Articles, devices, projects and theories about defying this most basic of physical laws.
Great stone structures and megaliths around the world stand as mysteries to how they were constructed. Is it possible their builders possessed the powers of defying gravity? From your About.com Guide.
Experimenters like Tim Ventura are testing an astonishing and mysterious technology that makes triangular vehicles float in the air - and could, one day, revolutionize flight.
Tim Ventura is developing "lifter" technology is a new type of field-effect propulsion technology that provides thrust without expelling mass. Go watch his fascinating videos.
This one may be for techno-geeks only, but it lists some of the best and most recent research done by real scientists on defeating the pull of gravity.
Details and drawings about what may be the world's first true anti-gravity device, developed by scientists in Finland in 1996. Was it all a mistake?
British Aerospace, NASA and independent researchers worldwide are on a quest to understand the mysteries of hyperdimensional physics and unlock the secrets of antigravity.
Reports on the latest news, research, and data in the field of anti-gravity. Includes a number of techie-type articles.
This is just a large ad for a book, but an interesting book with pictures and drawings of anti-gravity drives, vehicles and levitation experiments.
Comments on reports of anti-gravity devices, such as the Dean Drive.
Includes links to articles on antigravity devices, electrogravity, distortion fields and more "light reading."
A new field of study involves a little-known property of bismuth called diamagnetism, which could be the basis of anti-gravity and levitation.
A very good page about the American physicist who developed theories about anti-gravity. With documents and photos of experimental machines.
... and Falling Magnetic Motors. Through good ol' backyard mechanics, Don - a "perpetual motion specialist" - explains these machines.
Anti-gravity technologies may literally get off the ground in the near future, this site says. Scientists are taking seriously the possibility of an inertialess drive for spaceships.
Something about how the aether can create gravity effects, etc. You figure it out... I can't.
In 2001, Dr. Evgeny Podkletnov began publishing a series of scientific papers detailing the experimental results of what he called an "impulse gravity generator" that had many interesting effects.
Pierre Sinclair provides information you'll need for constructing your own gravito magnetic anti-gravity device. Get busy.
Grab a roll of duct tape, because here are instructions on how to build your own gravity modification device. You'll need a YBCO superconducting disc though.
Just when you thought you've read everything on anti-gravity, the INE presents just tons more articles on the subject.
Newton saw gravity as the attraction between bodies of matter. Professor John Searl, an English inventor, claims to have reversed that attraction.
NASA-funded research of a Russian scientist's experiments with creating anti-gravity fields, reprinted from
Popular Mechanics magazine.
Tom Bearden figures Newton, Faraday and Maxwell didn't really understand the potential of anti-gravity as he does.
Created to seek serious researchers working on gravity control and willing to demonstrate their devices before cameras for verification, and to gather together individuals to help produce The Quest for Gravity Control, the movie.
Prof. John Searl, this site says, is the only man to have built and flown an anti-gravity device, called a Levity Disc. Details here.
Wright says that gravity doesn't pull us down from the center of the Earth, rather it pushes us down from the sun.