And, Robin Von Spaandonk replied;

In reply to  Terry Blanton's message of Wed, 26 Jan 2005 15:53:19 -0800:
Hi,
 >--- Mike Carrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Possibly. In an old cell, hydrinos, or their compounds may have been accumulating for a long time.

You mean in the pores?

In such a situation, a nuclear reaction may result with release of energetic particles. Such energetic particles can ionise many oxygen atoms to the 2+ state, resulting in a localized high density of Mills catalyst, which in turn can rapidly catalyze the shrinkage of hydrogen atoms, with the energy release noted.

Interesting scenario


An initial nuclear reaction is not necessary, if a cosmic ray acts as trigger.
The effect will produce about 100 - 1000 times more energy than would normally be produced by combustion of hydrogen in the head space. Qua explosive yield this seems to be about the right order of magnitude.

As I recall Mills was suggesting 800 times the energy of combustion.

The effect could start under water and spread upward, if it consumed the local supply of hydrogen



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