Sunday, 31 January 2016

#72 ITE (Invisible Terrestrial Entities) and the Santilli Telescope

© Matthew Paulson / Flickr . Inset: Photograph of an ITE-2. Credit: Dr Santilli.
Tampa Bay in Florida


A new report published January 20, 2016 from the latest edition of the American Journal of Modern Physics has revealed that a a newly developed telescope with concave lenses has observed, for the first time, entities in our terrestrial environment that are invisible to our eyes and to conventional Galileo telescopes with convex lenses.  

Two types of Invisible Terrestrial Entities (ITE) were found in the investigation of matter versus antimatter detections using new telescopes with concave lenses to see antimatter-light that has a “negative” index of refraction instead of conventional convex lenses that have a matter-light positive index of refraction, as reported by physicist Ruggero M. Santilli, owner of Thunder Energies Corp., Tarpon Springs, Florida.

He reports that ITE-Type 1 are “located mostly in the areas of terrestrial or lunar (moon) orbits” and ITE-Type 2 are invisible in the Earth's atmosphere “located directly over sensitive civilian, industrial and military installations, and appear to behave in a way strongly suggesting their unauthorized surveillance.”