feedback loop, and might be a reason for some stars going nova (although
increasing energy output should result in greater ionization, and hence less H
available to form Hydrinos - a negative feedback loop).
[snip]
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In reply to Horace Heffner's message of Fri, 4 Jan 2008 21:49:45 -0900:
Hi,
[snip]
On Jan 4, 2008, at 7:16 PM, Robin van Spaandonk wrote:
Hi,
I believe I can make a case for Mills' Hydrinos not violating
Heisenberg's
Uncertainty principle.
The latter states:
delta p_x x delta x
Mills'
Hydrinos couldn't exist.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
gallons per barrel = $2.38 wholesale, unrefined cost
Other costs are variously estimated at about $1.00 to $1.20 per gallon:
$0.40 refinery cost
$0.49 tax
$0.04 delivery
$0.10 gas station profit
$1.03 approximate total
- Jed
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
means in this context?
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
may be couple of decades out of date ;)
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
a mirror at 45 deg. behind it, to throw the radiant heat forward.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
is only microns thick, which
is why they can print it on.
[snip]
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
be the point of having the guests pay a fortune to hear it, if they
released the info publicly anyway?
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
fresh water?
Of course, it would only apply to power plants relatively near the coast, and
these may already be using the sea for cooling anyway (as mentioned previously
by Jed?)
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
that it orbits much closer to a nucleus than the electrons -
that's why it works as a nuclear catalyst.
Furthermore, there is no evidence from muon catalyzed fusion experiments that I
am aware of, that the lifetime of the muon is extended.
[snip]
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
.
Resonant tunneling between sites should yield the normal product ratio. IOW one
would expect neutrons proportional to heat IMO.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
about an imaginary species of coral bioengineered
to extract gold from seawater, in Imperial Earth.
No need to bioengineer anything. There is already a species of seeweed that does
this.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
replace the Calcium Phosphate in their bones, freeing Ca for egg
shells.
There is also the possibility that Mg is replacing Ca in the shells.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
In reply to Rick Monteverde's message of Fri, 23 Nov 2007 00:52:09 -1000:
Hi,
[snip]
I stand by what I have written, but it is rapidly becoming obvious that I'm not
going to convince you, so I'm going to quit trying.
Robin van Spaandonk wrote: The last few decades have shown us
, which means that
more heat is not only absorbed (see 1), but also retained.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
France.)
Main page:
http://www.aepler.fr/importateur_officiel_ionise_pour_la_france_007.htm
They appear to be importers of these products:
http://www.ekoterm2001.com/index_en.php
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
by water vapor.
To make matters worse, the tundra is melting too, and also yielding up both CO2
and CH4 (another strong greenhouse gas). Yet another positive feedback loop.
It may not be hundreds of years, but mere decades, if these positive feedback
loops kick in strongly.
Regards,
Robin van
in former Eastern block countries, which he opposes.
However in my opinion, the actions of both the US and Russia are aimed at
protecting (cornering the market) what remains of the World's oil wealth.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
. Any pointers?
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
the cost of the reactor
itself.
[snip]
...which seems a waste to me. Why not use the waste heat for desalination? It
has fresh water as a free byproduct of the cooling process.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
In reply to Jed Rothwell's message of Thu, 15 Nov 2007 17:02:07 -0500:
Hi,
[snip]
Robin van Spaandonk wrote:
...which seems a waste to me. Why not use the waste heat for
desalination? It
has fresh water as a free byproduct of the cooling process.
There have been a few nuclear powered
suppressed by the
government?
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
to pretend that they going to get something bang for
their (our) buck.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
reaction spall neutrons from the
heavier elements (Au, Pt), but have a harder time freeing them from the lighter
Ag. The difference in binding energy between the isotopes of the metals could
provide an indication of the energy of the original particles.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub
is if the output temperature is so low that the Carnot efficiency is
less than 10%.
Of course they still have all those fast neutrons to contend with. (T
breeding).
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
the depth of the water table
is a considerable fraction (or multiple) of the distance between the wire and
the surface.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
figure, assuming that all the Solar energy output goes via the P-P reaction to
He4. This raises the question: What happened to them, if Fred's figure of 3.5
Billion/cm^2 Sec^-1 is correct?
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
to be convincing.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
]
This is precisely why I suggested a 1 transistor HF oscillator on the board
itself, powered by the power from the circuit.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
-
[snip]
He does if he wishes to be convincing.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
I was simply pointing out that if one wishes to convince someone of something,
then one has to play be their rules, not one's own (otherwise they won't be
convinced).
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
the
circuit of ~450mA maximum; to minimum of of ~105mA. This is extraordinary.
