Gravitational Micro-Force Research

The iasoberg™ Technology

Science Fiction — or Breakthrough?

An iasoberg™ is a tiny, unexplained gravitational force — and the predictive Technology built around it is now being used to identify severe weather events across the continental United States.

Earthquakes. Tornadoes. Hailstorms.
Mapped to your location. Any moment in time.

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Technology & Impact

The Science Behind the Technology

How a tiny unexplained gravitational force — first observed with a pendulum in 1954 — became the foundation for predicting earthquakes, tornadoes, and severe weather across the continental United States.

Origins of the Iasoberg™ Technology

The Iasoberg™ Technology traces its intellectual roots to the work of Nobel Prize-winning economist and physicist Professor Maurice Allais, who in June 1954 observed an anomalous deviation in the swing of a pendulum during a solar eclipse. This unexplained gravitational anomaly — now called the Allais — has since been replicated in other eclipse experiments around the world.

The Iasoberg™ Technology takes the Allais Effect as its foundation and extends it to a global predictive framework. The core insight is that the gravitational fields of the Sun and the supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy are not uniform — they are subtly deformed, creating small but detectable force variations at specific regions on the Earth's surface at any given moment.

These regions of deformed gravitational force are what we call iasobergs (pronounced ice-o-bergs). Like the vast submerged bulk of an iceberg, the forces at play are largely invisible to conventional instruments, yet their influence on geophysical phenomena appears to be measurable and — critically — predictable.

The Technology computes the positions of these Iasoberg™ regions on the Earth's surface with high accuracy for any moment in time between 2500 BC and 2500 AD, creating a 5,000-year window for both historical correlation and future prediction.

Development Milestones

1954

The Allais Effect Observed

Professor Maurice Allais observes an anomalous pendulum deviation during a solar eclipse in Paris — the first recorded evidence of an unexplained gravitational micro-force that would underpin the entire Iasoberg™ framework.

Foundation

Technology Conception

Building on the Allais Effect and the concept of gravitational field deformation by the Sun and galactic center, the Iasoberg™ Technology is conceived — establishing a mathematical relationship between celestial body positions and surface force regions on Earth.

9-Year Study

Hail Validation

A rigorous 9-year study examines the correlation between Iasoberg™ positions and days with the highest incidence of large hail events across the continental USA. Results show measurable success, leading to further Technology refinement.

2-Year Study

Tornado Outbreak Validation

A two-year study into tornado outbreak days correlates predicted Iasoberg™ positions with actual tornado events, demonstrating promising predictive accuracy for one of the most difficult weather phenomena to forecast.

Ongoing

Earthquake & TEC Research

Current investigations examine correlation with magnitude 7+ earthquakes, US government Total Electron Content (TEC) data, and Clear Air Turbulence affecting commercial aviation.

The Scientific Foundations

The Iasoberg™ Technology proposes that the gravitational fields of the Sun and the black hole at the galactic center are deformed in a manner analogous to the curvature of space-time by a massive body — and that these deformations produce measurable micro-forces at specific locations on Earth's surface.

The Allais Effect

Professor Allais discovered that during solar eclipses, a pendulum exhibits an anomalous rotation that cannot be explained by Newtonian or Einsteinian gravity alone. This tiny, unexplained deviation is the "Iasoberg™ force" in its most directly observable form.

The effect has been independently replicated during multiple eclipse events since 1954, lending growing credibility to the existence of a gravitational micro-force that current physics has yet to fully explain.

Barycenters & Celestial Alignment

The Technology incorporates the positions of the solar system's barycenter — the true center of mass around which the Sun and planets orbit — relative to the Earth and the galactic center at any given moment.

Specific alignments of the Sun, Moon, galactic center, and barycenter create configurations that concentrate Iasoberg™ forces at predictable surface locations, which the Technology maps with high precision.

Potential Impact

🌪️

Severe Weather Warning

Identifying high-risk days for tornado outbreaks and hailstorms weeks or months in advance could transform emergency preparedness, allowing communities and insurers to take proactive measures that save lives and reduce property damage.

🌍

Earthquake Prediction

If the Technology's correlations with major seismic events are validated, even probabilistic advance warning of magnitude 7+ earthquakes could be among the most significant scientific achievements of the modern era.

✈️

Aviation Safety

Clear Air Turbulence causes hundreds of passenger injuries annually and is nearly impossible to detect in advance. As global warming intensifies, CAT is expected to increase — making a predictive tool potentially invaluable to the aviation industry.

📡

Space Weather Correlation

Ongoing investigation into correlation with Total Electron Content (TEC) data may reveal connections between Iasoberg™ forces and ionospheric behavior — with implications for communications and GPS systems.

"Correlating past cataclysmic events with the locations of iasobergs™ at those points in time will lead to ever-more-precise prediction of future cataclysmic events, thus giving rise to advanced warning systems. The savings in lives and property damage could be astronomical."

Dive Deeper into the Science Behind the Predictions

Explore the theory that makes it all possible — from the basics to the advanced model, the role of the barycenter, and ongoing blog discussion.