[Vo]:Do Small Amounts Of Radiation Matter?

2018-10-17 Thread H LV
Do Small Amounts Of Radiation Matter? Yes, indeed, but not the way you might think. It turns out we need a little bit of radiation to function in tip-top shape. And it’s all about our genes. The latest studies from New Mexico State University demonstrate that the absence of radiation is not good

[Vo]:Carbon Capture and renewable fuels

2018-10-17 Thread H LV
This article is from June 7, 2018. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/b-c-company-says-it-is-sucking-carbon-from-air-making-fuel-1.4696817 <> <> A video about the company https://www.facebook.com/VICEAustralia/videos/2143022985727922/UzpfSTEwMDAwMzQ1Mjg0NzYyNjpWSzoxODQ1MzE1MzI1NTYz

[Vo]:Carbon Engineering

2018-10-17 Thread H LV
More about the company Carbon Engineering. Their philosophical outlook is different. "A non-disruptive disruptive tehnology" "Instead of changing everything else why don't we just make a fuel which is carbon neutral?" "Fuel made from atmospheric C02" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s6TZdstpmGo

[Vo]:The technology and economics of Carbon Capture

2018-10-17 Thread H LV
A discussion about the technology and economics of carbon capture. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XY_lzonfE3I

Re: [Vo]:Carbon Engineering

2018-10-18 Thread H LV
list the most outrageous aspects of > this technological scheme. > > They are praying on investors who are unfamiliar with thermodynamics. > -- > *From:* H LV > *Sent:* Wednesday, October 17, 2018 1:44 PM > *To:* vortex-l@eskimo.com > *Subject:* [Vo

Re: [Vo]:The technology and economics of Carbon Capture

2018-10-18 Thread H LV
, Oct 18, 2018 at 8:17 AM Brian Ahern wrote: > Amazingly bad video! > > > -- > *From:* H LV > *Sent:* Wednesday, October 17, 2018 1:55 PM > *To:* vortex-l@eskimo.com > *Subject:* [Vo]:The technology and economics of Carbon Capture > > A d

Re: [Vo]:The technology and economics of Carbon Capture

2018-10-18 Thread H LV
the last word is "insurmountable". On Thu, Oct 18, 2018 at 1:50 PM H LV wrote: > She looks nervous. > For many people the concepts of zero *net* emissions or even *negative* > emissions as opposed to zero emissions is unfamiliar > because it runs counter to the renewable

Re: [Vo]:Carbon Engineering

2018-10-18 Thread H LV
I have heard the first synthetic fuel was made in 1925. Germany synthesized fuel in WWII. Harry On Thu, Oct 18, 2018 at 4:05 PM Jed Rothwell wrote: > H LV wrote: > > The article on Carbon Engineering I posted in thread called Carbon Capture >> and Renewable Fuels makes it clea

[Vo]:Freeman Dyson

2018-10-27 Thread H LV
I guess one thing I don’t want to do is to spend all my time arguing this business. I mean, I am not the person to do that. I have two great disadvantages. First of all, I am 85 years old. Obviously, I’m an old fuddy-duddy. So, I have no credibility Freeman Dyson in 2009 This 2009 interview with F

[Vo]:Galactic cosmic rays, solar activity and the climate

2018-11-01 Thread H LV
Svensmark continues to build a case for his galactic view on climate change. https://phys.org/news/2017-12-link-stars-clouds-climate-earth.html https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-02082-2 Paper in Nature (Dec. 2017) https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-02082-2

[Vo]:OT: Dr. Judith Curry (Climatologist)

2018-11-04 Thread H LV
Dr. Judith Curry explains the reality of bad climate science and bad politics. https://youtu.be/1xOD097QBk4

[Vo]:OT: Climate models for the layman

2018-11-04 Thread H LV
Climate models for the layman interview with Dr. Judith Curry. https://youtu.be/SBjFjSZjv6w Climate models for the layman by Judith Curry https://www.regulatorwatch.com/reported_elsewhere/climate-models-layman-report/ Here is a critical response. Despite his claim that she is confusing the publ

Re: [Vo]:OT: Climate models for the layman

2018-11-04 Thread H LV
Sorry the link at the bottom should be https://andthentheresphysics.wordpress.com/2017/02/21/judith-curry-confuses-laypeople-about-climate-models/ On Sun, Nov 4, 2018, 2:11 PM H LV, wrote: > Climate models for the layman interview with Dr. Judith Curry. > https://youtu.be/SBjFj

