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Electromagnetic (EM) energy comes from switching the positive and negative poles of a magnet backwards and forwards. It really is how we generate electrical energy. EM energy as we know it is a vector form of energy, meaning the electrons involved move from one place to another.
Conventional EM energy has a wave form, similar to the waves of the ocean, or when, as a child , you shook a rope up and down and created a wave that way. These waves are transverse, which means that the wave's energy goes in an axis (up and down), while the wave itself goes perpendicular to that, forward along the rope or in direction of the shore.
However James Clerk Maxwell in 1865, Nikola Tesla in 1899, and E. T. Whitaker in 1903 realized that there was one more sort of wave occurring together with the standard transverse EM energy, named longitudinal EM energy. This form of wave energy is referred to as scalar energy (as opposite to vector energy), as the particles involved don't travel anywhere. One more name given to the phenomenon is zero point energy.
Let me give you an instance: suppose you and your friends were lined up next to one another, all facing in the identical direction, and the person next to you gives your shoulder a shove, not hard enough to knock you down, but sufficient to bump you into the person next to you. That person would bump the person next to them, and so on. What happened? Energy was transmitted across the line of people, but nobody actually went anywhere. You and your friends simply made a longitudinal wave.
Longitudinal waves are also referred to as compression waves. One more image which may help you to picture a compression wave is when you drop a pebble into water and the waves spread out from that. The pebble drops down (transmitting vector energy as transverse EM energy does); the longitudinal waves form 90 degrees to the pebble on the surface of the water, moving a leaf up and down but never moving it away. It is not exactly the identical, but hopefully you get the idea.
So where does such longitudinal (or scalar) EM energy come from? The theory is that when electrons become part of an electrical current in traditional (transverse) EM energy, the remainder of the atom has an equal and opposite reaction in the other direction, to balance things out. The stone drops down; the water rushes up to fill up the space. The 2 contradictory reactions of the electrons and their atoms causes longitudinal EM waves to form, just as waves form after a pebble drops into water.
Since the early twentieth century, a lot of investigators have attempted to develop useful applications of scalar EM energy including medical and health purposes, domestic energy production and weaponization, with varying degrees of success. One of the most recent uses has been the scalar energy pendant reported to have some health benefits.
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