Probably Rossi used some duct tape to repair the reactor. This makes Gamma rays 
;-)

Honestly, after all was happened, better: NOT happened, such a singular 
observation is without worth.
Of course there might be a strange mechanism producing gamma rays, possibly a 
welding apparatus or another industrial x-ray apparatus in neighbourhood, but 
this proves nothing. It is an industrial location and the source of the rays is 
unknown and so it is ridiculous to discuss this.

Peter
----- Original Nachricht ----
Von:     Berke Durak <berke.du...@gmail.com>
An:      vortex-l@eskimo.com
Datum:   07.12.2011 14:08
Betreff: [Vo]:Celani: gamma spike during ignition of Rossi reactor

> On Mon, Dec 5, 2011 at 1:52 PM, Mary Yugo <maryyu...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> Remember that guy who measured a gamma spike while Rossi was adjusting
> >> a reactor in the other room?
> >
> > I don't.  Is there a link or citation? (thanks)
> 
> Now there is: see my transcript of the LENR documentary:
> 
> http://www.mail-archive.com/vortex-l@eskimo.com/msg58293.html
> 
> It was Celani.  Here is the relevant part.
> 
> > After various vicissitudes, because the reactor was having major
> > problems, some inner resistors had broken down, Mr. Rossi came out
> > of the room delighted: "The reactor has started".  Before he came
> > out, a few minutes before, I had independently measured that both
> > the gamma detector and the mini Geiger had hit the top of the scale,
> > whereas the two detectors of electromagnetic interference were not
> > showing anything.
> 
> > This meant that a short but intense emission of gamma radiation had
> > taken place.
> -- 
> Berke Durak
> 
>

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