that uses ultra-wideband technology to create a 3-D picture of objects that are concealed by walls or other barriers.

Three units make up the Angel Light. The main unit, which Hurtubise calls the centrifuge, contains the Angel Light's brains and includes black, white, red and fluorescent light sources, as well as seven industrial lasers. The second unit, or the deflector grid, contains a large circle of optical glass, a microwave unit and plasma intermixed with carbon dioxide. The third unit contains eight plasma light rods, CO2 charges, industrial magnets, 108 mirrors, eight ionization cells industrial lights, and other components Hurtubise chooses to remain tight-lipped about.

Hurtubise said the Angel Light has cost $30,000 to build - he sold percentages of his other innovations to finance it - as well as 800 to 900 hours of his time. He credits his subconscious with the idea.

"I had a dream about a year and a half ago as I do for most of my innovations, just a dream, and I saw it, saw the whole casing and everything, and I saw what it could do," Hurtubise said.

"I had the same dream about that three times and by the third time I had it in my head and I started to build it."

Troy dreamed the Angel Light would be able to see through walls with window-like efficiency, and then built it with no blueprints, drawings or schematics. "I turned it on - that was well over a year ago - and it worked and it was really awesome."

Hurtubise said he could see into the garage behind his lab wall, and read the licence plate on his wife's car and even see the salt on it.

"I almost broke my knuckles three or four times, because it was almost like you could step through the wall," Hurtubise said.

"You could be fooled into believing that you could actually walk through the wall and go touch the car."

Hurtubise called his MIT contacts with news of what he'd done. "They told me that I was playing with electromagnetism," Hurtubise said.

The conversation ultimately led to the discovery of the Angel Light's other startling properties. Hurtubise said "somebody from MIT" shipped him an eight-inch by eight-inch piece of paneling from the latest Comanche helicopter, which was built using radar-resistant stealth technology.

"It's amazing what you can get across the border on a Greyhound bus," Hurtubise said.

Hurtubise was instructed to set up an outdoor track, which he did on First Nations land. He attached the panel piece to a remote control car that went down the track. Hurtubise then aimed the Angel Light at the panel and turned on a radar gun. "I was able to pick it up the panel on the radar gun," he said.

But a strange thing happened to the car, once it was hit by the Angel Light beam: it stopped working. Hurtubise returned to his lab and began testing the Angel Light on other electronic items including portable radios, TVs and a microwave over.

"They all stopped working," Hurtubise said. He duly reported this to his MIT contacts. "They said 'Troy, this is unbelievable.'"

Hurtubise purchase a remote-control plane for $1,800 and took it and the Angel Light to a flying field on the way to Powassan. He directed the Angel Light beam toward the sky and started the plane flying. "On the first loop it came around, passed through the beam of light and fell right to the ground," Hurtubise said.

Hurtubise continued testing the light on other materials and discovered it could also see through other metals including steel, tin, titanium and, unlike Superman, lead. As well the beam also penetrated ceramic and wood.

Then Hurtubise put his hand in the light beam. "I could see my blood vessels, muscles, everything, like I'd taken an Exacto knife, cut into my skin and peeled it back," Hurtubise said. Soon after, Hurtubise discovered the Angel Light had devilish side-effects. He lost feeling in the finger of the exposed hand and began suffering an overall malaise.

"MIT told me every time I turned it on there must have been splash-back hitting me," Hurtubise said. A test on a tank of goldfish was even more disturbing. "I turned the beam on it and within minutes all the goldfish died," Hurtubise said.

"That's when I realized there was a Hyde effect, as in Jekyll and Hyde, and I dismantled the whole thing."

He didn't reassemble it until the French called him after seeing a Discovery Channel program about the LIMBC. Hurtubise believes the Hyde effect can be taken out, but by others who have far more expertise than him. In the meantime Hurtubise believes that after 17 years inventing, his ship may finally have come in with France.

"My brother told me the only way I'd be able to sell any of my innovations is by walking on water," Hurtubise said. "Well, I think I've just walked on water."




Analysis

Hurtubise's invention is astounding, not only for its induction of transparency in matter, but perhaps even more so for his having built the device from instructions in repeating dreams! In fact, he has no idea how it functions!

While the emissions of the device are referred to by Hurtubise as 'light', the components of the machine and the effects of the beam suggest that it is in fact an ionized gas - a plasma - exciting the molecules of the wall into high-energy states which allows photons to pass through matter. A similar effect of the interpenetration of matter has also been observed in high-energy states naturally found in tornadoes and other weather phenomena.

Resonant plasmas have also been shown to produce free energy and frictionless movement which can potentially allow transdimensional travel. This same technology has been described for decades in extraterrestrial encounters, where beamed energy causes paralysis, levitation and allows passage through walls and ceilings.

Ancient flying vehicles called 'vimana', in Sanskrit, were described in detail as using weaponry and evasion systems of this kind, suggesting ancient connections between Sanskrit culture and the extraterrestrial dimension. Hurtubise's dream transmissions implicate an extraterrestrial origin for his prototype Angel Light plasma beam device, which he has subsequently modified and renamed God Light.