The Philadelphia Experiment
In 1939, Albert Einstein and Nikola Tesla told the United States Office
of Naval Research that Einstein's Unified Field Theory could be used to
jam certain types of radar, thereby making objects become invisible. On
June 12, 1943, the Navy prepared seven gigantic Tesla coils and beamed
them toward the USS Eldridge, a medium-sized cruiser berthed just outside
Philadelphia.
The ship vanished completely for some seven minutes.
When the ship reappeared most of the 67 men on board were okay. However,
Naval researchers and scientists then discovered a grisly sight.
Bodies, or remains of bodies were found throughout the ship, some
embedded within the steel. It appeared that the experiment had caused a
complete breakdown of the Einsteins suggested time/space continuum. The
surviving crew members were hospitalized in secret locations and all
records of the experiment received the highest classification.
In 1990, two survivors, Preston Nichols and Duncan Cameron broke the code
of silence, and began revealing with documents and photos what had
happened during the Philadelphia Experiment.
Many authorities believe that much of the research data on cloaking,
however, had been used by Lockheed in its construction of the B-1 stealth
bomber.
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