[Vo]:Roger Green - Interview of one of the first investors in Andrea Rossi

2024-05-16 Thread Joe Hughes
I found this interesting and thought I would share: https://youtu.be/Xh-fHzNQrO0?si=lqZwy5yP9AcRvswf Best Regards, Joe

Re: [Vo]:If 2 heat engines are placed in series their efficiency is lower, and the second law breaks according to Carnot if that can occur!

2024-05-10 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
OK If you change the limits like some do with the Peltier elements using 500C input then you can get higher COP's due to the higher entry level. (and just ignore the heating of the input...) Heat pumps we use in houses are certified - Europe for 0..35C, not for 10..35C - as we live pretty

Re: [Vo]:If 2 heat engines are placed in series their efficiency is lower, and the second law breaks according to Carnot if that can occur!

2024-05-10 Thread Jonathan Berry
*Sorry a heatpump (HP) cannot have a COP 30 or 60* Sorry but they can, I gave you the links. The math also supports this. No, you are right that a regular small house-hold heatpumps operating at 100% power over the rated temperature differential will top out currently at about a heating COP of

Re: [Vo]:If 2 heat engines are placed in series their efficiency is lower, and the second law breaks according to Carnot if that can occur!

2024-05-10 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
Sorry a heatpump (HP) cannot have a COP 30 or 60. Assume a COP of 5 for a single step HP as we have it today in a reasonably good probe heat pump. (mine has 5.5 for heating) You can neither simply multiply or add the COP's as you must provide e.g. 20x the basic energy to fill the reservoir

Re: [Vo]:If 2 heat engines are placed in series their efficiency is lower, and the second law breaks according to Carnot if that can occur!

2024-05-09 Thread Jonathan Berry
Oh I missed the end: "Heatpumps are reverse Carnot engines and have a much higher COP in respect to heat gained but *not to current gained!!!"* Current? I'm not sure what you mean by this, you might be talking about the volume of thermal energy moved, or you might be talking about the

Re: [Vo]:If 2 heat engines are placed in series their efficiency is lower, and the second law breaks according to Carnot if that can occur!

2024-05-09 Thread Jonathan Berry
Not sure why but this isn't forming into proper paragraphs... *"Youtube physics usually is self satisfaction of people that have no clue of the simplest things. So I almost never watch this garbage."* The video is covering the work of a company cascading heat pumps. As such the temperature

Re: [Vo]:If 2 heat engines are placed in series their efficiency is lower, and the second law breaks according to Carnot if that can occur!

2024-05-09 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
Youtube physics usually is self satisfaction of people that have no clue of the simplest things. So I almost never watch this garbage. A heatpump is not a Carnot process as *you obviously supply additional energy*! You must calculate in the Carnot conversion rate of energy gained -->

[Vo]:If 2 heat engines are placed in series their efficiency is lower, and the second law breaks according to Carnot if that can occur!

2024-05-09 Thread Jonathan Berry
After 200 years (1824) the second law of thermodynamics is disproven. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnot%27s_theorem_(thermodynamics) Simply Carnot argues that if the efficiency of a reversible heat engine was variable based on how it is made or the gases etc, then the second law of

Re: [Vo]:ICCF24 proceedings uploaded

2024-05-03 Thread MSF
Thanks, Jed. That's a hell of a lot of reading. M. On Wednesday, May 1st, 2024 at 2:50 PM, Jed Rothwell wrote: > See: > > JOURNAL OF CONDENSED MATTER NUCLEAR SCIENCE > > Experiments and Methods in Cold Fusion > Proceedings of ICCF24 Solid State Energy Summit, Mountain View, California, > July

[Vo]:ICCF24 proceedings uploaded

2024-05-01 Thread Jed Rothwell
See: JOURNAL OF CONDENSED MATTER NUCLEAR SCIENCE Experiments and Methods in Cold Fusion Proceedings of ICCF24 Solid State Energy Summit, Mountain View, California, July 25–28, 2022 VOLUME 38, May 2024 https://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/BiberianJPjcondensedzk.pdf I have not added this title or

Re: [Vo]:New vaporizing effect discovered

2024-04-28 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
Sorry! This is a kidding set of e-mails. Photons did always lead to evaporation of water since the earth is covered by water. Even more surprising is that ice does sublimate just from solar irradiation... So following such hoax science today is standard to diffuse a field by usst claiming

Re: [Vo]:New vaporizing effect discovered

2024-04-27 Thread MSF
Nice to see someone else got around to discovering this effect. I observed this phenomenon 15 or 20 years ago, using a 532 nm laser. As these dorks will finally get around to discovering, this effect varies greatly with the refractive index of the material and the degree of polarity.

