Jones, isn't there an endothermic reaction with d-d that releases a gamma ray?
On Tuesday, June 6, 2017, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote: > Jed Rothwell wrote: > > I suppose the cathode might have been storing and releasing heat at the > same time, but how could you tell with a calorimeter? > > > One expected effect of an experiment which is both storing and releasing > excess heat at the same time would be a period of so-called > heat-after-death following shut-down. > > Aside from that kind of direct proof, no one understands the mechanism for > storage of nuclear changes but a good candidate would be a mechanism which > results in "dense hydrogen". (technically this is not nuclear, but it is > closer to nuclear than to chemistry) > > If we had a rock-solid experiment which was clearly able to show > heat-after-death, then perhaps efforts could be made to collect and > characterize dense hydrogen. > > The problem of course is that there is no rock solid experiment capable of > showing heat-after-death. > >