February 29, 1996: Shuttle Tether - Richard C. Hoagland - podcast episode cover

February 29, 1996: Shuttle Tether - Richard C. Hoagland

May 30, 202335 minSeason 1996Ep. 115
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Episode description

Richard C. Hoagland, former science advisor to Walter Cronkite, joins Art Bell to analyze the space shuttle tethered satellite experiment that ended in dramatic failure when a 12-mile conductive wire mysteriously severed in orbit. Hoagland argues that NASA has no explanation for what destroyed the tether, which was rated to withstand over ten times the 24 pounds of actual tension on it. Close-up video shows the wire melted and pulled apart like taffy, indicating an enormous electrical surge far beyond anything predicted.

Hoagland introduces hyperdimensional physics, tracing its origins to James Clerk Maxwell's original 200-plus quaternion equations from the 19th century. He explains how Maxwell's unified field theory described forces originating in geometric dimensions beyond normal three-dimensional space. Hoagland connects this framework to Michael Faraday's anomalous 1837 discovery that rotating a magnet and conductor together still generates current, contradicting every modern physics textbook.

Drawing a direct parallel to Voyager 2's encounter with Saturn in August 1981, Hoagland describes how that spacecraft experienced unexplained thruster firings, computer malfunctions, and scan platform failures during its ring plane crossing. He argues the shuttle tether incident produced identical anomalies.
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