Re: [Vo]:off topic - This could be where it all began

2018-11-16 Thread H LV
As with photos of celebrities from decades ago, one wonders if these old galaxies are still around and how they look. ;-) On Fri, Nov 16, 2018, 12:45 PM Jones Beene > Interesting story today for anyone looking for Universal answers... such > as where are we, relatively speaking ? > > The galaxy,

[Vo]:Theory for FTL

2018-11-25 Thread H LV
https://www.firstpost.com/tech/science/experts-have-a-theory-for-how-spacecrafts-can-travel-at-faster-than-light-speeds-5588101.html?fbclid=IwAR3t08cYa_bs5tCBGaon-sviv2_bHdmDKzwrik0McHBB880phLQuw-dBv14

[Vo]:First flight of an electric plane with no moving parts.

2018-12-04 Thread H LV
"Your typical jet plane is full of fast-moving blades. We need the spinning of turbines and propellers to create thrust and let us take to the skies. Or do we?" https://www.technologyreview.com/s/612451/an-electric-plane-with-no-moving-parts-has-made-its-first-flight/

Re: [Vo]:Digitizing an old graph from Fleischmann

2018-12-12 Thread H LV
I've been thinking, that if one really wants information to last at least millions of year then it should be fossilized. On Wed, Dec 12, 2018, 8:14 PM Terry Blanton Their Utah facility records all human electronic information ad > infinitum. Or until the next asteroid or EMP. > > On Wed, Dec 12,

Re: [Vo]:Digitizing an old graph from Fleischmann

2018-12-13 Thread H LV
I was was imagining some sort of record that could withstand a wide variety of conditions. Harry On Thu, Dec 13, 2018 at 11:06 AM Jed Rothwell wrote: > H LV wrote: > > I've been thinking, that if one really wants information to last at least >> millions of year then it

[Vo]:Superconductivity above freezing...but at very high pressure

2018-12-22 Thread H LV
"Physicists think they have achieved one of the most coveted goals of their discipline: creating a superconducting material that works at near-room temperature. The evidence is still preliminary and comes with a major caveat. So far, the material has been made only under pressures of about 200 gig

Re: [Vo]:Superconductivity above freezing...but at very high pressure

2018-12-22 Thread H LV
It seems 2018 has been an exciting and controversial year for superconductor claims. https://www.evolving-science.com/matter-energy/new-world-record-superconductivity-00779?fbclid=IwAR1LaMEkNne-p0D8pygvePg3LPt6GagwPfOvsB-af_6viRCFTKk7wfJ8k4Q On Sat, Dec 22, 2018, 5:18 PM H LV "Physicists

Re: [Vo]:Microwave ignition - From Germany

2018-12-25 Thread H LV
This is where we should be headed, rather than more privately owned cars with a different motor. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/dec/05/luxembourg-to-become-first-country-to-make-all-public-transport-free On Tue, Dec 25, 2018, 9:50 AM Jones Beene > > Terry Blanton wrote: > > > How many vo

Re: [Vo]:

2018-12-27 Thread H LV
Another remote possibility is that its rotation is so slow as to be undetectable since measurements of its light curve began. On Thu, Dec 27, 2018, 5:22 PM Axil Axil > https://www.inverse.com/article/52048-ultima-thule-new-horizons-mission-nasa-light-curve > > > ultima thule has no light curve. T

Re: [Vo]:Slaughterbots

2019-01-14 Thread H LV
Some sort of EMP? On Mon, Jan 14, 2019, 5:59 AM Alain Sepeda Our work would be to develop counter measures. > If there is sword, there is shield. > > Le lun. 14 janv. 2019 à 02:41, Jed Rothwell a > écrit : > >> In my book, I predicted that small autonomous robot killers might be >> developed. I

Re: [Vo]:Robert Godes podcdid not catch the signifast

2019-01-19 Thread H LV
If the goal is the conversion of energy into heat rather than the production of energy (0U), how efficient is this method compared to other methods? I mean if LENR or CF proves to be impractical as a primary source of energy then perhaps it's true value is in the production of heat. Harry On Sat,

Re: [Vo]:Robert Godes podcdid not catch the signifast

2019-01-20 Thread H LV
f oil) Harry On Sat, Jan 19, 2019 at 3:05 PM David L. Babcock wrote: > I hope that was snark... Not much could beat a match. > > On Sat, Jan 19, 2019 at 1:35 PM H LV wrote: > >> If the goal is the conversion of energy into heat rather than the >> production of energy (0U),

[Vo]:What is Pataphysics?