[Vo]:New vaporizing effect discovered

2024-04-27 Thread H L V
How light can vaporize water without the need for heat Researchers discovered that light can cause evaporation of water from a surface without the need for heat. This 'photomolecular effect' could be important for

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's understanding of light in a vacuum vs the Michelson-Morley experiment

2024-04-21 Thread H L V
In the late 19th and early 20th century the physics community began to enshrine mathematical ingenuity as the best way to resolve the tensions between theory and experiment and grew increasingly dismissive of philosophical questioning and speculation. The theory of Special Relativity is typically

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's understanding of light in a vacuum vs the Michelson-Morley experiment

2024-04-18 Thread MSF
Faraday's message to Maxwell parallels Aristotle's complaint about the Egyptians. Aristotle implied words to the effect that the ancient Egyptians thought that the physical world should obey mathematics instead of math describing reality. There's a lot of that going on today. The so-called

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's understanding of light in a vacuum vs the Michelson-Morley experiment

2024-04-16 Thread H L V
Faraday wrote this 10 years before Maxwell published his first work on electromgnetism in 1856 which was titled "On Faraday's lines of Force" Maxwell's equations were first published in 1862. It seems Maxwell interpreted Faraday's writings in a manner that was consistent with an aether. I would

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's understanding of light in a vacuum vs the Michelson-Morley experiment

2024-04-15 Thread MSF
Hmmm... A year after Maxwell's equations. Maxwell can't have been too happy about that, as his equations described the behavior of the aether. And he repeatedly claimed that he had merely expressed Faraday in conventional mathematical form. On Monday, April 15th, 2024 at 8:04 PM, MSF wrote: >

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's understanding of light in a vacuum vs the Michelson-Morley experiment

2024-04-15 Thread MSF
This gives you an idea what a deep thinker Faraday was. Do you know if he posited this idea before Maxwell published his equations? I thought I had read everything Faraday wrote. Somehow I missed this one. MIchael On Monday, April 15th, 2024 at 12:08 PM, H L V wrote: > This is a quote from a

[Vo]:Faraday's understanding of light in a vacuum vs the Michelson-Morley experiment

2024-04-15 Thread H L V
This is a quote from a letter written by Michael Faraday to Richard Philips on April 15, 1846 (bold letters were added by me) *"The view which I am so bold to put forth considers, therefore, radiation as a kind of species of vibration in the lines of force which are known to connect particles

Re: [Vo]:Nuclear waste

2024-04-01 Thread Robin
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Mon, 1 Apr 2024 22:56:25 +0200: Hi, [snip] >Uranium is at least 10'000x more harmless than Plutonium > Storing plutonium is wasteful anyway. Use it as fuel. >So its a bad idea... > > >J.W. > > >On 01.04.2024 21:10, Robin wrote: >> Hi, >> >> Why not

Re: [Vo]:Nuclear waste

2024-04-01 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
Uranium is at least 10'000x more harmless than Plutonium So its a bad idea... J.W. On 01.04.2024 21:10, Robin wrote: Hi, Why not store nuclear waste in worked out Uranium mines? After all, "nuclear material" was stored there for billions of years before we dug it up. Crypto currency

[Vo]:Nuclear waste

2024-04-01 Thread Robin
Hi, Why not store nuclear waste in worked out Uranium mines? After all, "nuclear material" was stored there for billions of years before we dug it up. Crypto currency mining deliberately wastes energy. Surely there is a better way to do this? Regards, Robin van Spaandonk

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's disc generator

2024-03-26 Thread H L V
If these two statements are logical implications of Maxwell's equations, a) A magnet that is not moving with respect to the aether will not have an electric field. b) A magnet that is moving at a constant velocity with respect to the aether will have an electric field. Then consider this thought

