Aggie Spheres or Mulvaney globes, as they were sometimes called, were wood-turned artworks by the Mulvaney family on Earth but modified with special circuitry by the Aggies.
The circuitry could, when activated, give off a seemingly gravelectric field first postulated by the physicist Sciama in the twentieth century. These fields, when activated, had the property of correcting the disruption of a spherical region of space centered around the artwork.
This inverse effect of gravelectric fields, that is, the conversion of electric to gravitational energy, was unique to this device. How the Aggies accomplished this with a seemingly thin-film electronic circuit, no one was able to figure out, including the great physicist, Dag Mach, though he conjectured that the power source was the zero-point energy of space.
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