Axil,
Hydrinos have never been observed directly and only occur inside the metal 
lattice where geometry dictates. IMHO Jan Naudts paper on relativistic hydrogen 
nailed it but people refuse to accept that gas atoms are being exposed to 
radical changes in equivalent velocity induced by zero point motion of gas in 
opposition to changes in suppression of vacuum waves. This would only 
contradict the COE caveat that zero point energy and gas motion can not be 
exploited and treat ZPE as a power source - effectively saying that quantum 
effects can allow for a Maxwellian or Heisenburg trap.
Fran

From: Axil Axil [mailto:janap...@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, January 15, 2014 9:45 AM
To: vortex-l
Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:BLP's announcement


If hydrinos are real, are they a cause or an effect? Do hydrinos emerge from 
more basic processes that only happen in rare and unusual conditions?

For example, cooper pairs of electrons only occur in superconductors. There are 
very specific and unusual conditions in a solid that produce cooper pairing.

Clearly, hydrinos are not the usual condition of the electrons existence. If 
hydrinos were common, they would have shown up in many other experiments 
involving electrons.

Another example is the fractional charge of the electron produced by the 
fractional Hall Effect.  If Mills can demonstrate that hydrinos exist, this 
unusual state of electron behavior must be one of the 500 states of matter 
defined by each unique dance of the electrons between and among themselves.

The question that must then be asked and answered, what is the strange music 
that these electrons dance to?

In the presence of this new music, what other strange things are happening to 
other fermions in the neighborhood of these strange electrons: what are the 
protons doing, and the quarks inside the protons, and the other nuclei in the 
general vicinity?

It maybe that the hydrino is just one small piece of a bigger puzzle and not 
the be all and end all of the Mills reaction.





On Tue, Jan 14, 2014 at 10:47 PM, Eric Walker 
<eric.wal...@gmail.com<mailto:eric.wal...@gmail.com>> wrote:
On Tue, Jan 14, 2014 at 2:29 PM, James Bowery 
<jabow...@gmail.com<mailto:jabow...@gmail.com>> wrote:

the detailed chemistry and identification of Hydrinos by ten analytical methods 
that laboratories can follow and replicate are given at 
http://www.blacklightpower.com/.

Without offering an opinion about whether Blacklight Power actually has a 
gainful reaction, I will say that this particular detail sounds like pure 
huxterism.

Eric


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