You can suppose nonsense if you want. Planck and Schrodinger paved the way in quantum physics for the relationship between frequency and energy, and mass / particle duality. Tesla would have nothing to do with quantum physics, but they made real what he only arm-waved about.
"Scalar waves" are nonsense. You might like to think of them as longitudinal waves, except that electromagnetism propagates by transverse waves. I've tried to see what there was behind it, and it is mostly arm-waving assertion and a complete lack of equations. Maybe you can get some kind of phenomenon by applying a high-voltage alternating current to a terminal electrode and develop a time-varying electrostatic field. In which case, it should be subject to Maxwell's equations. Obviously, no one has found any utility in it.
But Planck and Schrodiner were the first to formulate the equations that linked waves to energy and to matter, using quantum physics, which Tesla abhorred.
You can suppose nonsense if you want. Planck and Schrodinger paved the way in quantum physics for the relationship between frequency and energy, and mass / particle duality. Tesla would have nothing to do with quantum physics, but they made real what he only arm-waved about.
"Scalar waves" are nonsense. You might like to think of them as longitudinal waves, except that electromagnetism propagates by transverse waves. I've tried to see what there was behind it, and it is mostly arm-waving assertion and a complete lack of equations. Maybe you can get some kind of phenomenon by applying a high-voltage alternating current to a terminal electrode and develop a time-varying electrostatic field. In which case, it should be subject to Maxwell's equations. Obviously, no one has found any utility in it.
But Planck and Schrodiner were the first to formulate the equations that linked waves to energy and to matter, using quantum physics, which Tesla abhorred.