2019-01-20 Thread H LV
Pataphysics is a concept first espoused by the artist Alfred Jarry around 1900. It has many definitions, including the science of imaginary solutions and the laws governing exceptions, the science of the particular, pataphysics is to metaphysics as metaphysics is to physics, pataphysics includes me

[Vo]:Lev Landu honoured by a google doodle

2019-01-22 Thread H LV
Today Lev Landu was honoured by a google doodle. I searched youtube for more videos about this nobel prize winning Russian physicist but there wasn't much in English. However, in these two short videos Edward Teller describes how he settled a theorectical dispute about superconductivity between Lan

Re: [Vo]:More on the novel particle

2019-02-01 Thread H LV
I could learn about the structure of a watch by smashing it with a hammer but chances are I will damage or destroy some parts of the watch in the process. Do high energy colliders really offer a window into the structure of matter or do they transform the very thing they are studying? Harry On

Re: [Vo]:More on the novel particle

2019-02-03 Thread H LV
pect > intransigence to continue - plus an unwillingness to review own LHC data > for confirmation - since it should be there.” This comment is right on > IMHO. > > > > Bob Cook > -- > *From:* H LV > *Sent:* Friday, February 1, 2019 1:57:0

Re: [Vo]:More on the novel particle

2019-02-03 Thread H LV
Maybe MRI machines will be useful instruments too. They used to be called NMR imaging machines but the name was changed due to irrationals fears associated with the word nuclear. Harry On Sun, Feb 3, 2019, 6:39 PM H LV Rutherford established this method of investigating the nucleus and the

[Vo]:He doesn't care what his colleagues think.

2019-02-05 Thread H LV
Harvard’s top astronomer says an alien ship may be among us — and he doesn’t care what his colleagues think https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/techandscience/harvards-top-astronomer-says-an-alien-ship-may-be-among-us-—-and-he-doesnt-care-what-his-colleagues-think/ar-BBTbOMd Quote “The mainstream appr

[Vo]:Off Topic: climatologist Judith Curry testified this month

2019-02-24 Thread H LV
This month before congress climatologist Judith Curry argued for a pragmatic approach to climate change based on her assesment of the actual uncertainties and confidence levels contained in the IPCC reports. (Video is about 5 minutes) https://youtu.be/5RIepllnjFA Harry

Re: [Vo]:The EMC effect and proton disintegration

2019-02-24 Thread H LV
Just curious, in what state are the target nuclei? Are these free floating nuclei like in a gas or are they part of a solid? Harry

Re: [Vo]:The EMC effect and proton disintegration

2019-02-24 Thread H LV
s no firm evidence for this conclusion, other than that it would > tie up a lot of loose ends if it were accurate. > > > > According to LH dense hydrogen is a superfluid... > > - > > H LV wrote: > > Just curious, in what state are t

Re: [Vo]:The EMC effect and proton disintegration

2019-02-24 Thread H LV
that it s commonly assumed that they can be treated as islands with no possibility informing each other, but maybe that assumption is wrong under some circumstances. Harry On Sun, Feb 24, 2019, 10:59 AM Jones Beene Which is a segue back to the subject heading - the EMC effect > > > H

Re: [Vo]:a bit of honesty in a complicated world

2019-03-01 Thread H LV
In contrast with Big Tobacco of the 1970s, I think the big car companies and big oil have investors who suffer from risk aversion rather than naked selfishness. Harry On Thu, Feb 28, 2019 at 8:45 PM Jed Rothwell wrote: > Jones Beene wrote: > > >> He did not mention explicitly : "investors from

Re: [Vo]:a bit of honesty in a complicated world

2019-03-02 Thread H LV
x27;safe'. CYA and political correctness > comes with the territory, big organizations not allowed to fail > > > On Fri, Mar 1, 2019, 17:59 H LV wrote: > >> In contrast with Big Tobacco of the 1970s, I think the big car companies >> and big oil have investors wh

Re: [Vo]:a bit of honesty in a complicated world

2019-03-03 Thread H LV
the nature of some faith doctrines) is warranted in open, > civilized society, even though I do not agree with all their tenants. > > > > Bob Cook > > > > > > *From: *H LV > *Sent: *Saturday, March 2, 2019 11:49 AM > *To: *vortex-l@eskimo.com > *Subject:

[Vo]:Thorium-salt reactor starts up.

