I did this experiment with a Tesla coil quite a while ago. At the time the coil discharge seemed very odd. I had held a screwdriver close to the output electrode on the Tesla coil. The discharge wasn't normal. The screwdriver emitted a spark along with the output electrode on the coil. Both seemed to discharge to a point in space. The odd part was that the path the sparks took was almost at right angles to each other. It seemed pretty consistent and repeatable. So I took a short video of the anomaly. It helps to start and stop the video several times when it happens to catch it in the act:
This Tesla coil is one I made that puts out negative voltage. The voltage is below the ground state of the local environment. About 50,000 volts by my estimate. What is odd is the angle of interaction between the two sparks. The only other observation of an angle occurring that I can think of is when there is a positron-electron pair production with a high...
Tesla Coil Anomaly
This Tesla coil is one I made that puts out negative voltage. The voltage is below the ground state of the local environment. About 50,000 volts by my estimate. What is odd is the angle of interaction between the two sparks. The only other observation of an angle occurring that I can think of is when there is a positron-electron pair production with a high...
Tesla Coil Anomaly