hello,

how about ball lightnings?

First of all, are they real, i.e. has anyone or does anyone know someone who 
has seen such thing?

If they are real, can they be explained in the terms of thermodynamics and 
(electro-) chemistry, or is it required to have cold fusion or other more 
exotic type of free energy? Largest observed ball lightnings are huge, about 
basketball sized, and can last for minutes. That high energy output is almost 
impossible to imagine from chemical origins.

Could this lightning anomaly (neutrons and gammas etc.) explain that ball 
lightnings can exist and indeed they are the positive verification of some sort 
of exotic interaction? Could this be the reason, why they cannot be produced in 
the lab, that necessary conditions for exotic interaction are not sufficient? 

There are some free energy inventors who claim things about ball lightnings, 
but these are certainly not reliable evidence. On the contrary!

    ―Jouni


On 14 Apr 2012, at 00:41, "Jones Beene" <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> Massive amount of "free energy" delivered yesterday, a few miles away. No
> doubt about it.
> 
> This spike was about 4 gigajoules. There were others.
> 
> A few gammas detected, but not enough to account for the net energy. It did
> set off the rad alarms at the port of Oakland.
> 
> Yet, this is not exactly LENR, at least not in an obvious way. However,
> there is an LENR connection (to be continued).
> 
> http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/04/13/article-2129246-1294184D000005DC-2
> 23_964x694.jpg
> 
> <winmail.dat>

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