Whilst I was at the gym today I figured out how it was done. Firstly the building or temple room must be either conical or pyramidal. secondly the walls of that conical/ pyramidal structure must be composed of a stone which contains Iron, Iron plates may also be incorporated into the wall structure. Thirdly a capstone which is magnetic must be installed at the apex of the cone/pyramid. Fourthly the object being levitated must be symmetrical with its centre of mass at its geometric centre. Fifthly the object being levitated must be composed of either a ferromagnetic material which may be magnetised or not.



What happens is that the wall both extents the influence of the magnet and shapes the flux lines because it contains Iron. What you have is essentially a magnetic cone. The flux limes are wider at the base whilst they converge towards the apex. The result of this is that a magnetic object is drawn upwards into the magnetic cone. Now lets imagine you have a hollow iron ball which you wish to make float in mid-air. What you do is balance the upward magnetic pull with the downwards pull of gravity until both are equal. The way that is done is by adding sand into the hollow iron sphere until its weight is just enough to stop it being pulled up into the vault of the ceiling but not enough to overcome the pull of the magnet capstone. Based on the analysis of the temple at India it conforms to all these conditions including the sun object which was said to be levitated. Would be very impressive to view...actually I would love to design and build such a temple!