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's disc generator

2024-03-20 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
The law of Faraday is very clear any change in magnetic flux induces charge hence a field. Many untrained physicists write j (current) instead of q what is wrong. To measure a current you have to cut the ring (rim) of charges what leads to dragging forces and movement of charge over e.g. a

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's disc generator

2024-03-19 Thread H L V
The question of whether the magnetic field rotates in the faraday disc generator is a question that is related to aether theories in particular or any theory of privileged reference frames in general. It got me wondering if there are alternate ways to test for the presence of an aether or a

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's disc generator

2024-03-14 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
As most might know, in physics we only know force fields. Thus so called field lines (magnet field) are equipotential cuts of the space covered by fields. Of course you never can draw such a line as all sources are in constant motion/rotation. The static magnetic field is a special case as it

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's disc generator

2024-03-14 Thread H L V
Sorry, the last word should be 'magnet' rather than 'magnetic'. harry On Thu, Mar 14, 2024 at 11:02 AM H L V wrote: > Another visualization of the behaviour of magnetic fields without the > concept of lines of force. > When the magnet is moved around it simply changes the orientation of all >

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's disc generator

2024-03-14 Thread H L V
Another visualization of the behaviour of magnetic fields without the concept of lines of force. When the magnet is moved around it simply changes the orientation of all the little compass needles. The notion of lines of force tends to make one think the magnetic field is somehow mechanically

[Vo]:85 papers uploaded to LENR-CANR.org

2024-03-13 Thread Jed Rothwell
I uploaded 85 papers. The latest papers are shown here, but there are so many this list is unhelpful: https://lenr-canr.org/wordpress/?page_id=3009 I have appended another list below, which includes most of the new papers. I uploaded 4 papers by W. B. Clarke. These cast doubt on results from

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's disc generator

2024-03-06 Thread H L V
Here is a physical demonstration of the situation using a ferrofluid. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bn41nPOGq-U The ferrofluid does not rotate with the cylindrical magnet, which supports the idea that the magnet's field does not rotate with the magnet. (There is a little bit of movement but the

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's disc generator

2024-03-05 Thread H L V
It depends what you mean by a field. If you imagine the field is made of wire-like filaments which are fastened to an atom then you would expect the field to translate and rotate whenever the atom translates and rotates. On the other hand if you imagine the field is a vector field then the field

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's disc generator

2024-03-05 Thread Robin
In reply to H L V's message of Tue, 5 Mar 2024 09:28:31 -0500: Hi, You don't need an experiment to figure this out. The field obviously rotates with the magnet. This is because the field is not a single entity. It is the sum of all the tiny fields created by the electrons attached to

Re: [Vo]:Faraday's disc generator

2024-03-05 Thread H L V
Instead of measuring voltages, another approach would be to measure how the entire assembly moves in response to the various relative rotations. In order to observe such effects, the entire assembly should be self contained so that it is free to slide over a level surface. The relative rotation of

[Vo]:Faraday's disc generator

2024-03-05 Thread H L V
Resolving the paradox of unipolar induction: new experimental evidence on the influence of the test circuit (Free to download. Published 2022) https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-21155-x This is an interesting paper from experimental point view. The authors designed the test circuit so

[Vo]:cold fusion power cell

2024-02-23 Thread Frank Znidarsic
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HrVW4IwFINs

Re: [Vo]:OT: AI generated video is progressing rapidly

2024-02-22 Thread Jed Rothwell
I asked the Bot about F's original paper: https://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/Fleischmanelectroche.pdf My questions were mainly about these two paragraphs: (a) Excess enthalpy generation is markedly dependent on the applied current density (i.e. magnitude of the shift in the chemical potential) and is

Re: [Vo]:OT: AI generated video is progressing rapidly

2024-02-22 Thread Jed Rothwell
Document processing AI is also making progress. Adobe Acrobat just added a new feature, the AI Assistant. It works with documents in native Acrobat format, not a scanned document converted to Acrobat. I tried it with my book, but it said, "the feature only supports files with less than 120 pages."

