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Transcription
Most people think propulsion means burning fuel, but the most advanced craft don't burn anything at all.
They ride the magnetic fabric of space itself.
It's called magnetohydrodynamics, MHD for short, a technology that uses magnetic fields and electrically charged fluids, plasma, liquid metal, even seawater, to create thrust with no moving parts.
Here's how it works.
Run an electric current through ionized plasma, place it inside a strong magnetic field.
The two forces interact, creating what's called the Lorentz force, and that invisible push propels the craft forward.
No propellers, no turbines, no exhaust, just pure electromagnetic acceleration.
This is why UFOs can hover, vanish, or make impossible turns without sound.
By ionizing the air around them, they create a plasma bubble, a frictionless shield that slices through atmosphere and even bends light.
With the right superconductors, MHD can produce magnetic lift, true levitation.
In space, it works as a reactionless drive, surfing the charged particles of the interstellar medium.
The public was shown rockets, but in classified programs, MHD has been tested since the 1950s in projects with names like Sky Vault, some of it is said to be reverse engineered from recovered craft.
MHD is more than propulsion.
It's the missing link between the flying shields of ancient legends and the silent starships of tomorrow.
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