It may also be the power source.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
of common elements/compounds.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
/compounds.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
that currently supplies the connection from the signal
generator. It may initially need a battery connected across the power leads of
the oscillator to get it going, but once running it should be possible to remove
the battery.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
]
Actually, it may be even simpler. Since we are assuming that the circuit itself
is already an energy amplifier it may be enough to just couple a quartz
oscillator crystal between the LEDs and the signal input wire.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Tue, 30 Oct 2007 19:41:20 -0700:
Hi,
Check Hartmann's site for the latest circuit setup and pic from Dr. S
and tell me what your see.
Jones
Do you have a direct URL for this?
[snip]
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
In reply to John Winterflood's message of Thu, 25 Oct 2007 14:54:55 +0800:
Hi,
[snip]
Robin van Spaandonk wrote:
... Note that Tesla lit light bulbs 25 miles away, with no wires,
using only the ground as common medium. ...
As I understand it there were two conductors - the earth
specifically denied that normal Herzian waves were
involved. (See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wireless_power and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evanescent_wave_coupling).
On a tangent, at what frequencies does HAARP transmit?
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
).
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
already? (It reduces the problem space).
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk [EMAIL PROTECTED]
irradiance is 1300 W/m^2 above the atmosphere, so the
maximum for neutrinos is 3.1% thereof = 40.8 W / m^2.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
There are NO immovable objects in the Universe,
and ALL forces are irresistable.
In reply to Harry Veeder's message of Tue, 23 Oct 2007 01:03:04 -0500:
Hi,
[snip]
On 22/10/2007 10:08 PM, Robin van Spaandonk wrote:
In reply to E Lab's message of Mon, 22 Oct 2007 18:55:55 -0500:
Hi Ronald,
[snip]
Lets talk apples and no lemons. The only time ANY measurements have been
to be fairly close and not miles away.
Through his faraday cage?
Yes. The cage may be part of the circuit now, as Horace (I think) said. Ground
connection - cage - capacitively coupled to bread board base.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
. If
this is the source, then there should be an increase in radioactivity when
they are lit.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk [EMAIL PROTECTED]
the heat death of the universe. Would you rather sit on
the floor not breathing all your life?
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
In reply to Harry Veeder's message of Sun, 21 Oct 2007 23:31:23 -0500:
Hi,
[snip]
My point is that the science known as modern physics
is consistent with a moribund philosophy of life.
[snip]
True, but we likely won't be around to see it anyway. ;)
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub
In reply to EnergyLab's message of Fri, 12 Oct 2007 14:21:08 -0500:
I wrote:
Is the frequency in the hundreds of Hz?
Stupid question. I should have looked at the scope pictures!
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
in the hundreds of Hz?
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
is determined by the
height of the Coulomb barrier, which is extreme.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
never reply before reading the whole message. :(
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
, the
contribution would be negligible. Even 3^3 = 27 * .415 eV is only about 11 eV.
That's not even going to make a dent in the Coulomb barrier.
[snip]
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
air,
which suddenly oxidized the glowing filament. Usually the filament gives out
before the seal weakens to that extent, but occasionally, you may get a
combination of a strong filament with a weak seal.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
would of course pick up an
electron of its own, associate with another D and bubble up.
Does this make any sense to you?
[snip]
Yes, and it might even be right. :)
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
at most.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
of black hole mass and orbit are possible.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
helps, as water falls through
between the matter, but sunlight is prevented from reaching moist ground
underneath.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
the EMF spectrum
like a flood light, and given the efforts of the radio astronomers,
there is no way we'd overlook it.
I said orbits not incoming.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
have caused The Flood making a huge
impression on the remnants of humanity, and giving rise to stories that live on
to this day.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
hit by a meteor(ite), we pass through the particle
beam, which would heat the atmosphere considerably, but cause no shock effects
on the ground.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
nearby (and perhaps cannot
be situated anywhere other than a galactic core) ... or is there?
http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/2000/03
[snip]
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
.
Upon closer reading of http://www.baeinstitute.com/tech_advPropulsion.html I get
the impression they want the base laser on the ground. However in that case I
doubt they will achieve a 3000 fold increase in thrust due to absorption in the
atmosphere.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub
eV. 4 x 13.598
= 54.39. Close enough for gumint work. IOW the Cr could easily be a Mills
catalyst.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
how much they expect for a
reasonable vehicle?
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
with the Hydrinos once the latter have
been prepared.
(Why are we using U again?)
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
and also down in a ladder-mill.
Actually they would need to be even longer, because they don't extend
vertically, but at an angle.
Anyone know how much lift one might expect?
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
down). Once at the bottom, the cycle begins anew.
The inventor says that kite mills up to 50 kW can be built, but then suggests
that 3 of these would be enough to power the city of Groningen. (I suspect he is
off by about a factor of 1000).
