A Disruptive Invention

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by Peter Shackle




  A Disruptive Invention

  A novel by Peter W. Shackle

  A Disruptive Invention

  Amazon Edition

  Copyright 2011 Peter W. Shackle

  Amazon Edition, License Notes

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Amazon.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Fact

  Scientists try and explain everything which happens in nature in terms of forces. The gravitational force for example makes an apple fall from a tree. There are three others – the electromagnetic force makes the motor work in your vacuum cleaner and the so called strong force and weak force hold atoms together. For the last thirty years a few physicists have been theorizing that there ought to be a so-called fifth force. This would cause an electric current to repel gravity. The consequences of being able to repulse gravity at will would be civilization shattering. Over and again someone thinks they have found it, yet when the experiments are refined there is nothing there. It has never been found - yet.

  Chapter 1

  John Sykes’ alarm clock sounded and he slammed it off. He was waiting for it to ring. His face was haggard and drawn. That was one hell of a night, he thought to himself. He staggered slowly down the hallway of his one bedroom studio and winced at the sight of the slender, shirtless figure with bleary eyes and uncombed long hair that he saw in the hall mirror. Moving on to the kitchen he set his electric kettle on to make some coffee.

  At that moment the phone rang. “Hello?”

  “John, I called you yesterday, why didn’t you call me back?” said his mother.

  Twenty eight years old and I’m still getting worried calls from my Mom. I should be grateful. I love her really.

  “I was busy Mom, I’m sorry.”

  “I’ve been worried about you eating properly.”

  “I’m fine Mom. Don’t worry about me”

  “Why didn’t you call me yesterday?”

  “I was busy Mom. I was doing an experiment here in my apartment and something extraordinary happened. I was lost to my thoughts and couldn’t think of anything else,”

  “Did you get those socks which I knitted for you yet?”

  “No mom, I’ll tell you the moment that they arrive. Mom- I’ve really got to get ready for work. Let me call you tonight.”

  “Well don’t forget I love you Johnny.”

  “OK Mom. I love you too! I’ll call you tonight.”

  John poured hot water into a cup and mixed in a spoonful of instant coffee. Did I really see what I thought I saw? It should have been impossible. But I saw it twenty times. He gobbled down some cereal and got ready for the day.

  As John drove the short two mile commute to Lighting Enterprises, he agonized over the quandary that he was in. It doesn’t make any sense. But if it was real it would change the world. Nobody will believe me. I’ve got to get some help – somebody who is strong technically to collaborate with. But if I tell anyone I’m going to get laughed at. My professional standing will be shot.

  “Morning, Heather,” he grunted as he went past reception.

  “Hi John,” responded the receptionist with little excitement at the vision of the lanky long haired geek walking by. John threaded his way into the engineering laboratory. It was a cavernous room the size of a small supermarket, with work benches and desks arranged in rows along its length.

  “Hi John,” called out a tall young man in blue jeans and a pink polo shirt. “That fix which you suggested for my filament circuit is working like a charm!”

  “Morning John!” exclaimed a short man in green jeans and a brown shirt. “I could sure do with some more of your insights into how to get my boost circuit going right – when you have got a moment.”

  John felt a warm feeling from the appreciation of his disciples in the engineering lab. Some of the stress feeling from the terrible night before started to fade away.

  He came to a bench where a burly young Chinese man, Fred Huang, was working hunched over an oscilloscope with an experimental circuit containing a fluorescent lamp beside it. The oscilloscope looked like a small TV screen with squiggly lines upon it, showing what was going on inside the circuit. The lamp suddenly flashed on brightly and then went out again after less than a second. John slipped off his jacket and threw it over his own bench nearby. “How’s that new ballast circuit going, Fred?”

  “Works like shit!” snapped Fred in exasperation. “Every time I power it up, the lamp ignites and runs for a split second and then the whole thing shuts down completely.”

  John squinted at the waveforms on Fred’s oscilloscope screen. The tiredness from his rotten night’s sleep made the images blur. “You know, I think you have got the software screwed up. Maybe you should get Judy Chen to check it out.”

  Fred looked at John knowingly, “I think you just want a chance to flirt with Judy and ogle her big tits! It seems like every problem I have is always an excuse to call Judy over here so that you can get an eye-full. Her broken English bugs me.”

  John bristled, rising to the bait. “In these microprocessor controlled products the software tells the circuit how to behave and controls almost everything. Quite likely if you have it out of adjustment then the operation of the whole thing is wrecked. Look, Judy is down the other end of the lab and she just finished on Henry’s bench. Now is your chance to get her over here to help.”

  Fred squirmed at the suggestion that he had messed up, and peevishly threw another barb at John. “Well, how come you know exactly where Judy is in the building and what she is doing?” he said softly. Then he shook his head, acknowledged defeat, and pragmatically yelled out: “Hey Judy – can you help over here for a minute?”

