In my Grand Unification Theory of Cold Fusion (Gremlins - collapsed
singularities):

A gremlin that has devoured/collapsed Hydrogen ions is nicknamed a "Hydrino"

A gremlin that has devoured Helium ions is nicknamed a... Helino?

A Helino might belch Hydrinos? or at least something similar.

On Mon, Aug 13, 2012 at 3:55 PM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> The best explanation for the Corona thermal anomaly is still ignored,
> despite the preponderance of evidence. This is because the source of heat
> is
> NOT nuclear and the mainstream demands that it be nuclear.
>
> The spectrum of the corona is well-known and well studied, and all of the
> hydrino lines are visible according to BLP... many of them are shared with
> hydrogen or helium. However, there are previously unidentified lines in
> astrophysical data going back decades - which matches predicted dihydrino
> molecular rotational transitions to five figures.
>
> The only alternative explanation for the most important of these lines is a
> rare spectral transition of iron - the Fe ion. This lame explanation
> involving iron was the usual response from the mainstream until it was
> pointed out that there is many orders of magnitude too little iron in the
> corona to account for the magnitude of this line.
>
> Nevertheless, Mills is ignored. He may not be 100% correct, but to ignore
> him and his evidence is unscientific.
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Bastiaan Bergman
>
> http://physics.aps.org/articles/v5/90
>
> specifically:
> "The finding revealed that the solar corona was a few million degrees
> kelvin, more than three hundred times hotter than the surface of the
> sun below, and flew in the face of what was expected from simple
> thermodynamics"
>
> "It is now universally accepted that the reservoir of energy stored in
> the sun's atmospheric magnetic field is what heats the localized
> plasma in the corona. In simplified terms, the field is generated in
> the solar interior as a result of large-scale rotational and
> convective motions of the charged plasma, which serve to produce a
> strong (100,000  gauss) magnetic field some 200,000km  below the solar
> surface "
>
> "What is not known, and remains under considerable debate even now, is
> how the energy stored in the magnetic fields is converted into heating
> the corona "
>
> Lesson:
> We have no freeking clue how fusion works
>
>

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