Bianchini instrument has a range between 20keV – some MeV, and he didi’t 
measure anything in all tests. Shielding was partially cut off in january for 
Villa’s detector. Bianchini measured nothing.

From: Joshua Cude 
Sent: Monday, December 05, 2011 5:10 PM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com 
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Padua University not Siena made the analysis




On Mon, Dec 5, 2011 at 7:43 AM, Berke Durak <berke.du...@gmail.com> wrote:


  > The nickel is a power. It's pretty hard to imagine a preferred emission
  > direction with randomly oriented reactants.


  True, but again, this is unknown physics, 

Right. Anything can be explained that way...

  and the randomly oriented powder
  is possibly bathing in these EM fields that Rossi possibly uses to control
  the reaction - this breaks the spherical symmetry.


Maybe with new physics, but with old physics, the EM fields Rossi used do not 
control nuclear reactions. And if true, it wouldn't be hard to get evidence for 
it. Evidence that might help to vindicate Rossi. But then, he's trying to avoid 
vindication; too much competition. 


  According to Nelson's slides, the gammas are in the 50 - 200 keV range and
  are thermalized.

Nelson didn't show data to support that. It was just wild speculation, and the 
range was probably chosen because Villa's cutoff was 200 keV.

  Easy to do with very little shielding.  And photons in that
  range wouldn't have been detected by Villa - this is clearly stated in
  the abstract.


Right. But there are ways to detect photons between 50 and 200 keV. And NASA 
could probably avail themselves of the necessary technology. But they didn't 
show evidence of 50 - 200 keV gammas. Neither has Rossi. And neither did he 
suggest any reactions that might produce such low energy gammas. And the sort 
of reactions that WL predict would produce much higher energy gammas. And the 
one slide he showed with a gamma  spectrum from Piantelli showed a 750 keV 
gamma.

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