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
.',
equals six months in the future.
[snip]
..six months being about the maximum amount of time one can reasonably ask
someone to be patient. ;)
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
).
Perhaps electro-shock therapy is stimulating the decay?
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
energy is too small. It's like trying to hold down a roof in a
tornado with an ordinary rubber band.
[snip]
This is not necessarily true of Hydrinos. The very severely shrunken ones have
binding energies running into the tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of
eV.
Regards,
Robin van
In reply to thomas malloy's message of Mon, 27 Aug 2007 00:36:31 -0500 (CDT):
Hi,
[snip]
Jones Beene wrote:
Robin van Spaandonk wrote:
You might argue that free energy is always preferable to even cheap
oil, but the practical problem with the Gray device is low battery
life. The longest
thermal energies.)
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
from?
(For H2 we are looking at more than 4 eV / molecule, which is far in excess of
average thermal energies.)
Brain must have been momentarily on blank. The answer is probably that it
comes from the energy of formation of the metal hydride.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
supply needing to use a high voltage just to drive a
small power supply current through the cell.
This phenomenon may be what is taking place in the Meyer cells.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
become a part of established lore.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
In reply to Terry Blanton's message of Thu, 23 Aug 2007 15:11:54 -0400:
Hi,
[snip]
Or more CGI? An alleged lunar mining machine:
http://www.paranormalnews.com/article.asp?ArticleID=1185
(scroll down for vid).
Terry
http://www.astronautix.com/flights/apollo20.htm
Regards,
Robin van
In reply to Jed Rothwell's message of Thu, 23 Aug 2007 18:14:21 -0400:
Hi,
[snip]
You
wonder how the human race will survive.
What makes you think it will?
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
to be
generating 550% excess as the above works out to 40.2/6.12 x 100 =
656.86% 656.86 - 100 (Faraday) = 556.86% OU !
[snip] Ravi
Was Ravi the kid with the egg? If so, there may be a GHz component that he
doesn't know about.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
. This is
because they are less likely to know what can't be done. Slow steady
improvement usually comes from people working within their field.
[snip]
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
not available on the
web?
It is available at
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v338/n6218/pdf/338737a0.pdf , but one has
to pay for it.
[snip]
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
in telluric currents, which in
turn either via the magnetostrictive effect, or through localized heating, or
possibly through heating caused by variations induced in decay rates, may result
in stresses in the crust.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
is frequency based, and only the outer two p
electrons will be orbiting at the same frequency, which won't match the Hydrogen
frequency anyway, I don't see this working well.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
is located in a very seismically active area, this is not a good
idea.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
De Broglie wave does
only a single orbit before reconnecting with itself, which assumption then
allows the r ~ n^2 relationship to be maintained.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
of *appearing* to transform the
element in question to one which is one lower on the periodic table, but with
the same mass. The transformation would effect chemical reactions, but should
have little influence on e.g. naa.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
%?)...still, 5% may be better than 0%, depending
on the cost of the facility per unit energy retrieved.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Thu, 02 Aug 2007 19:14:30 -0700:
Hi,
[snip]
palladium-coated plastic beads as a cathode. Not sure Patterson ever
divulged which plastic was used.
The term polysulphonate comes to mind, though I could have mangled it. :)
[snip]
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
is simply a Hydrino.
[snip]
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
making it less likely to form O++. However the same can be said for O
in water. In either case, It would IMO take a brute force interaction with
ionizing radiation to form O++.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
the dryer.
[snip]
...sounds like you've just invented the Tokamak. ;)
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
LENR or hydrino effect!
[snip]
Actually, it wouldn't surprise me if some hydrinos were always formed in
combustion engines, especially when they run hot, and recycling the exhaust is a
good way to reuse them, increasing the production next time around.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub
fusion:
D + e- + D - He + e- + gamma
If the electron is so intimately involved in the fusion event, then there is
also a chance that it will carry away he energy of the reaction, at least some
of the time.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
, the copy I sent out
came back intact. No biggie.
- Jed
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
, then fireworks may ensue. :)
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
that for
hydrogen, so any such chemical effect would also be far smaller in those cases.
[snip]
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
if the binding
energy of the heavier isotope to the electrode material is slightly greater than
that of the respective lighter isotope.
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
this of interest:
http://checkerboard.dnsalias.net/
[snip]
Regards,
Robin van Spaandonk
The shrub is a plant.
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Mon, 2 Jul 2007 17:34:49 -0700 (PDT):
Hi,
[snip]
--- Robin van Spaandonk
Perhaps one implication is that each that each quark
comprises a pair of particles, each with a mass Pi^5
times that of the electron.
Well...
Don't keep us in suspense...or are we
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