2019-03-12 Thread H LV
https://www.technologyreview.com/the-download/608712/a-thorium-salt-reactor-has-fired-up-for-the-first-time-in-four-decades/?fbclid=IwAR2UXaco_FNvQq6WTJdBR60hc7IAhW-cmLK0Ivtgk0dg0uRe5XGck8OzphY A Thorium-Salt Reactor Has Fired Up for the First Time in Four Decades The road to cleaner, meltdown-pr

[Vo]:Evidence of Solar Storms

2019-03-12 Thread H LV
<> . Worse yet, the world has become far more dependent on electricity since the Carrington Event, and if a similarly powerful geomagnetic storm were to h

Re: [Vo]:Oak Ridge enriching isotopes again

2019-03-16 Thread H LV
Some years I noticed a curious parallel betweenl the shape of a typical stress strain curve and the shape of the binding energy curve. If the parallelism is more than just a coincidence then it suggests the standard binding energy curve is only "apparent" and the true binding energy does not have a

Re: [Vo]:Magmo in the land of lost wages...

2019-03-28 Thread H LV
:-D "two tens for a five" https://youtu.be/f7pMYHn-1yA Harry On Wed, Mar 27, 2019, 8:06 PM Terry Blanton > 40 *kw* of mechanical *energy* >> > > uh-huh. They sure know what they are talking about. >

[Vo]:​Why I Don’t “Believe” in “Science”

2019-03-28 Thread H LV
Why I Don’t “Believe” in “Science” Science isn't about "belief." It's about facts, evidence, theories, experiments. by ROBERT TRACINSKI MARCH 26, 2019 https://thebulwark.com/why-i-dont-believe-in-science/ begin quote <> end quote

Re: [Vo]:Magmo in the land of lost wages...

2019-03-28 Thread H LV
iven that it shouldn't even work at all - maybe that follow-on > breakthrough is not farfetched as it seems. > > Who knows? Maybe the business plan is to get a few hundred of them out > there as UPS systems and hope they can figure out how to boost the output > considerably furth

Re: [Vo]:A backdoor to proton annihilation?

2019-04-04 Thread H LV
Thinking about it as an engineer might, it could be that an individual proton is subjected to locally enormous stress which causes it to fail (disintegrate). Harry On Thu, Apr 4, 2019, 2:19 PM JonesBeene One of the big knocks about the Holmlid effect – where the claim is that > hydrogen > > is c

Re: [Vo]:PENTAGON CANCELS CONTRACT FOR JASON ADVISORY PANEL--TOO MUCH LENR?

2019-04-13 Thread H LV
https://youtu.be/oyXolsifjc0 How about winding them up? ;-) But, seriously what kind of mechanical energy density is possible with micro/nano mechanical technology? On Sat, Apr 13, 2019, 3:49 PM In reply to Terry Blanton's message of Sat, 13 Apr 2019 09:47:59 -0400: > Hi, > > >Aww, come on guy

Re: [Vo]:OFF TOPIC Notre Dame, art curating and restoration

2019-04-18 Thread H LV
I didn't know Greek statues were originally painted. Fascinating. Harry On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 9:50 PM Jed Rothwell wrote: > Some comments by me about this: > > > https://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/thread/5967-le-myst%C3%A8re-des-cath%C3%A9drales/?postID=109274#post109274 > > Take-away message: i

Re: [Vo]:OFF TOPIC Notre Dame, art curating and restoration

2019-04-18 Thread H LV
One revelation per day is all I can take. Harry On Thu, Apr 18, 2019, 5:39 PM Terry Blanton And dinosaurs had feathers. > > On Thu, Apr 18, 2019 at 3:26 PM H LV wrote: > >> I didn't know Greek statues were originally painted. >> Fascinating. >> Harry >>

Re: [Vo]:Planckian dissipation phenomenon

2019-05-12 Thread H LV
If one can build a transmitter and a receiver to transmit and detect wave packets travelling with sub c group velocity why can't one do the same for wave packets with group velocity much greater than c and achieve communication which is much faster than c? Harry On Fri, May 3, 2019, 11:51 PM Axil

[Vo]:Off topic: machine translation

2019-05-15 Thread H LV
A critique of google translate. https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2018/01/the-shallowness-of-google-translate/551570/ Harry

