In reply to  Jones Beene's message of Fri, 11 Jun 2021 21:30:50 +0000 (UTC):
Hi,

You wouldn't see UV with a prism anyway. The glass absorbs the UV.


>Most interesting, Michael.  It would be even more so (to Mills' investors :-)  
>... if there had been some of the Mills' UV lines as predicted - 27.2 eV , 
>13.6 eV and so on.
>
>Did you see any UV lines at all?
>
>
>
>Michael Foster wrote:
>  
>  I tried this and it looks really kewl indeed. The potassium chloride I used 
> was pure enough that if you do a simple flame test, you don't get any of that 
> yellow-orange sodium color. I watched the sparking with a 1500 lpm 
> diffraction grating and the double D lines of sodium are way too bright to be 
> accounted for from the potassium chloride. So it's either transmutation 
> (unlikely), or the energy produced by the sparking is enough to remove some 
> sodium from the wall of the glass container.
> 
> I didn't see any of the characteristic hydrino spectral lines :-)
> 
> 
>  
>  
Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk <mixent...@aussiebroadband.com.au>

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