dow before
destructive runaway.
Fran
Re: [Vo]:Is the Rossi Reactor a Langmuir Torch
Terry Blanton
Fri, 06 Jan 2012 17:15:43 -0800
Bloody hell. If the reactor works by the oscillation of hydrogen
between molecular and atomic states, the only reason to have to
service the reactor is the de
Bloody hell. If the reactor works by the oscillation of hydrogen
between molecular and atomic states, the only reason to have to
service the reactor is the depletion of hydrogen through the reactor
walls or some type of pollution occurring in the reaction.
It makes a large difference in the econo
On Fri, Jan 6, 2012 at 7:33 PM, Jones Beene wrote:
> My bet on that window, which I did not notice, is that it would be for use
> with a start-up device (a laser, for instance), and not as a detector.
http://defkalion-energy.com/files/DGT_PRESS%20RELEASE_2011-11-14.pdf
The last two piccys. One
-Original Message-
From: Terry Blanton
> If the source of Rossi Reactor energy is association of nascent hydrogen,
there is an easy test. All you have to do is detect 277 nm far-ultraviolet
photons whose energy is equal to 4.476 eV.
That is a good point. However, these photons are in a
T,
"277 nm far-ultraviolet photons" reminds me of "Black Lights" company name
and their claims of spectrum shift.
"So, how are the 277 nm photons turned into heat?" It is likely a relentless
stream of photons that heat any absorbing material.
I seem to recall one European researcher received
If the source of Rossi Reactor energy is association of nascent
hydrogen, there is an easy test. All you have to do is detect 277 nm
far-ultraviolet photons whose energy is equal to 4.476 eV.
Now that I mention it, I recall a window in the reactor in one of the
Defkalion photos which could have b
On Fri, Jan 6, 2012 at 3:55 PM, Roarty, Francis X
wrote:
> My posit above is that fewer or smaller VP are NOT left in the suppressed
> void but rather space-time fabric has a consistent density and cross section
> population such that the fabric stretches to allow the larger VP to fit - a
> po
riday, January 06, 2012 11:31 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: EXTERNAL: [Vo]:Is the Rossi Reactor a Langmuir Torch
fueled by ZPE? It would seem that the numbers are right and
absolutely no nuclear reactions nor transmutations are occurring. The
energy of association of nascent hydrogen is 4.4
udts paper led me to adopt but it is an honest intuitive perspective.
_
From: Jones Beene [mailto:jone...@pacbell.net]
Sent: Friday, January 06, 2012 2:41 PM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: EXTERNAL: RE: [Vo]:Is the Rossi Reactor a Langmuir Torch
-
On Fri, Jan 6, 2012 at 2:41 PM, Jones Beene wrote:
> "On a basis of these calculations a measure of catalytic power of the metals
> was defined and the series of metals and alloys was ordered according to
> their catalytic power. It was found that the highest catalytic power with
> respect to the
-Original Message-
From: Terry Blanton
> So how exactly does the surface of a metal dissociate molecular hydrogen?
Romanowski offers a complicated suggestion. In short - the copper-nickel
alloy supplies about 3 eV of the necessary energy, in a kind of QM tunneling
reaction. The molecule
BTW, this has been discussed before, I just wanted to put the numbers on it.
T
fueled by ZPE? It would seem that the numbers are right and
absolutely no nuclear reactions nor transmutations are occurring. The
energy of association of nascent hydrogen is 4.476 eV per H2 atom.
The dissociation energy of one mole of H2 is 4.476 x 6.02 x 10^23 =
2.7 x 10^24 eV. At 22.47 MeV pe
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