About Curt Renshaw:

Curt Renshaw has a BSEE from Georgia Institute of Technology, 1982, with master's work at George Washington University and Ga. Tech. Mr. Renshaw’s master’s work focuses on electromagnetic theory and relativistic physics. In 1982, Mr. Renshaw went to work at the Navy EHF Satcom Program Office of the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (then NAVELEX) in Washington, D.C. The NESP program was the Navy side of the MILSTAR communications program, and placed the first operational EHF satellite in service. In 1985 he founded Tele-Consultants, Inc. (TCI) to provide engineering, logistics and management support to the Department of the Navy and other Defense customers. TCI employees number over 125 and encompass five states. For more information about TCI, visit the Tele-Consultants, Inc. homepage at http://www.teleinc.com.

Mr. Renshaw has devoted the past twenty years to studies of alternatives to special and general relativity, culminating in a book: The Restoration of Space and Time, Galiliean-Newtonian Relativity in the 21st Century. The book develops fully, from first principles and in laymen’s terms, the Radiation Continuum Model of electromagnetic radiation. From this simple and elegant replacement to Einstein’s second postulate of light, RCM is shown to eliminate the entire basis for special relativity, including time dilation, length contraction, relative simultaneity and mass increase with velocity. As a result, the basis for general relativity is also stricken, and it is demonstrated that the universe indeed behaves according to Galilean ideas of distance, time, velocity and mass.

Mr. Renshaw has consulted with physicists and astronomers from around the globe, several of whose web sites are linked through this one. Curt’s work has been reviewed and discussed at length with Dr. Howard Hayden and Dr. Cynthia Whitney, editors of Galilean Electrodynamics, and Dr. Roy Keys, editor of Apieron. Mr. Renshaw has spent several discussion sessions with Grote Reber, the father of radio astronomy, Dr. G. P. Rodrique, professor of Electromagnetics at Ga Tech, Dr. Peter Brown of the U.K., Dr. P. Chubey and Svetlana Tolchelnikova-Murri of Pulkova Observatory near St. Petersburg, Russia, and Drs. Xu and Xu of China, collaborating on a joint paper with the latter. RCM theory has been discussed with Dr. William Kalfelz, instrumental in much of the pioneering efforts of the theory’s development, and Dr. David Finklestein, also of Georgia Tech, and author of Quantum Relativity. Mr. Renshaw has also been engaged in several lively debates with Mike Lemonick, science editor of Time Magazine and author of The Light at the Edge of the Universe, though Mr. Lemonick has yet to be thoroughly persuaded as to the merits of the theory.

In addition to a long list of published credits on the subject of Relativity Theory, Mr. Renshaw has presented papers at three independent sessions of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), and presented four papers at two independent sessions of the IVth International Conference on Space, Time and Gravitation, September 16 - 29, 1996, hosted by the Russian Academy of Sciences in St. Petersburg, Russia.

Curt is married to his wife, Martha of twenty years. Curt has two daughters, Catherine Sophia Rinaldi and Taylor Marie Feagin, each born in 1981, and twin sons, David Eugene Renshaw, PhD and Albert Einstein Renshaw, PhD, born in 1994. Curt and Martha lead marriage strengthening groups in Atlanta and around the world in Kenya, Bosnia and Brazil.  The entire family loves to snow ski whenever conditions allow.


Questions? Comments?crenshaw@teleinc.com