Re: [Vo]:Planckian dissipation phenomenon

2019-05-21 Thread H LV
nerated first? Would they be going by some other > limiting speed agent other than C? > > On 5/12/19, H LV wrote: > > If one can build a transmitter and a receiver to transmit and detect wave > > packets travelling with sub c group velocity why can't one do the same > for

Re: [Vo]:The historical model for Danzik - Joe Newman

2019-05-27 Thread H LV
Perpetual motion machines are usually classified as either being of the first kind or second kind. The first kind creates its own energy and can perform work in violation of the first law of thermodynamics. The second kind uses ambient thermal energy to perform work in violation of the second law

Re: [Vo]:The historical model for Danzik - Joe Newman

2019-05-27 Thread H LV
On Mon, May 27, 2019, 5:18 PM Jed Rothwell H LV wrote: > > >> A perpetual motion machine which is capable of generating enough energy >> to keep itself in >> motion despite the forces present, but not enough to perform any other >> work, such as lifting a weig

Re: [Vo]:Berlinguette, C.P., et al., Revisiting the cold case of cold fusion. Nature, 2019

2019-05-29 Thread H LV
The first article says: . >> Well at least they aren't using the scathing term pathological science. Harry On Tue, May 28, 2019, 7:13 PM Jed Rothwell Note there are two other articles in Nature about the Google experiment. > Both of them insuf

Re: [Vo]:Another take on LENR from MIT?

2019-05-30 Thread H LV
On Wed, May 29, 2019, 10:28 PM Terry Blanton > > On Wed, May 29, 2019 at 10:25 PM Terry Blanton wrote: > >> It's as damned obvious as UFOs. >> > > Hopefully, before my expiry date, a UFO will land on the WH lawn and when > they ask how the ship is powered the response will be, "Cold fusion, you

Re: [Vo]:A bit more info -- LENR/Google

2019-06-06 Thread H LV
On Thu, Jun 6, 2019, 9:39 AM JonesBeene > > > > This is the same story previously reported here and elsewhere, with a bit > more info and pics courtesy of National Geographic > > > > > https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2019/05/cold-fusion-remains-elusive-these-scientists-may-revive-quest/

Re: [Vo]:Mizuno reports increased excess heat

2019-06-19 Thread H LV
In your paper you describe a certain brand of orange scented detergent. Do you think a successful replication requires it? Harry On Wed., Jun. 19, 2019, 8:23 p.m. Jed Rothwell, wrote: > Axil Axil wrote: > > >> This replication method goes without saying. But what is the plan for >> continuing i

Re: [Vo]:Mizuno reports increased excess heat

2019-06-22 Thread H LV
Commercial for Kyukyuto. https://youtu.be/W4rOA20hZvw Harry On Wed., Jun. 19, 2019, 8:49 p.m. Jed Rothwell, wrote: > > > By the way, the name of that detergent is cute. It is Kyukyuto which is > the sound clean wet dishes make when you wife them. Kyu! Kyu! Literally and > figuratively cute. >

Re: [Vo]:This could be an indication of "dense hydrogen" from solarorigin

2019-06-23 Thread H LV
On Wed, Jun 12, 2019 at 11:38 PM Andrew Meulenberg wrote: > > Schwinger was also "scorned" when he proposed that nuclear energy could be > shared with bound electrons since this could lead to deeper orbits and > fusion. > If nuclear energy can be shared with bound electrons, doesn't that imply e

[Vo]:Pros and Cons of SMRs

2019-06-25 Thread H LV
The pros and cons of SMRs. https://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/small-modular-reactors-nuclear-smr-1.5187469 Harry

[Vo]:More on Canada and SMRs

2019-06-25 Thread H LV
<< Canada is positioning itself up to be a leader in a new age of nuclear power by exploring the use of small modular reactors (SMR). "It's the next wave of innovation. It's the future of the Canadian nuclear sector," according to Diane Cameron, director of the Nuclear Energy Division at Natural R

Re: [Vo]:How to make money with cold fusion

2019-07-02 Thread H LV
When the electric battery was first discovered in the early 1800s and little was known about the phenomena, to some people it seemed like it could become the next great source of energy. I think people should temper their commercial and scientific expectations when faced with the mystery of a new

Re: [Vo]:How to make money with cold fusion

2019-07-03 Thread H LV
The battery (or Voltaic pile as it was originally named) proved to be an incredibley important discovery, but not in the way some people imagined. So much of our modern world depends on batteries. Harry On Tue., Jul. 2, 2019, 4:39 p.m. Jed Rothwell, wrote: > H LV wrote: > > When the