[Vo]:OT: AI generated video is progressing rapidly

2024-02-21 Thread H L V
AI Generated Videos Just Changed Forever https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NXpdyAWLDas Harry

[Vo]:Mr Bean blamed for poor EV sales

2024-02-07 Thread MSF
This is hilarious. Trying to blame Rowan Atkinson for failing EV sales. Couldn't be that frozen Tesla graveyard in Chicago. https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2024/02/07/mr-bean-star-rowan-atkinson-blamed-for-slow-ev-sales/

Re: [Vo]:Nissan Leaf

2024-01-31 Thread Robin
In reply to Jed Rothwell's message of Wed, 31 Jan 2024 17:12:40 -0500: Thanks Jed. [snip] >I do not think so. > >I had an older Leaf, which I gave to my daughter. I do not recall anything >like that. Regards, Robin van Spaandonk Buy electric cars and recharge them from solar panels on your

Re: [Vo]:Nissan Leaf

2024-01-31 Thread Jed Rothwell
Robin wrote: Does anyone know if the original version of the Nissan Leaf, released in > 2010, had bi-directional charging capability? > I do not think so. I had an older Leaf, which I gave to my daughter. I do not recall anything like that.

[Vo]:Nissan Leaf

2024-01-31 Thread Robin
Hi, Does anyone know if the original version of the Nissan Leaf, released in 2010, had bi-directional charging capability? Regards, Robin van Spaandonk Buy electric cars and recharge them from solar panels on your roof.

[Vo]:Watch this

2024-01-24 Thread Robin
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I4I8QThLMJc Regards, Robin van Spaandonk Buy electric cars and recharge them from solar panels on your roof.

Re: [Vo]:Van Allen belts

2024-01-14 Thread Robin
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Mon, 15 Jan 2024 00:30:33 +0100: Hi, [snip] >No the earth is not at the magnetic radius. She is inside the tense >solar plasma flux. > >All mass is magnetic flux mass. E.g. the Bohr radius is the first >magnetic resonance radius. The second you get by

Re: [Vo]:Van Allen belts

2024-01-14 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
No the earth is not at the magnetic radius. She is inside the tense solar plasma flux. All mass is magnetic flux mass. E.g. the Bohr radius is the first magnetic resonance radius. The second you get by multiplying it with (pi/alpha)^2. This you then can multiply with the sun's proton's

Re: [Vo]:Van Allen belts

2024-01-14 Thread Robin
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Mon, 15 Jan 2024 00:02:25 +0100: Hi Jürg, Would you care to reply to the other questions? [snip] >You are correct! I made a Kopernikus turn and did look at the sun's belt > > >J.W. > >On 14.01.2024 19:53, Robin wrote: >> In reply to Jürg

Re: [Vo]:Van Allen belts

2024-01-14 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
You are correct! I made a Kopernikus turn and did look at the sun's belt J.W. On 14.01.2024 19:53, Robin wrote: In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Sun, 14 Jan 2024 06:43:05 +0100: Hi, [snip] That's the fact. The Van Allen belt is the magnetic resonance region (radius) of the SUN.

Re: [Vo]:Van Allen belts

2024-01-14 Thread Robin
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Sun, 14 Jan 2024 06:43:05 +0100: Hi, [snip] >That's the fact. The Van Allen belt is the magnetic resonance region >(radius) of the SUN. You can calculate it with the spherical metric for >magnetic mass. Same for the Galaxy MOND radius. I'm not quite

Re: [Vo]:Van Allen belts

2024-01-13 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
That's the fact. The Van Allen belt is the magnetic resonance region (radius) of the SUN. You can calculate it with the spherical metric for magnetic mass. Same for the Galaxy MOND radius. J.W. On 13.01.2024 01:55, Robin wrote: Hi, Perhaps charged particles in the Van Allen belts are

[Vo]:Van Allen belts

2024-01-12 Thread Robin
Hi, Perhaps charged particles in the Van Allen belts are energized by resonant absorption of ELF radiation from the Sun? Regards, Robin van Spaandonk Buy electric cars and recharge them from solar panels on your roof.