  Judy Chen glanced across the big laboratory and a glimmer of understanding flickered momentarily across her flat oriental face. She acknowledged Fred with a peremptory nod and smile.

  As she walked down the next aisle between benches carrying a laptop under her arm, she serenely surveyed the rows of benches with development projects like a teacher contemplating the progress of her students. About 5’8’’, she wore a short skirt and a loose fitting safari vest. As she crossed the laboratory, ten pairs of eyes followed her, trying to imagine the curvaceous figure concealed under the baggy safari vest that she habitually wore in order not to get hit upon by amorous young engineers.

  She changed course and walked round to where John and Fred were pondering over Fred’s miscreant circuit. “What’s problem?”

  “Well, just watch,” responded Fred.

  He powered up his circuit. Once again the light came on with a bright flash and then went out.

  “OK,” said Judy with a faint smile.

  “Let me have talk with her.”

  “With her?” queried John. If only she didn’t have a boyfriend.

  “Yes –with her,” said Judy in a soft but firm voice. “All these systems are female.”

  With that she opened up her laptop, and put it down on Fred’s bench. Then she took a yard long cable that was dangling from the laptop and plugged it into the center of Fred’s circuit.

  She punched a few keys and looked at the screen of complicated computer code. “O.K. baby, I understand,”
she murmured. She looked up at Fred with a half-smile. “Igniting one of these fluorescent lamps is like girl making out with a boy who gets excited too easily – If the lamp ignites before the filaments are hot, then the inverter has already given everything it has and there is nothing but frustration. What you must do is slow down the initial advance and then things will keep going.”

  Damn she’s so smart. Any of the guys would be quoting equations and measuring energy flows, and she can interpret the whole thing in terms of human relationships! John glanced at Fred who was blushing a little.

  She typed away at the keyboard. “I’ve slowed down initial turn on and now she’ll be much happier. O.K. baby – everything fine now.” John and Fred looked at each other and rolled their eyes. “Try again now,” she ordered.

  Fred toggled the power switch and the lamp attached to his circuit grew brighter and brighter and then stayed on at full brightness.

  “There – happiness is long satisfying ignition,” said Judy smugly.

  Oh, would I like to ignite with you.

  She unplugged her laptop. “Your new software saved on server as file 8-10-10, OK?”

  Its now or never, while she is feeling triumphant I’ve got a chance of a sympathetic ear.

  “Hey Judy – I need a coffee from the break room – could you spare a few minutes to talk about a problem of mine?” said John hesitantly.

  Judy looked at him curiously. After a moment’s reflection she replied, “Sure, I haven’t had my morning tea yet.”

  Chapter 2

  In the breakroom, staff from all departments were milling around, putting their lunches in the fridge, fixing coffee and tea and generally socializing. Judy put a bag of green tea in a cup of hot water.

  Whatever has John come up with now? She thought. They sat down at a side table. They looked an odd pair, John with his round face, long brown hair and ruddy complexion, and Judy with her shapely figure, black hair and infectious smile. None of the staff gave them a second glance because everybody in Lighting Enterprises knew that John was the inventor and the source of the company’s break-out products. They had often seen him with Judy the intuitive interpreter who could write the code to make John’s visions come into reality. When they got together to work good things usually came out of it.

  “So what’s problem?” said Judy.

  John seemed to be fidgeting awkwardly and kept staring absentmindedly at Judy’s chest.

  Come on John, there is nothing to embarrass you. I’m covered up in my lab camouflage. “Did you have a nice weekend?” she said, trying to put John at ease.

  John suddenly sucked in his breath and plunged in to what was on his mind. “Last night I was fiddling around in my home laboratory trying to build myself a fancy metal detector - a magnetometer. I had wound wires into a coil about four inches across, in two halves because I did not have a single bobbin big enough to hold all the turns I needed. I simply glued the two coils together so that the total turns were right.” John paused and sipped his coffee, lifting his eyes to look Judy straight in the face. “When I put some battery power to the coil, I felt it twitch in my hand. Now you know that an electrified coil can only move itself in response to something magnetic, like another coil or a piece of iron. But here on my table there was nothing magnetic around and yet the coil twitched.” He gesticulated with his hand to exemplify something moving sharply upwards.

  “Acting on a hunch I put it on my kitchen scales. When I turned on the power, the weight changed from 2.5 oz to 2.3 oz. Now, when you join a battery onto a coil like this it produces a magnetic field, which means a region around it which will attract or repel a magnet or a similar coil, depending on which way up they are. I realized then that I had joined the coils up back to back instead of front to back so that they counteracted each other’s magnetic field and produced no magnetic field at all.” As he spoke he moved his hands in the air, first putting the palms together and then putting the palm of one hand against the back of the other.

  “So I joined them up normally and then the effect disappeared. I fiddled around for the whole evening doing it over and over again, and I am convinced that it is reproducible. It happens either way up, but not when the coils are on their edge. Do you have any clue what could be going on?”

