Klaus Kronenberg

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Klaus Kronenberg
Born March 28, 1922(1922-03-28)
Solingen, Germany
Died March 14, 2008 (aged 86)
Redlands, California, U.S.
Residence Germany, United States
Citizenship German (1922–1953)
American (1953–2008)
Fields Physics
Known for Magetic Water Conditioning, magnetic levitation

Klaus J. Kronenberg was a German-born and educated physicist. He fought in Stalingrad as soldier of the Wehrmacht, but due to frostbite injuries, was forced to return home. In Germany he studied physics, specializing in magnetics.

In the 1940s, Dr. Kronenberg studied with such eminent scholars as Werner Heisenberg, Max Planck, et al, in the fields of physics, resonance, water structure, crystallography, and magnetics.[1]

From 1953 thru 1963 he worked for the Indiana General Corporation, Magnetics Division, Valparaiso, Indiana.

His patents include: - Patent der Bundesrepublik Deutschland No. 970709, USA Patent 3,354,713 (Acousto-Optical Signal System for Probing the D-Layer of the Ionosphere. Also pending patent #06/312,612.

Throughout the 1990's he continued his research on the structure of water and the effects of physical conditioning (through a resonance phenomenon) on water (magnetic water treatment). He was one of the few scientists ever publishing a positive effect of magnetic water treatment. [2]

Dr. Klaus J. Kronenberg was also closely involved with the development of magnetic levitation transport (Magnetrain Project w/Roy Vincent) [3] and participated and contributed to the First International Conference on Magnetic Levitation at INTERMAG 1974, Toronto, Canada and a host of other 'mag-lev' related conferences.

He spent his remaining years with family, enjoying retirement. A dedicated believer in being a lifelong-learner, he struggled to understand difficult systems just days before he passed. His love of nature, thirst for knowledge, curiosity, and his sense of humor are survived by his wife of sixty years Hannah Kronenberg and their three children.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Dr. Kronenberg. http://scaleaway.com/Kronenberg.html
  2. ^ IEEE Transactions on Magnetics, Vol. Mag-21, No. 5, September 1985, pages 2059-2061
  3. ^ Maglev News. April 4, 1994. Vol 2 No 12. ISSN 1065-6561

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