Re: [Vo]:Water can trigger nuclear reaction to produce energy and isotope gases

2024-01-03 Thread Robin
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Wed, 3 Jan 2024 08:50:35 +0100: Hi, [snip] >There is only one physics = reality. >Santilli, Mills,Holmlid all see the same shrunken hydrogen. Without the H*/D* >step there is no CF/LENR. ...but they all have different explanations for it. :) >For

Re: [Vo]:Water can trigger nuclear reaction to produce energy and isotope gases

2024-01-02 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
Are you referring to the same reaction Prof. Leif Holmlid was talking about? There is only one physics = reality. Santilli, Mills,Holmlid all see the same shrunken hydrogen. Without the H*/D* step there is no CF/LENR. For certain coatings we see X-ray spectra in the range from 4keV..16keV (our

Re: [Vo]:Water can trigger nuclear reaction to produce energy and isotope gases

2024-01-02 Thread Robin
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Wed, 3 Jan 2024 06:19:31 +0100: Hi, [snip] >Lock at the picture. Only the innermost kernel of thousands of protons >will possibly fuse or form H*-H*. H*-H* is an exothermic reaction nearly >delivering 500eV. Are you referring to the same reaction Prof.

Re: [Vo]:Water can trigger nuclear reaction to produce energy and isotope gases

2024-01-02 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
Lock at the picture. Only the innermost kernel of thousands of protons will possibly fuse or form H*-H*. H*-H* is an exothermic reaction nearly delivering 500eV. The first step anyway is stripping of Oxigen! Of course much better science would be needed. But who wants to kill standard model

Re: [Vo]:Water can trigger nuclear reaction to produce energy and isotope gases

2024-01-02 Thread Robin
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Wed, 3 Jan 2024 05:14:56 +0100: Hi, [snip] >What accelerating free electrons? > >This is a kind of hand waving. The bubble implodes so all momenta point >inwards. Heat will strip up the electrons what adds a further inward >momenta due to photon emission

Re: [Vo]:Water can trigger nuclear reaction to produce energy and isotope gases

2024-01-02 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
What accelerating free electrons? This is a kind of hand waving. The bubble implodes so all momenta point inwards. Heat will strip up the electrons what adds a further inward momenta due to photon emission (1/2 of this energy) . Impact speed is 7..10km/s. Crucial is that the electrons

Re: [Vo]:Water can trigger nuclear reaction to produce energy and isotope gases

2024-01-02 Thread Robin
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Wed, 3 Jan 2024 02:36:56 +0100: Hi, [snip] >Factually the best update (2009) about sono fusion is given in :: >https://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/StringhamRwhenbubble.pdf > >J.W. Quote from the above paper: "The initially dense cluster is further

Re: [Vo]:Water can trigger nuclear reaction to produce energy and isotope gases

2024-01-02 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
Factually the best update (2009) about sono fusion is given in :: https://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/StringhamRwhenbubble.pdf J.W. On 03.01.2024 00:37, Robin wrote: Hi, You might take a look at the work of Dr. Randell Mills (http://brilliantlightpower.com/). A severely shrunken H2 molecule

[Vo]:Water can trigger nuclear reaction to produce energy and isotope gases

2024-01-02 Thread Robin
Hi, You might take a look at the work of Dr. Randell Mills (http://brilliantlightpower.com/). A severely shrunken H2 molecule would provide the "constraint" on particle location that you are looking for. Furthermore, the shrunken electrons of the Hydrino molecule can carry away excess energy

Re: [Vo]:New paper from B-J. Huang et al.

2024-01-02 Thread Frank Grimer
Because many thousands of negative pressure are produced within the cavity. On Tue, 2 Jan 2024 at 22:14, Jed Rothwell wrote: > Huang, B.-J., et al., *Water can trigger nuclear reaction to produce > energy and isotope gases.* Scientific Reports, 2024. *14*(1): p. 214. > >

[Vo]:New paper from B-J. Huang et al.

2024-01-02 Thread Jed Rothwell
Huang, B.-J., et al., *Water can trigger nuclear reaction to produce energy and isotope gases.* Scientific Reports, 2024. *14*(1): p. 214. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-50824-8.epdf

[Vo]:Nuclear Power Comeback Update

2023-12-24 Thread H L V
Nuclear Power Comeback Update: Poland Authorizes Small Modular Reactors from video description: Nuclear power is back in fashion in many countries because of its potential to decarbonize even energy-intense industry quickly. In its latest success, Poland has authorized the construction of 24

