It is more efficient since there is no energy loss in heating on rotational energies as there are with diatomic gases. The only problem is ofcourse to heat the gas. More of the heating energy goes into gas expansion in noble gases compared to diatomic gases. I assume that good Sterling engines use noble gas. There is too much hush hush regarding Sterling techniques.
David David Jonsson, Sweden, phone callto:+46703000370 On Sun, Jun 26, 2011 at 10:40 PM, Frank Roarty <froarty...@comcast.net>wrote: > > Frank X. Roarty > > -------- Original Message -------- > Subject: Inert gas engine > From: Frank Roarty <froarty...@comcast.net> > To: hoyt.stea...@gmail.com > CC: > > Hoyt, > The inert gas engine was developed from the Papp engine. For those such as > myself that believe all these anomalies from Black Light Plasma, > sonoluminesence to the heat anomalies in metal powders and lattices are all > based on vacuum engineering of energy density by use of casimir geometry > relative to the random motion of ionized gases. I did a blog on the Papp > engine back in March see froarty.scienceblog.com which has a lengthy reply > from John Rhoner the CEO of Plasma ERG and patent author. > fran