Table of contents:
Video: Living Ball Bettsev
2024 Author: Seth Attwood | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-16 15:55
Almost every one of us can now boast that we carry a magical way-measuring ball in our pocket. This miracle in fairy tales worked like a modern navigator. But just 40 years ago, a ball was found from an unknown alloy, which was no less mysterious than a magic ball from Russian fairy tales …
The Mystery of the Betz Sphere
Of all the mysterious balls that scientists have had a chance to investigate, this one was the most incomprehensible - it moved by itself, as if controlled by a certain mind, and reacted to external stimuli.
On March 26, 1974, 21-year-old intern Terry Matthew Betz, his father, naval engineer Antoine, and Jerry's mother examined the damage left on their lands by the recent wildfire. The Betz farm was located near Jacksonville, Florida. During the inspection, they found a polished metal ball with a diameter of 20, 22 cm and weighing 9, 67 kg.
There were no seams or dents on it, except for a small triangular mark measuring 3 mm. If he fell from above, then at a very low speed, since he did not form a crater and did not burrow into the ground. The fire did not leave any traces on it.
Terry decided to take the ball to the house, where he lay for the next two weeks, like an ordinary piece of iron. But when the young intern decided to entertain his girlfriend Teresa Fraser with guitar playing, the ball came to life! It began to vibrate like a tuning fork and make strange pulsating sounds in response to certain notes. The audible sound was accompanied by infrasound: the dog Bettsev, because of this, began to whine, covering its ears with its paws.
The Betzs soon discovered that the ball could roll on its own. If you push it on the floor, the ball can stop, then roll again, and so on several times - until it returns to the pushed one like a boomerang. He once rode for 12 minutes in a row without a single stop!
It turned out that the ball reacts to weather conditions - on clear days it rolled more actively than on rainy days, and if you put it on the shady side of the room, it often rolled onto the sunny side. He did not react to artificial sources of heat, such as a heater or blowtorch. Periodically, the ball vibrated at a low frequency, as if a motor was running inside. On the steel surface, there was only one place with strong magnetic properties (later it turned out that the ball has three magnetic poles, and maybe all four).
If you put the ball on the table, it continued to roll, but it never fell off - as if it were being controlled by some mind, pulling it away from the edge. When one of the family members lifted the edge of the table so that the ball finally fell, it continued to hold on, using a fast rotation around its axis for this! If you shake the ball hard in your hands and then put it on the surface, it would start running away, bouncing, as Terry put it, like "a giant Mexican jumping bob."
After observing the ball, the Betz family decided to tell the public about it and find scientists who would solve the mystery. They first called the local Jacksonville Journal. The editors sent photographer Lon Anger to the farm. Lon told about what happened next:
"Mrs. Betz told me to put the ball on the floor and push it. It rolled a little and froze. What's next? She says:" Wait a little. ", having rolled to the left for about 2, 5 m, made a big arc and returned directly to my feet."
Anger, returning to the editorial office, wrote a sensational article. Soon the whole country started talking about the ball in the Betz house. The farm was besieged by reporters. The military and ufologists, in turn, also paid tribute to this story. Navy spokesman Chris Berninger said that in his presence, the ball also rolled as he wanted.
At night in the Betsev house strange music began to be heard, similar to an organ or something like that. The doors began to swing open and slam shut by themselves at any time of the day or night. The family decided that the balloon should be handed over to the Navy for a more detailed study.
The military enlightened the ball on a powerful X-ray machine and found that its wall thickness ranges from 1.09 to 1.14 cm - this thickness allows the ball to withstand pressures of up to 120 thousand pounds per square inch. Of course, he could fall off the table without any harm to himself. The spectroscope showed that its body is made of stainless steel with an admixture of nickel. Its closest analogue is "alloy 431" for work in high temperature conditions, maximally resistant to corrosion.
Beneath this shell, which even under X-ray did not reveal any seams, there were two more round objects surrounded by their own shell of material of unusual density. The ball turned out to be not radioactive. The military wanted to cut it, but Betz refused to agree to an autopsy and demanded the ball back. Since the find was not identified by the military, the Betzs decided that it might be an alien device.
Just at this time, the "yellow" newspaper "National Enquirer" announced that it would pay $ 10,000 for "the best scientific evidence for the existence of UFOs" and $ 50,000 for "proof that UFOs are of alien origin."
The committee, which was supposed to decide the fate of both awards, included prominent ufologists, including Allen Heineck. The Bettsev family decided to lend the balloon to the newspaper, hoping to win a good amount, and at the same time conduct additional research on the find at the expense of journalists from the largest circulation newspaper in the United States.
On April 20 and 21, 1974, the ball became the focus of the commission's attention, but the Betts were not given money - after all, they could not prove that the ball had anything to do with UFOs. But a member of the commission, Dr. James Harder, after carrying out some calculations of the density of the elements of the ball, came to the conclusion that there is something inside with an atomic number of 140 (recall that the heaviest element in nature is uranium with atomic number 92, and on accelerators and in elements numbered up to 118 were synthesized in the reactor).
Three years later, at the International UFO Congress in Chicago on June 24, 1977, Harder intimidated everyone: if you just drill a hole in the ball, a chain reaction will occur inside and it will explode like an atomic bomb. In addition, maybe he is still under the supervision of aliens and they can severely punish those who encroached on their device!
By this moment, the Bettsy disappeared somewhere along with the ball. It was not possible to find them. Where the mysterious find now lies and what it really was, has remained a mystery. And if Harder was right, won't we wait for some poor fellow to take up a drill …
Recommended:
Why are so few Russians living in private houses?
Almost everyone in our country dreams of living in their own home. But, despite the large territories, "one-story Russia" did not appear in our country
Titans of Soviet Civilization living today - who are they?
Orientalist and political scientist Igor Dimitriev - about an amazing meeting on the slopes of Elbrus
GMO - a weapon of genocide of all living things
A genetic war is currently being waged against Russia and the planet. The weapons in this war are genetically modified organisms
The solar system is a living cell of the universe
As direct participants in the milestone events in the history of mankind, we all together and each separately will have to voluntarily or forcibly make our own existential
What Form of the Living Earth: Flat-Ball-Hollow-Multidimensional? Secrets of Human Perception of the Universe
In order to understand the shape of any Living multidimensional object, which is our Earth, you need to know the basic principles of the functioning of life in the Universe. Knowledge of these principles will help us understand that the flat form of the Earth, like the Spherical one, cannot exist