[Vo]:Delocalization of nuclei

2019-07-04 Thread H LV
Jones brought up the subject of quantum delocalization. What usually comes to mind is the delocalization of electrons since they have a relatively much longer quantum wavelength compared to protons. However delocalization can in principle happen to protons as well (and maybe larger nuclei ?)This pa

Re: [Vo]:Delocalization of nuclei

2019-07-08 Thread H LV
On Fri., Jul. 5, 2019, 12:03 a.m. JonesBeene, wrote: > *From: *H LV > > > >- However delocalization can in principle happen to protons as well… > > > > Isn’t hydronium a classic example of delocalization of protons? > > > I am not sure if the term de

Re: [Vo]:SPIN-LATTICE COUPLING

2019-07-13 Thread H LV
Here are three examples of recalescence. At white hot temperature https://youtu.be/5hDGYjfNGCA Red hot temperature https://youtu.be/33neAGXxZ94 A cooler example requiring a special thermal imaging camera https://youtu.be/whHOK9pOTFg If nuclei could somehow couple to the lattice, a nuclear reca

Re: [Vo]:SPIN-LATTICE COUPLING

2019-07-13 Thread H LV
The wikipedia page does not mention the complementary phenomena of decalescence. Definition of *decalescence* : the decrease in temperature when the rate of heat absorption during transformation exceeds the rate of heat input while heating metal through a transformation range On Sat., Jul. 13, 2

Re: [Vo]:If Mizuno is correct, this design is likely to betheprecursor to all future devices

2019-07-16 Thread H LV
How much of the energy in a nuclear reaction is actually due to mass change? A chemical reaction is accompanied by mass change but the change is so small that it can be ignored so that essentially all the energy is due to EM forces performing work. Even if there were no mass change in a nuclear re

Re: [Vo]:If Mizuno is correct, this design is likely to betheprecursor to all future devices

2019-07-16 Thread H LV
uesday, July 16, 2019 5:50:54 AM > *To:* Vortex > *Subject:* Re: [Vo]:If Mizuno is correct, this design is likely to > betheprecursor to all future devices > > H LV wrote: > > How much of the energy in a nuclear reaction is actually due to mass >> change? A chemical reaction is accom

Re: [Vo]:If Mizuno is correct, this design is likely to betheprecursor to all future devices

2019-07-16 Thread H LV
On Tue., Jul. 16, 2019, 9:51 a.m. Jed Rothwell, wrote: > H LV wrote: > > How much of the energy in a nuclear reaction is actually due to mass >> change? A chemical reaction is accompanied by mass change but the change >> is so small that it can be ignored so that essentia

Re: [Vo]:If Mizuno is correct, this design is likely tobetheprecursor to all future devices

2019-07-16 Thread H LV
On Tue., Jul. 16, 2019, 9:54 a.m. JonesBeene, wrote: > > > *From: *H LV > > > >- How much of the energy in a nuclear reaction is actually due to mass >change? > > > > Is there any reason to think that it would not be all? > > > >

Re: [Vo]:If Mizuno is correct, this design is likely to betheprecursor to all future devices

2019-07-16 Thread H LV
On Tue., Jul. 16, 2019, 1:12 p.m. Jürg Wyttenbach, wrote: > My model shows that all mass is EM mass and in fact gravitation is the > weakest EM force. > > EM mass behaves exactly as Einstein and others before Einstein already > found. A spring under tension has more mass than a relaxed spring etc

Re: [Vo]:If Mizuno is correct, this design is likely to betheprecursor to all future devices

2019-07-16 Thread H LV
; > > > I would say pulling on the spring adds potential energy to the spring and > the entity creating the tension. The entiity may be a closed system which > entails the weak “gracity” EM field forces as Jurg suggests. > > > > > > Bob Cook >

Re: [Vo]:If Mizuno is correct, this design is likely to betheprecursor to all future devices

2019-07-16 Thread H LV
If mass energy conversion is treated as a cause of nuclear structure then you are correct. I am looking at it as an effect of nuclear structure so the energy produced per atom would only tell us that nuclear forces are involved. Harry On Tue., Jul. 16, 2019, 6:23 p.m. , wrote: > In reply to H

Re: [Vo]:If Mizuno is correct, this design is likely to betheprecursor to all future devices

