[Vo]:GPT-4 Goes Real-Time

2023-05-15 Thread Terry Blanton
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/openai-is-rolling-out-a-game-changing-feature-to-chatgpt-this-week-that-could-revolutionize-how-we-use-the-internet/ar-AA1bdFve?cvid=a4acde83246f4582b43984f1f4f74464=15


Re: [Vo]:LENR-CANR.org ChatBot improved

2023-05-15 Thread Jed Rothwell
Beware of hallucinations! This is completely wrong:

What are the author(s), title and URL of the Pd-B experiments at China Lake?
BOT: The author of the paper on Pd-B experiments at China Lake is Miles, M.
and B.F. Bush. The title of the paper is "Palladium-Boron Cathodes Produce
Excess Power in Electrolytic Cells Using Heavy Water and Lithium Deuteride"
and the URL is http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/MilesMpalladiumb.pdf. The paper
describes electrochemical excess power effects produced using Pd-B cathodes
prepared at the US Naval Research Laboratory in nine different experiments
conducted at three different laboratories using three different types of
calorimeters.

The title is made up. There is no paper "Palladium-Boron Cathodes Produce
Excess Power in Electrolytic Cells Using Heavy Water and Lithium
Deuteride." The URL is made up, in the right format for LENR-CANR.org!


This is somewhat right, but somewhat of a hallucination, because Miles did
not sent samples to SRI as far as I know:

Miles sent samples of effluent gas to three other labs to be tested for
helium. Do you know the names of those labs?
BOT: Yes, according to the given information, Miles sent samples of
effluent gas to other laboratories, including the University of Texas and
SRI, to be tested for helium.

[The labs were: University of Texas, Rockwell International, Helium Field
Operations laboratory, Department of the Interior, Amarillo, Texas. The Bot
could not find them all.]


Are there more details about the University of Texas equipment in the paper
by Miles, "ANOMALOUS EFFECTS IN DEUTERATED SYSTEMS"?
BOT: Yes, there are more details about the University of Texas equipment in
the paper "ANOMALOUS EFFECTS IN DEUTERATED SYSTEMS" by Miles, Bush, and
Johnson. According to the paper, the University of Texas used a Bell &
Howell 21-491 mass spectrometer with a cryofiltration system to remove all
gases except helium. The mass spectrometer had sufficient resolution to
separate D2 and He easily when the mass peaks were displayed as analogue
signals on an oscilloscope. The detection limit for helium in their
measurements was approximately 8 X 1011 atoms of 4He in 500 mL of gas
sample.

[ANOMALOUS EFFECTS IN DEUTERATED SYSTEMS is here:
https://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/MilesManomalousea.pdf. It does not say "Bell
& Howell" anywhere in this document. However, this detail is in another
document by Ben Bush: http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/BushBFheliumprod.pdf So,
the ChatBot went looking for that information elsewhere, even though I
asked her about this paper only. The quote "8 X 1011 atoms of 4He in 500 mL
of gas sample" is from Miles, ICCF2, p. 364,
https://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/SIFthescience.pdf. It should be 10^11, but
the text file I uploaded removed the superscript markings for this
particular file.]


What paper describes how  Miles and Bush looked for anomalous radiation
using several different Geiger-Mueller (GM) detectors as well as sodium
iodide (NaI) detectors during electrolysis experiments?
BOT: The paper that describes how Miles and Bush looked for anomalous
radiation using several different Geiger-Mueller (GM) detectors as well as
sodium iodide (NaI) detectors during electrolysis experiments is titled
"Radiation Measurements at China Lake: Real or Artifacts?" and was
presented at The Seventh International Conference on Cold Fusion in 1998.
The paper was authored by Miles, M. and B.F. Bush and can be found at the
URL http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/MilesMradiationm.pdf.

[CORRECT.]

>


[Vo]:LENR-CANR.org ChatBot improved

2023-05-15 Thread Jed Rothwell
I replaced all files with text formatted files, and corrected some that
were not machine readable. I think the ChatBot performance has improved. It
finds URLs more often, and it finds details in the papers. It still misses
some details. See this exchange:

BOT: Hello! What can I do for you today?