Re: [Vo]:Papers about the controversy

2023-12-12 Thread Robin
In reply to Jed Rothwell's message of Tue, 12 Dec 2023 15:53:36 -0500: Hi, [snip] >(Jones said that current density depends on the surface area. That is a >geometry error. Current density is a function of surface area. >It is as if Jones said that mass density varies with volume. Or that joules

[Vo]:Papers about the controversy

2023-12-12 Thread Jed Rothwell
Someone suggested I upload papers about the controversies in cold fusion, and papers by skeptics. So I uploaded some papers about this. I mentioned these two already: *Editorials from the early history of cold fusion*, in *New York Times and others*. 1989. (As I mentioned before)

Re: [Vo]:Japanese JT-60SA Precedes ITER

2023-12-12 Thread Terry Blanton
Personally, I doubt we will ever have reliable hot fusion reactors. Low energy fusion, a different story. On Tue, Dec 12, 2023, 1:29 PM Robin wrote: > In reply to Terry Blanton's message of Tue, 12 Dec 2023 11:37:52 -0500: > Hi, > [snip] > > >

Re: [Vo]:Japanese JT-60SA Precedes ITER

2023-12-12 Thread Robin
In reply to Terry Blanton's message of Tue, 12 Dec 2023 11:37:52 -0500: Hi, [snip] >https://oilprice.com/Alternative-Energy/Nuclear-Power/Another-Major-Milestone-in-the-Race-for-Nuclear-Fusion.ht

[Vo]:Japanese JT-60SA Precedes ITER

2023-12-12 Thread Terry Blanton
https://oilprice.com/Alternative-Energy/Nuclear-Power/Another-Major-Milestone-in-the-Race-for-Nuclear-Fusion.ht ml

Re: [Vo]:Silly battery constraints

2023-12-09 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
There is only a car mafia constraint. Initially there was a plan to change accumulators at "gas stations". But this does not allow the manufacturer to charge you 3x more than the accumulator's real value  if you buy an expensive car. It also means that you have a bit less design freedom.

[Vo]:Silly battery constraints

2023-12-09 Thread Robin
Hi, One of the constraints placed on battery design is they should be able to charge as fast as possible. However this constraint is a hang over from the gasoline age. The intent is to allow fast charging at a "gas station". However, in future, most cars will charge using power provided by

Re: [Vo]:Berryllium-10 nucleus

2023-12-08 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
For "small" isotopes it is easy to predict the shape and the exact 4D quantum structure. But *shape is not the driver for LENR.* Cold fusion (LENR) only runs if you can transport the excess energy out of the center of mass reaction. This is also the reason why hot fusion is bare nonsense. For

[Vo]:Berryllium-10 nucleus

2023-12-08 Thread H L V
A berryllium-10 nucleus was predicted to have a dumbbell shape and now the shape seems to have been confirmed by experiment. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVri9slkCQU Speculation: Could unusually shaped nuclei play a role in LENR? Harry

[Vo]:Information from the APS meeting in Baltimore, May 1-2, 1989

2023-12-08 Thread Jed Rothwell
I uploaded this infuriating collection of documents: APS, *Information from the APS meeting in Baltimore, May 1-2, 1989*. 1989. https://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/APSinformatio.pdf

Re: [Vo]:Safe computing

2023-12-06 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
You are a dreamer! Laws are here to protect the wealthy criminals that also influence, steer the large companies and states. These folks don't like security for people at all. There are highly criminal states like USA that enforce (e.g, Apple, Microsoft, CISCO even chips manufactures)  by

Re: [Vo]:ICCF8 proceedings uploaded

2023-12-06 Thread Robin
In reply to Jed Rothwell's message of Wed, 6 Dec 2023 20:44:35 -0500: Hi Jed, I meant, are there any personal favourite papers in the latest proceedings? >Robin wrote: > > >> Do you have any personal highlights? >> > >When they held this conference in 2000, the conference organizers told me I

Re: [Vo]:ICCF8 proceedings uploaded

2023-12-06 Thread Jed Rothwell
Robin wrote: > Do you have any personal highlights? > When they held this conference in 2000, the conference organizers told me I had to ask individual authors to send me papers. Some authors were anxious to have their work at LENR-CANR.org. Others did not want their work uploaded. I ended up