2019-07-19 Thread H LV
My criticism allows for such a possibility. Harry On Wed., Jul. 17, 2019, 4:06 p.m. , wrote: > In reply to H LV's message of Tue, 16 Jul 2019 19:49:22 -0400: > Hi Harry, > > You are making the assumption that it actually has something to do with > nuclear > structure. However it is by no mean

Re: [Vo]:are smartlists working? vortex-L test

2019-08-16 Thread H LV
https://youtu.be/umj0gu5nEGs Rocky Horror Picture Show On Fri., Aug. 16, 2019, 8:58 a.m. JonesBeene, wrote: > > > Wow, for a second I thought I was in a time warp…. 😊 > > > > > > > > *From: *Rick Monteverde *.* > > *…* > > On Aug 15, 2019 at 8:32 PM, William Beaty wrote: > > Test > > > > >

Re: [Vo]:Replication of Mizuno mesh experiment by Zhang

2019-08-21 Thread H LV
Will he be trying a new mesh? Harry On Wed., Aug. 21, 2019, 2:09 p.m. Jed wrote: > >1. Zhang replaced the deuterium gas with argon. That killed the >reaction. I hope he did not clobber it permanently! Yesterday he told me he >went back to deuterium, but it is still dead. > >

Re: [Vo]:anti-matter production

2019-08-27 Thread H LV
This is off topic but I have speculated that the eye creates a very small amount of light so it might be place where spontaneous hawking radiation occurs. Harry On Sat., Aug. 24, 2019, 8:49 p.m. Axil Axil, wrote: > Rossi said that the SL reactor produces photons in the 100 to 200 nm > range. Thi

[Vo]:OFFTOPIC: Why the Starship uses stainless steel

2019-09-29 Thread H LV
Why the Starship uses stainless steel https://youtu.be/6AcE7hBhpYU Harry

[Vo]:The SAFIRE project update

2019-09-30 Thread H LV
<> 48minutes https://youtu.be/DTaXfbvGf8E Reaction to the SAFIRE update 17minutes https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=L69ttX3kviw

Re: [Vo]:Nick Danger's Top 10 answers for symptom 7

2019-10-23 Thread H LV
I think the list should include N-rays. Harry On Wed., Oct. 23, 2019, 5:52 p.m. Jones Beene, wrote: > This is a light-weight piece for the namephreaks out there (we miss you, > Herb). > > In a patho-sci mashup of LENR with Firesign Theatre ("beat the reaper") > it's about time to settle on a nam

Re: [Vo]:Nick Danger's Top 10 answers for symptom 7

2019-10-23 Thread H LV
ote: > Harry- > > > > I agree if you mean n (neutrino) rays. Neutrons are too easy to identify > at a distance to be missed an/or mysterious.. > > > > Bob Cook > > > > Sent from Mail <https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for > Windo

Re: [Vo]:Status of Mizuno Pd-Ni replications

2019-12-02 Thread H LV
Test

[Vo]:Reflections on the state of the public climate debate

2019-12-02 Thread H LV
Reflections on the state of the public climate debate by Climatologist Judith Curry. https://judithcurry.com/2019/12/02/madrid/#more-25458 Harry On Mon., Dec. 2, 2019, 11:42 a.m. Jones Beene, wrote: > > > Jed Rothwell wrote: > > > > Several replications of the Pd-Ni experiment are underway, bu

[Vo]:OT: The toxic rhetoric of climate change

2019-12-16 Thread H LV
https://judithcurry.com/2019/12/14/the-toxic-rhetoric-of-climate-change/ Harry

Re: [Vo]:OT: The toxic rhetoric of climate change

2019-12-16 Thread H LV
projection is for 2100. > > > But don't worry some 10 million years ago earth was 10 degrees warmer. > Elephants, Giraffes, Alligators,.. lived in the north of Europe. Of > course sea level was 20 metes higher and London was a nice riff. I can't > wait to see it come b

[Vo]:OT: View point diversity and Confirmation Bias

2019-12-16 Thread H LV
A short narrated video with a cute animation illustrating the difference between orthodoxy and heterodoxy and how confirmation bias can lead to orthodoxy and how view point diversity supports heterodoxy. https://youtu.be/3Bklwq2LBjI Jonathan Haidt ( one of the founders of Heterodox Academy ) dis

Re: [Vo]:OT: The toxic rhetoric of climate change

2019-12-16 Thread H LV
At the bottom of the graph it should say "unlikely worst case scenario" instead of "current path", but as Judith Curry points out the media has stopped reading the IPCC reports and only listens to activists who have decided on their own that the IPCC reports are too conservative for their agenda.