  Oh my god. Nobody has ever seen anything like that before. That’s not in any of the textbooks. Trust John to blunder around half drunk and come up with something that nobody in the world has ever spotted before. “John, I never heard of anything like that. That’s way outside my expertise. Are you sure you not been drinking? Like at that frat party when you were a physics senior and I was a new grad student. I can remember how after you had a few beers you took over a computer and made it burp and swear.

  “Do you remember Tony Shepard, the physics teacher? Now he would be a good person to ask – he knew about all kinds of weird stuff. I’ve got his phone number - he and I once went on date when I was a grad student and he was teaching solid state physics classes.”

  “I remember Tony Shepard,” groaned John. His face flickered with conflict as he seemed to be thinking over the pros and cons of Professor Tony Shepard.

  He’s really good looking. I adored that thick blond hair with the sharply chiseled features and pointy nose. I wouldn’t mind seeing him again now that I’m all alone.

  “Let me call him,” said Judy.

  She reached into her safari vest and pulled out a cell phone. “Hello Tony? It’s me Judy Chen from your physics class – you remember we saw that art exhibition together? Yes – that’s right. Look I have strangest story here. My friend John Sykes – he was in your physics class too – has done this amazing experiment in which he puts an electric current through a coil and somehow its weight appears to change. It blows my mind away because magnetic coils shouldn’t have anything to do with gravity.” Judy smiled and chuckled at some witty remark that Tony must have made. “Could you come over and look with us and explain what’s going on? … Well could you call me back and we could fix another time? OK – talk to you later.”

  Turning to John, she continued: “He has a reception at the house of his department head, Professor Jones, this evening. He is going to check his calendar when he gets back to desk in a few minutes." Judy stared solemnly at John “I guess that’s all I can do for now. We should get back to work.” That’s a pity, I would have liked to have seen Tony again.

  John looked crushed. He rested his face in his hands.

  Judy sipped her tea and reflected upon the priorities of her job stack. The moment of quiet was interrupted by the ringing of her cell phone. She snatched it from her pocket. “Hello … well tonight would be great – we fix you dinner. John, give me your address.” John scribbled his address on a napkin and slid it over. “It’s at 79 Oakwood Street, right near the campus … say 7? Great. See you then.” Looking at John, she said “It turns out that Tony’s reception is next week. So I have arranged for him to come to your place at 7p.m. tonight.”

  “I owe you Judy,” said John. “I can see Miller staring at us from across the lab. He knows my present project doesn’t have any software and thinks we are wasting time.”

  “Let’s get back work,” said Judy.

  “Yes, before the old curmudgeon starts creating,” said John. “See you around 7 tonight, OK?” Judy nodded and smiled. Whatever is a kermugon?

  Chapter 3

  On his way home John stopped by Panda Express, the fast food chain, and picked up a small feast for his guests. As he drove home, his mother’s words from his childhood were running through his mind: “Make sure that everybody has plenty to eat and drink! Anticipate their every need so that they feel comfortable in your home!”

  When he got home John looked around his apartment. This place looks like shit. It was littered with books on electronics and physics. Stuff was strewn everywhere, perhaps a sign of a creative but disorderly mind. He mentally compared his disorganized apartment with his parent’s neat little farm in the Iowa corn fie
lds. This made his thoughts flash back to the way other children looked at him in school because he could not help getting the top grades in science and math. There was his speech as valedictorian of the school at the school graduation. His first sight of the enormous blue pyramid at Cal State Long Beach where the physics department combined his loves of physics and astronomy. The pain on his parents faces as they took out a mortgage on the farm to pay for his college tuition. As he worked around the apartment, picking up litter and vacuuming the living room floor, John felt an agonizing tension. Suppose I made some mistake in my experiments last night? Suppose there was some amateurish oversight which Tony might ridicule me for? John cringed at imagining Tony pointing out that the whole effect which he had seen was the result of a silly mistake. I’ll have to admit that I did it by joining the coils together wrongly in the first place –that’s bad enough, he thought. Then his fears were heightened a step further: He could humiliate me in front of Judy. The more he agonized over the situation, the more he realized that he had already taken an irrevocable step which was going to affect his professional standing, one way or another, forever. He thought about having a shot of whisky before his guests arrived to calm his nerves. Then he remembered his mother’s warnings that it was rude to start drinking before guests arrived – it was always obvious and looked terrible. He braced himself for a rough evening.

  Chapter 4

  As Judy drove across town to John’s house, her mind was haunted by the memory of the last time she had been with Tony Sheppard, several years before. Coming as a student from Beijing, Judy had been awestruck at the sight of the blonde hair of Professor Tony Shepard. Back in Beijing, she had mainly only seen pictures of blond haired people and had rarely seen one in real life. For her, standard hair was black, strong and coarse. “My engineering in Beijing has been all down and dirty power transmission,” she had told her counselor. “I need some experimental physics to learn the fundamentals of what is really going on.” Tony Shepard ran the experimental physics lab.

 

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