Lazar 1989: Element 115 Doesn’t Exist — It’s the Fuel. Reactor Bombards It with Protons, Generates a Gravity-A Wave, the Craft “Falls” Toward Its Destination. In 2003, Scientists Synthesize Element 115. Named Moscovium in 2016. Synthesized Version Decays in Milliseconds — But Lazar Always Said the Off-Planet Stable Isotope Was Different.

The Element 115 claim is the most empirically testable part of Lazar’s testimony and the most analytically significant. LAZAR’S 1989 CLAIM: Element 115 does not exist on Earth’s periodic table. It is the fuel for the alien craft’s propulsion system. The reactor bombards Element 115 with protons, causing it to release anti-matter particles that generate a “gravity-A wave.” The craft amplifies this gravity wave through three emitters on its underside — creating a distortion of spacetime toward which the craft then “falls,” allowing near-instantaneous travel. The craft does not move through space conventionally — it bends space toward itself. WHAT HAPPENED: In 2003, Russian and American scientists at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna synthesized an element with 115 protons. It was officially named Moscovium and added to the periodic table in 2016. TIMELINE: Lazar described Element 115 in 1989. Scientists confirmed its existence as a synthesizable element in 2003 — 14 years later. Lazar had always maintained this specific distinction: the naturally occurring, off-planet stable isotope he worked with has entirely different properties from the highly unstable version synthesized in a lab, which decays in milliseconds. Known isotopes of Moscovium decay in 220-650 milliseconds — far too unstable to function as a fuel source. This distinction is either Lazar’s escape hatch from falsification or a precise technical claim that remains unresolved. The stable isotope question has never been answered. The gravity wave amplifier description from 1989 maps directly onto the propulsion physics of both the Tic Tac (which Lazar recognized when shown the footage) and Charles Buhler’s propellantless thrust research at NASA.

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