“Long ago human beings recognized that all perceptible matter comes from a primary substance, filling all space—the Akasha or Luminiferous Ether which is acted upon by the lifegiving Prana or creative force, calling into existence in never ending cycles all things and phenomena” - Nikola Tesla
New energy has many names.
That's because inventors, physicists, spiritualists and researchers have studied and come to understand it at different points in time, giving it a different contextual meaning over the ages.
For example, the term Luminiferous Ether was popularly used in the 19th century, to refer to the medium which propagated light. Once quantum physics became widely studied, terms like quantum oscillations and vacuum fluctuations came into being to describe the seemingly random vibrations at 0 Kelvin (-459.67°F).
A well known spiritual teacher Deepak Chopra, talks about self-power, the power within each of us, similarly to how scientists describe the quantum field. He describes it as “the field of pure potentiality, the immeasurable potential of all that was, all that is and all that will be… It is the organizing power of the universe because the self of the individual is the ground state of your existence, which is also the ground state of all”.
Today, the term free energy, new energy or quantum energy is most used. Whatever it's called, there's only one of it. It's the inexhaustible, fundamental energy field which pervades the universe and supports all matter.
Types of New Energy Technologies
Electromagnetic motors
Back electromotive force (EMF) is the energy created when there are sudden changes in the flow of a current in a magnetic field. This type of NET harnesses this ‘drag force’ into useful work.
Permanent magnet motors
Magnets naturally polarize the quantum environment around it, causing great streams of charged energy flow around itself. When many are placed in clever geometrical patterns, a stream of new energy flows into the device.
Plasma systems
Plasma is highly ionized gas, the 4th state of matter. It has electromagnetic properties that can be used for useful work. One example is cavitation: microscopic water bubbles that implode under high pressure and release impressive amounts of energy.
Low Energy Nuclear Reactions
LENR is the process of harnessing the energy intrinsic in spinning atoms such as copper and iron. These spinning atoms when placed in special magnetic fields resonate and amplify space energy in the process.