For nanoparticles, localized surface plasmon dipole oscillations can give
rise to a large range of intense colors of suspensions or sols containing
the nanoparticles. Nanoparticles and nanowires exhibit strong absorption
and emission bands in the ultraviolet-visible light regime that are not
present in the bulk metal. The hydrino spectrum emissions are in the
ultraviolet.  The energy (color) of this absorption differ when the light
is polarized along or perpendicular to the nanowire.

Certain chemical reactions can produce nano-structures which will emit
light in the 10nm range. Nano-structures are regularly used to up-shift or
down shift light to varied wavelengths.

For example, carbon nanotubes can take on any color base on their
dimensions.






On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 5:26 AM, Stefan Israelsson Tampe <
stefan.ita...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Mills spectral evidences is pretty thorough and I can't understand that if
> true, it came from some other mysterious process.
> It match very well with the theoretical lines. It also looks like these
> fingerprints have been verified by third parties. But I can't find
> their reports for this at the website, I'm not English speaking, but I got
> the impressions that at least three 3'd parties stated that
> the reaction did show evidences of hydrino. So in a sense we need wait for
> the reports regarding this to see how well they replicated.
> I personally can't imagine that Mills is faking all this information,
> therefore i'm quite positive, BLP should now want the hydrino evidences
> to be replicated so I guess that we should get more and better
> verification documents later on.
>
>
> On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 7:42 AM, Eric Walker <eric.wal...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> I wrote:
>>
>> spectroscopy at Harvard CfA showed evidence (and several possible
>>> artifacts) of continuum radiation in the 10-30 nm range from low-energy ...
>>>
>>
>> There is a further lack of clarity as to the employer of the
>> spectropists.  Were they GEN3 subcontractors with no affiliation to Harvard
>> CfA who were permitted to use its facilities, perhaps by renting a machine
>> for a short period of time?  The careful wording of the preamble to the
>> report leaves open a range of possibilities.
>>
>> Eric
>>
>>
>

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