The beginning of Project Montauk dates back to 1943 where a stealth radar was located inside the USS Eldridge.
When the Eldridge was placed at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard it was also called the "Philadelphia Experiment".
This topic has been explored in many other books and films. Just a quick mention.
Also known as Project Rainbow for those who used it.
It was created as a top secret arsenal to help end World War II.
The equivalent of today's spy targeting system, Project Rainbow was created as a technique to remain undetectable on enemy radar.
This was created by creating a so-called "electromagnetic cylinder" which, as a supernatural phenomenon, separated the enemy's radar waves.
The so-called "electromagnetic cylinder" completely changed the electromagnetic field of a particular area, in this case the field pointing to the USS Eldridge.
The main goal was to make the ship invisible to radar, which had an unexpected and drastic side effect.
The ship became invisible to the naked eye and left the space-time continuum. Soon the ship suddenly reappeared in Norfolk, Virginia, a hundred miles away.
The project turned out to be a success from a material point of view, but it had drastic consequences from a material point of view.
When the USS Eldridge "moved" from the U.S. Naval Shipyard to Norfolk and returned, the crew were completely confused. They had left the physical universe and had nothing to support themselves near the ship. Despite returning to the US Navy Shipyard, some of them stuck to the ship's hull spontaneously.
Those who survived were in a state of mental confusion and absolute terror. The team was removed from the navy station as "mentally unsound" after spending sufficient time rehabilitating.
The status of "mentally unsound" despite their testimony was the easiest and most advantageous to ignore, their own stories were rejected.
This put Project Rainbow on hold.
There was a sudden pause, and there was no certainty that people would survive further experiments on humans. It was too risky.
Dr. John Von Neumann, who oversaw the project, was suddenly called upon to work on the Manhattan Project.
This took over the design of the atomic bomb, which was intended to be the weapon of choice to end World War II.
Despite this, Project Rainbow was revived in the late 1940s.
This culminated in the space-time hole in Montauk in 1983.
The purpose of this book is to understand the research on the 1983 Philadelphia Experiment in Montauk.
I would like to point out that I, Preston Nichols, had experience with this.
NOTE FROM CO-AUTHOR(from Peter Moon):
Preston's goal was to defend the confidential document he had read about the Philadelphia Experiment.
Over time, even more details will be revealed about this in this book.
Following the publication of the original book Me, I received a report from Al Bielek that Preston Nichols was supposed to have had the original footage of the Philadelphia Experiment, but had returned it to the Government.
Al was rather outraged by the whole thing.
When I asked Preston if it was true. He stated that he was forced to give back the footage because it did not belong to him.
Years later I learned that Preston had read the report on the Philadelphia Experiment while he was working for LISP on Long Island. The full name was the Air Force Instrument Laboratory. It was true that he returned the previous evidence because he signed the Code of Confidentiality Clause.