Re: [Vo]:Bessler update, and other musings..

2019-12-26 Thread H LV
What we think of as the beginning of modern physics in the 1600s , i.e. classical mechanics, was informed by the study of projectiles, collisions, rolling and rocking bodies. A conceptual and mathematical framework was devised which explained such motions. It was also thought that if all motions co

Re: [Vo]:Bessler update, and other musings..

2019-12-26 Thread H LV
Sorry that should say "...on non-ice surfaces...". Harry On Thu., Dec. 26, 2019, 6:34 p.m. H LV, wrote: > What we think of as the beginning of modern physics in the 1600s , i.e. > classical mechanics, was informed by the study of projectiles, collisions, > rolling an

[Vo]:Mystery Hiding Inside Every Atom

2020-01-08 Thread H LV
There's a Giant Mystery Hiding Inside Every Atom in the Universe By Rafi Letzter - Staff Writer No one really knows what happens inside an atom. But two competing groups of scientists think they've figured it out. And both are racing to prove that their own vision is correct. Here's what we know

[Vo]:cannon balls and curling stones

2020-01-13 Thread H LV
This is an illustration from Newton's Principia of his famous cannon thought experiment. It shows how a cannonball fired horizontally from a mountain top (assuming no air resistance) will orbit the Earth without falling to the ground if it is fired with sufficient speed. https://imgur.com/gallery/d

Re: [Vo]:cannon balls and curling stones

2020-01-13 Thread H LV
On Mon, Jan 13, 2020 at 10:15 AM H LV wrote: > This is an illustration from Newton's Principia of his famous cannon > thought experiment. It shows how a cannonball fired horizontally from a > mountain top (assuming no air resistance) will orbit the Earth without > falling to th

[Vo]:OT: Something new about something old.

2020-01-14 Thread H LV
<> A New Discovery about Dodecahedrons Featuring Jayadev Athreya on a new discovery about platonic solids, in particular dodecahedra https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G9_l8QASobI Harry

Re: [Vo]:cannon balls and curling stones

2020-01-22 Thread H LV
On Mon, Jan 13, 2020 at 12:21 PM H LV wrote: > > > On Mon, Jan 13, 2020 at 10:15 AM H LV wrote: > >> This is an illustration from Newton's Principia of his famous cannon >> thought experiment. It shows how a cannonball fired horizontally from a >> mountain to

Re: [Vo]:cannon balls and curling stones

2020-01-22 Thread H LV
On Wed, Jan 22, 2020 at 4:46 PM H LV wrote: > > > On Mon, Jan 13, 2020 at 12:21 PM H LV wrote: > >> >> >> On Mon, Jan 13, 2020 at 10:15 AM H LV wrote: >> >>> This is an illustration from Newton's Principia of his famous cannon >&

Re: [Vo]:cannon balls and curling stones

2020-01-23 Thread H LV
n.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrifugal_force#cite_note-Angelo-42> is > interesting. > > > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reactive_centrifugal_force#Difference_from_centrifugal_pseudoforce > > Andrew > _ __ _ > > On Wed, Jan 22, 2020 at 11:30 PM H LV wrote: > >> &g

Re: [Vo]:cannon balls and curling stones

2020-01-23 Thread H LV
On Wed, Jan 22, 2020 at 5:40 PM Jürg Wyttenbach wrote: > Unluckily the earth is not flat even in the curved sense as it is an > ellipsoid with at least a delta north-south/east-west in radius of about > 10km. > > Even more unluckily gravitation is not a constant it slightly depends on > the densi

Re: [Vo]:There is no dark matter. Instead, information has mass, physicist says

2020-01-24 Thread H LV
quote << Vopson says, "He [Landauer] first identified the link between thermodynamics and information by postulating that logical irreversibility of a computational process implies physical irreversibility." This indicates that information is physical, Vopson says, and demonstrates the link between

Re: [Vo]:There is no dark matter. Instead, information has mass, physicist says

2020-01-24 Thread H LV
history of the balloon -15 minutes https://youtu.be/jjqdgbFGFiE On Fri, Jan 24, 2020 at 12:08 PM ChemE Stewart wrote: > This place is mostly of entropy, radiation and hot air... > > https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entropy_(information_theory) > > > On Fri, Jan 24, 2020 at 11

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