Re: [Vo]:ICCF8 proceedings uploaded

2023-12-06 Thread Robin
In reply to Jed Rothwell's message of Wed, 6 Dec 2023 17:18:57 -0500: Hi Jed, Do you have any personal highlights? >Proceedings uploaded: > >Scaramuzzi, F., ed. *ICCF8 Proceedings of the 8th International Conference >on Cold Fusion*. Vol. 70. 2000, Italian Physical Society, Bologna, Italy:

[Vo]:ICCF8 proceedings uploaded

2023-12-06 Thread Jed Rothwell
Proceedings uploaded: Scaramuzzi, F., ed. *ICCF8 Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Cold Fusion*. Vol. 70. 2000, Italian Physical Society, Bologna, Italy: Lerici (La Spezia), Italy. https://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/Scaramuzziiccfprocee.pdf This is a large document. It may take a

[Vo]:Safe computing

2023-12-06 Thread Stefan Israelsson Tampe
A much safer computing paradigm is coming if I looked correctly at todays horoscope about what is written in the stars; I think these kind of ideas will be huge and completely change the landscape about how to enable integrity and catching criminals at the same time as well as keep databases over

[Vo]:Phaethon

2023-12-06 Thread Robin
Hi, How can the Earth pass through the tail of various comets and asteroids, resulting in meteor showers, if our orbits don't intersect? Buy electric cars and recharge them from solar panels on your roof.

[Vo]:Phaethon

2023-12-06 Thread Robin
Hi, When asking bing when the asteroid Phaethon would impact the Earth, it informed me that calculating future paths involved a lot of computational power and told me it couldn't do that. When asked to use Wolfram AstronomicalData to do the calculation, it kept on spouting the same drivel about

Re: [Vo]:function before form

2023-12-05 Thread Terry Blanton
If it won't fit in the hole, you can't use it. On Tue, Dec 5, 2023, 6:01 PM Robin wrote: > Hi, > > Form should always play second fiddle to function. > This means that no matter what you are creating, the primary concern > should always be that it works. Once it's working, > you can worry about

[Vo]:function before form

2023-12-05 Thread Robin
Hi, Form should always play second fiddle to function. This means that no matter what you are creating, the primary concern should always be that it works. Once it's working, you can worry about making it look pretty. This is because, if it doesn't work, no one will use it, no matter how pretty

Re: [Vo]:Mech OU & Inertial Thrust

2023-12-04 Thread Vibrator !
I'll give an overview of the exploit here: • FoR divergence depends on inertial isolation The body that you wish to accelerate for discount work expenditure must gain momentum without inertial interaction with its environment. This thus precludes conventional inertial interactions per N2, in

Re: [Vo]:Mech OU & Inertial Thrust

2023-12-04 Thread Vibrator !
In the last config the best CoP seemed to converge to around 3.5. Bessler indicated CoP's of 4 were possible, in one passage seemingly implying a factor of 16: Der wird ein großer Künstler heißen, Wer ein schwer Ding leicht hoch kann schmeißen, Und wenn ein Pfund ein Viertel fällt, Es vier Pfund

Re: [Vo]:Mech OU & Inertial Thrust

2023-12-04 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
We all wait for the first device with COP >2! J.W: On 04.12.2023 09:59, Vibrator ! wrote: Just a heads up for anyone interested - i've succeeded in my long-held objective of cultivating and harvesting a divergent inertial frame. The energy density is whatever you want - just make up some

[Vo]:Mech OU & Inertial Thrust

2023-12-04 Thread Vibrator !
Just a heads up for anyone interested - i've succeeded in my long-held objective of cultivating and harvesting a divergent inertial frame. The energy density is whatever you want - just make up some high number and you're good - and power density is basically that number times how many cycles a

[Vo]:Fuel cell electrodes

2023-12-01 Thread Robin
Hi, Now that you are using vacuum deposition, you might try any of the transition metals on a graphene base. In particular, Nickel, Iron, or Titanium, all of which interact with Hydrogen, and Nickel in particular is used as a catalyst in organic chemistry. Buy electric cars and recharge them

[Vo]:Silver Palladium "breakthrough" ?

2023-12-01 Thread Jones Beene
https://www6.slac.stanford.edu/news/2023-11-13-researchers-aim-make-cheaper-fuel-cells-reality Should not P get a little credit for this catalyst - not to mention J? ... and/or ... is LENR involved in the improvement ?

