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    Walter Dröscher is a physicist who worked at the Austrian Patent office. Now in retirement, he devotes most of his time to developing Heim Theory. It was in 1980 that Dröscher was introduced to the reclusive German physicist Burkhard Heim, thereby becoming one of the few physicists to collaborate with Heim.
    Dröscher quickly familiarised himself with the theory and so was able to ensure that Volume II of Heim's work on Elementary Particle physics was essentially error free (Volume I contained errors that were only later corrected, with the help of Dröscher and others).

    As he got to know the theory better, he saw that by re-introducing the 7th and 8th dimensions discarded in Heim's 6 dimensional theory, two new forces could be derived which are related to normal gravity. Dröscher also made clear the correspondence between Heim Theory and the Standard Model. In 2005, a team consisting of Dröscher and Jochem Häuser (University of Applied Sciences in Salzgitter, Germany; Physicist & Professor of Computer Science) received an award from the AIAA for their application of Heim-Dröscher theory to space propulsion.

    It was Dröscher who provided the explanation for the gravito-magnetic effect seen by Martin Tajmar et al. in a possibly revolutionary experiment backed by ESA in March 2006. Dröscher's calculations, using a relation derived with Heim years before, reproduced the magnitude of this first ever artificially generated gravitational field, to high accuracy (0.0001 g (earth gravity at sea level) compared with 0.00013 g). As of September 2006, two other groups, one at Berkeley, were planning to attempt to reproduce Tajmar's effect.




        Walter Dröscher
     
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