Did nasa researchers verify results from K2CO3?
Yes, there have been experiments conducted with K2CO3 electrolyte and
nickel cathodes that have shown excess heat production. NASA has been
involved in attempting to replicate these results, but to my knowledge, no
team has been successful except for the Stanford results and results from
Europe and the USSR. However, there have been some successful replications
of the Case Heat Effect accompanied by some of the largest 4He
concentrations so far observed. As for the specific question about NASA
researchers verifying results from K2CO3, I am not sure. Would you like me
to look up more information on that?

Yes.
After conducting further research, I have not been able to find any
specific information about NASA researchers verifying results from K2CO3
electrolyte and nickel cathodes. However, there have been several other
groups around the world who have reported confirming the generation of
excess heat in such Ni-H2O cells using K2CO3 electrolyte and porous nickel
cathodes. These groups include Mills and Kneizys, Bush and Eagleton of
CalPoly, Pomona, Thermacore Inc., and several groups at BARC in India.
Additionally, Reiko Notoya and Michio Enyo of Hokkaido University in Japan
reported excess heat production in the electrolysis of light water solution
of potassium carbonate using porous nickel cathode.

Are there papers from Fralick, author or coauther?
I'm sorry, but I could not find any information about a Fralick author or
co-author in the given information. Could you provide me with more context
or details about what you are looking for?

Is there a paper authored by Niedra, co-author Fralick?
I apologize for the confusion earlier. After conducting further research, I
was able to find information about a paper authored by J.M. Niedra and Ira
T. Myers titled "Replication of the Apparent Excess Heat Effect in a Light
Water-Potassium Carbonate-Nickel Electrolytic Cell." The paper was
published as a NASA Technical Memorandum in February 1996 and reprinted in
Infinite Energy, Vol.2, No.7, 1996, pp.62-70. However, I could not find any
information about a co-author named Fralick in this paper.

[THIS IS MY MISTAKE. I forgot to include Fralick in the LENR-CANR.org
database. Apparently, the Bot is looking at the ASCII version of the index
that I uploaded, and found this:
Title: Niedra, J.M. and I.T. Myers, Replication of the apparent excess
heat effect in light water-potassium carbonate-nickel-electrolytic
cell. Infinite Energy, 1996. 2(7): p. 62.
URL: http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/NiedraJMreplicatio.pdf
First Author: Niedra, J. M.
All Authors: Niedra, J. M., Myers, I. T.
Keywords: heat-, H2O, Ni, electrolysis, replication Mills
Abstract: Replication of experiments claiming to demonstrate excess heat
production in light water-Ni-K2CO3 electrolytic cells was found to produce
an apparent excess heat of 11 W maximum, for 60 W electrical power into the
cell. Power gains ranged from 1.06 to 1.68. The cell was operated at four
different dc current levels plus one pulsed current run at 1 Hz, 10% duty
cycle. The 28 liter cell used in these verification tests was on loan from
a private corporation whose own tests with similar cells are documented to
produce 50 W steady excess heat for a continuous period exceeding hundreds
of days. The apparent excess heat can not be readily explained either in
terms of nonlinearity of the cell's thermal conductance at a low
temperature differential or by thermoelectric heat pumping. However, the
present data do admit efficient recombination of dissolved hydrogen-oxygen
as an ordinary explanation. Calorimetry methods and heat balance
calculations for the verification tests are described. Considering the
large magnitude of benefit if this effect is found to be a genuine new
energy source, a more thorough investigation of evolved heat in the
nickel-hydrogen system in both electrolytic and gaseous loading cells
remains warranted.]

What is the abstract for ""Replication of the Apparent Excess Heat Effect
in a Light Water-Potassium Carbonate-Nickel Electrolytic Cell."
BOT: The abstract for "Replication of the Apparent Excess Heat Effect in a
Light Water-Potassium Carbonate-Nickel Electrolytic Cell" by J.M. Niedra
and Ira T. Myers is as follows: "Replication of experiments claiming to
demonstrate excess heat production in light water-Ni-K2CO3 electrolytic
cells was found to produce an apparent excess heat of 11 W maximum, for 60
W electrical power into the cell. Power gains ranged from 1.06 to 1.68. The
cell was operated at four different dc current levels plus one pulsed
current run at 1 Hz, 10% duty cycle. The 28 liter cell used in these
verification