User:Juancitodelaverdad/sandbox

Russell Alexander Chihoski was born in Providence R.I. on 23 September 1931 to Alec Chihoski and Helen Karis. He graduated from Classical High School in Jan 1950, and MIT in Jun 1954 as BS in Materials Engineering. He married Caroline Disario in Caracas in Jan 1957, and they proceeded toward raising Helen, Mary, Teresa, Russell, Gabriel, and Paul. He joined the Martin Airplane Company in Baltimore in Feb 1957 working as assistant factory foreman then as quality engineer. Subsequently after four years out in the field he relocated to Littleton Colorado and the Denver Division of the Martin Aerospace Company where, after assistant foreman of the factory, he worked in engineer/scientist positions in Advanced Manufacturing Technology and Materials Engineering until he retired in Feb 1991. Among numerous published works were notable papers uncovering the physics behind certain manufacturing effects. He was awarded Gold and a Silver medals by the American Welding Society. He presented papers for the American Society for Metals on aluminum conductivity. He was invited to address the IEEE, the Society for Nondestructive Testing, and the Magneto-hydrodynamics Conference sponsored by the Oakridge National Laboratories. Martin Marietta Corporation awarded him, in Washington, Jefferson Silver Cups for the most important scientific works published in 1973, 1980, and 1984, recognizing its Scientist Of The Year. He has lectured or contributed in panel discussions at MIT, Ohio University, the USAF Academy, Colorado School of Mines, Colorado University, University of Tennessee, and the Los Alamos and Lawrence Laboratories. After his retirement he turned to examining positions that theoretical physics and cosmology hold in their communities seeking to find graphic presentations that evolve from their conclusions. He asserts none of his thoughts come from formal training in theoretical physics but are products of extrapolation and imagination; insisting nonetheless his proposals are not science fiction. ​​​Selected important publications— • Variation in Aluminum Spot Welds, Welding Journal Dec 1970 (discovering how surface conditions create extraordinary unwanted strengths in resistance spot welds.) • Expansion and Stress Around Aluminum Weld Puddles, Welding Journal September 1979 (by interpreting Moiré fringes taken from double-exposure photographs of line-engraved panels observe the strain and distortion of the experimental plate’s entire surface at-once during its welding.) • Conductivity-Hardness Reveal Heat Treat History of Aluminum Alloys Part I Metal Progress May 1983, Part II July 1983. (using a magnetic induction probe to fill-in an uncomplicated five dimension graph whose measurements gage the efficacy of the steps a aluminum plate experiences in its factory heat-treatments. Furthermore electrical conductivity here provides nondestructive evidence of the product’s uniform strength.) • Presumption of Gravitons Solves Problems, © 2014, a thought-experiment that supports the unusual thesis that gravity is a push. Using the gravity particle it shows how it is push that has been producing familiar results. It lays out how the graviton phenomenon coincides with the expanding universe and dark energy. • Speed of Light Men's Club 3rd ed, (Davies-West Publisher, © 2006,2013, Tattered Cover Book Store) a 570 page book which supposes and describes the existence of a grand energy hiding in the gravity phenomenon. It uses this proposition to describe the magnificent —yet possibly harmful— effects on the course of human history if a grand energy is found; but then to-the-contrary what will happen if a grand energy is not found, and soon.