On Dec 25, 2009, at 4:02 PM, Jed Rothwell wrote:
Steven Krivit wrote:
Fleischmann, M., et al., Electrochemically Induced Nuclear Fusion
of Deuterium, Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry, Vol. 261,
Issue 2, Part 1, p. 301-308 (April 10, 1989) and errata in Vol.
263, p. 187-188,
At 16:50: on Fri, 25 Dec 2009, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax wrote
[snip]
Yeah. Very high compression and mobility is somewhat of a proxy for very
high temperature. But not exactly. Thermonuclear fusion would refer to
fusion taking place because of the high energy of the nuclei, allowing them
to overcome
Fleischmann, M., et al.,
http://newenergytimes.com/v2/library/1989/1989Fleischmann-PrelimNote.pdfElectrochemically
Induced Nuclear Fusion of Deuterium, Journal of Electroanalytical
Chemistry, Vol. 261, Issue 2, Part 1, p. 301-308 (April 10, 1989) and
errata in Vol. 263, p. 187-188, (1989)
In
At 06:24 PM 12/25/2009, Steven Krivit wrote:
Fleischmann, M., et al., Electrochemically Induced Nuclear Fusion
of Deuterium, Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry, Vol. 261,
Issue 2, Part 1, p. 301-308 (April 10, 1989) and errata in Vol. 263,
p. 187-188, (1989)
In view of the very high
Steven Krivit wrote:
Fleischmann, M., et al., Electrochemically Induced Nuclear Fusion of
Deuteriumhttp://newenergytimes.com/v2/library/1989/1989Fleischmann-PrelimNote.pdf,
Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry, Vol. 261, Issue 2, Part 1, p.
301-308 (April 10, 1989) and errata in Vol. 263,
I do not want to make too big a deal about this, by the way. I think
thermonuclear is technically inaccurate in this context but broadly
speaking, taken to mean conventional, known, plasma fusion reactions then
Steve is right. This hypothesis has dogged the field. I do not think
Fleischmann and
At 08:24 PM 12/25/2009, you wrote:
I do not want to make too big a deal about this, by the way. I think
thermonuclear is technically inaccurate in this context but
broadly speaking, taken to mean conventional, known, plasma fusion
reactions then Steve is right. This hypothesis has dogged the
On Dec 25, 2009, at 4:02 PM, Jed Rothwell wrote:
Steven Krivit wrote:
Fleischmann, M., et al., Electrochemically Induced Nuclear Fusion
of Deuterium, Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry, Vol. 261,
Issue 2, Part 1, p. 301-308 (April 10, 1989) and errata in Vol.
263, p. 187-188,
I can't post my encyclopedia papers on the Web at this time, however, I
have permission to email them to anybody who is interested, so don't
hesitate to ask, I'm happy to save you the $1800. (Actually, they may end
up selling individual chapters, I don't know.)
Steve
By golly they did say
http://www.elsevierdirect.com/brochures/ecps/Encyclopedia of
Electrochemical Power Sources Five-Volume Set
Krivit, S.B, Cold Fusion: History, Encyclopedia of Electrochemical Power
Sources, Vol 2, Juergen Garche, Chris Dyer, Patrick Moseley, Zempachi
Ogumi, David Rand and Bruno Scrosati,
That's great! For my database, please upload the abstracts here. If
they don't have abstracts, the few paragraphs.
- Jed
At 11:21 AM 12/24/2009, you wrote:
That's great! For my database, please upload the abstracts here. If they
don't have abstracts, the few paragraphs.
- Jed
Jed,
There are no abstracts. Feel free to publish the introductions.
Steve
Cold Fusion Precursor to Low-Energy Nuclear Reactions
What an excellent Christmas present for the field of LENR research...
Merry Christmas all!
-Mark
_
From: Steven Krivit [mailto:stev...@newenergytimes.com]
Sent: Thursday, December 24, 2009 11:44 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Krivit Elsevier Encyclopedia Articles
Steven Krivit wrote:
On 23 March 1989, electrochemists M. Fleischmann and S. Pons claimed
in a press conference at the University of Utah that they had
achieved nuclear fusion . . . Their hypothesis that a novel form of
thermonuclear fusion was responsible for their experimental results
is
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