Re: [Vo]:Oh-My-God particle

2023-11-29 Thread Robin
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Wed, 29 Nov 2023 08:13:10 +0100: Hi, The problem with a remote origin is that friction will slow it down. Interstellar space is not empty, just scarcely populated. >Plasma jets from black holes are ejected up to 60c relative to our >motion. Thus I

Re: [Vo]:Oh-My-God particle

2023-11-28 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
Plasma jets from black holes are ejected up to 60c relative to our motion. Thus I would be modest and concede that we humans still lack the knowledge to fully understand what can happen with matter. J.W. On 28.11.2023 20:11, Robin wrote: Hi, Given that it can't have come from deep space,

[Vo]:Oh-My-God particle

2023-11-28 Thread Robin
Hi, Given that it can't have come from deep space, it must have been created locally. Since nothing local is capable of generating such high energy fundamental particles, a small piece of plasma from the Sun, rather than a single particle, seems probable. Cosmic rays are detected with multiple

[Vo]:Invention

2023-11-27 Thread Robin
Hi, A metal plate containing millions of square pits, each 45.589 nm on a side, that is exposed to Hydrogen gas, may emit electrons with a maximum energy of 40.8 eV minus the work function of the metal. These electrons may then be collected on an anode to drive an external current between the

Re: [Vo]:Video: Making activated palladium with Dr. Edmund Storms

2023-11-27 Thread Jed Rothwell
Robin wrote: > A few comments:- > > 1) I seem to recall someone else having used Calcium Oxide before. > Dufour in transmutation studies. Iwamura also in transmutation studies. Note that Ed explains the role of the inert calcium oxide particles here:

Re: [Vo]:Video: Making activated palladium with Dr. Edmund Storms

2023-11-27 Thread Robin
In reply to Jed Rothwell's message of Mon, 27 Nov 2023 15:59:24 -0500: Hi, [snip] >Wonderful!! > >See: > >https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zjtPZR55r30 A few comments:- 1) I seem to recall someone else having used Calcium Oxide before. 2) Perhaps unrelated, but 36 microns is the wavelength of a

[Vo]:Video: Making activated palladium with Dr. Edmund Storms

2023-11-27 Thread Jed Rothwell
Wonderful!! See: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zjtPZR55r30

[Vo]:Claytor paper presented at NSF/EPRI Workshop in 1989

2023-11-27 Thread Jed Rothwell
I uploaded an early paper by Claytor: Claytor, T.N., et al. *Tritium and neutron measurements of a solid state cell*. in *NSF/EPRI Workshop on Anomalous Effects in Deuterated Materials*. 1989. Washington, DC. https://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/ClaytorTNtritiumand.pdf Abstract A solid state "cold

Re: [Vo]:different temperatures

2023-11-17 Thread Robin
In reply to Jed Rothwell's message of Fri, 17 Nov 2023 19:26:01 -0500: Hi, [snip] >Robin wrote: > > >> I have an electric heater that can be controlled to within 1/10 of a >> degree centigrade . . . > > >That is remarkable. That is a laboratory grade thermostat. I should have said precision,

Re: [Vo]:different temperatures

2023-11-17 Thread Jed Rothwell
Robin wrote: > I have an electric heater that can be controlled to within 1/10 of a > degree centigrade . . . That is remarkable. That is a laboratory grade thermostat. > The only explanation I can think of is that the house is well insulated > and has a long time constant, so that early

[Vo]:different temperatures

2023-11-17 Thread Robin
Hi, I have an electric heater that can be controlled to within 1/10 of a degree centigrade, and also temperature monitoring software that reports the temperature. I have noticed that early in the morning I am comfortable with a temperature of 22ºC, but as we approach noon I need the temperature

Re: [Vo]:Polished: Re: Special Relativity (SR) .vs Aether

2023-11-12 Thread ROGER ANDERTON
Harry I was quoting wikipedia and I disagree with the quote. -- Original Message -- From: "H L V" To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Sent: Sunday, 12 Nov, 23 At 21:10 Subject: Re: [Vo]:Polished: Re: Special Relativity (SR) .vs Aether I have heard different accounts of what mot

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