146 A Vision of the Future of Electricity
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2026/04/28
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Wireless Power Transmission: Perhaps the True Future of MOS
Traditional power grids are wired, fixed-point, and unidirectional by nature. In essence, they force energy into one-dimensional transmission lines, resulting in high energy loss, vulnerable security, and a fundamental inability to achieve true global optimality.
I have long held an intuition: the real arena for the Multi-Origin Curvature (MOS) theory may not be the wired power grid, but wireless power transmission.
MOS describes the geometry of fields, the high-dimensional flow of energy, and multi-node coordination. Wireless power transmission takes the exact form of unconstrained by cables, with energy freely coupled in spatial fields — transmitters and receivers can act as countless “origins”, and energy travels along geodesics in space, which naturally aligns with MOS’s core ideas of high dimensions, multi-origin architecture, and flexible coordination.
More than a century ago, Nikola Tesla had already envisioned this.
He built the Wardenclyffe Tower, dreaming of delivering electricity to any corner of the globe without wires, through resonance between the Earth and the ionosphere. He too sought a world where energy flows freely, boundless in reach.
Tesla’s era lacked high-frequency power devices and modern field theory, so his vision never materialized. Today, however, wireless power transmission — especially magnetically coupled resonant wireless power transfer — has moved from the laboratory to real-world applications. Meanwhile, MOS provides a brand-new geometric and systemic framework that can rigorously formulate and solve problems of multi-node coupling, field interaction, and global optimization.
Put simply:
- The traditional power grid represents the single-origin, low-dimensional, wired past;
- Wireless power transmission + MOS represents the multi-origin, high-dimensional, field-based future.
Tesla’s intuition a century ago and the direction of MOS today point to the same distant goal:
to free energy from cables, so it may reach everywhere as freely, efficiently, and safely as air itself.