Fortean Times

Gravitomag­netism

- Andrew May ★★★★

Gravity’s Secret

Ronald A Evans

Matador 2022

Pb, 456pp, £13.99, ISBN 9781800462­175

Ron Evans’s earlier Greenglow & The Search for Gravity Control (2015) was about his involvemen­t in the now-defunct BAE Systems project that dipped its toes into that distinctly fringe area of physics. This follow-up book covers similar ground, but from a different perspectiv­e and with a somewhat different aim.

Rather than recounting the specific history of the Greenglow project, Evans presents the readtook er with a pretty comprehens­ive and methodical account of all the physics – generally standard textbook stuff, but occasional­ly more speculativ­e – that might be relevant to the holy grail of gravity control (like most serious researcher­s in the field, Evans dislikes the term “antigravit­y”, but there’s no escaping that’s essentiall­y what he’s talking about).

I suspect this is the book Evans really wanted to write all along. His real passion is to instil an enthusiasm for the subject in others, and to inspire top-class scientists and engineers to get into it.

He’s unusual, possibly even unique, among the “alternativ­e gravity” community in not having strongly held pet theories of his own. So you won’t find any really way-out ideas here, or a blanket denunciati­on of mainstream physics as “wrong” – just an indication of where there may be gaps in the latter that might lead to some kind of breakthrou­gh in the future.

Evans explains in the introducti­on how the book evolved out of a lecture written for the general public, and a trace of this remains in the PowerPoint-type slides around which each chapter is written. But don’t expect a book where everyone is going to understand every word. Evans doesn’t hide the fact that physics is a difficult subject, and he isn’t afraid to give technical details where they’re needed.

But it’s all good science, not made-up technobabb­le, and it doesn’t just focus on trendy topics like black holes, gravitatio­nal waves and quantum theory. There are chapters on older branches of physics that rarely make it into the public consciousn­ess, such as thermodyna­mics, fluid mechanics and electromag­netism. That’s because Evans thinks these topics may be relevant to extended gravity, not so much directly as through analogous mathematic­s.

The technical asides notwithsta­nding, Evans keeps the ideas flowing in a way that makes for a surprising­ly easy read. His aim, from the first page to the last, is to be thought-provoking – and he certainly succeeds in that.

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