[Vo]:"below ground state helium" ?
"Below ground state helium" turns up zero hits on google. which is curious . in light of the assertion that 'physics is almost complete'. Has this possibility not been addressed adequately ? IOW .does anyone recall if this (putative) species of fractional helium has been mentioned by Mills/BLP or by others? . and if not, why not? It could be a better candidate for a portion of 'dark matter,' if it existed in 'deep redundancy,' than the usual suspects. Matter of fact, it is fairly illogical, as Mills asserts, to suggest that 'hydrino-hydride' can make up a proportion of dark matter, yet 'heliinos' or pycnohelium, do not exist. Helium is the second most abundant element in the universe, accounting for 24-25% of the elemental mass of our galaxy (aside from dark matter). I intentionally phrased that statement in this way because the normal view is that hydrogen is more prevalent (90+%) in the number of atoms, is misleading in terms of actual mass, and ultimately in terms of relative importance. If your intent is to make a point, then helium is clearly the most neglected atomic-molecule in the universe, and if it was to be a preferential product of 'redundancy' who is to say that it is not more prevalent than hydrogen, given that dark matter itself is the wild-card in terms of total mass . and/or that LERN, as a QM reaction operating over billions of years, would favor pycnohelium "as the end of the line", over any other species. :-) Jones
Re: [Vo]:electron slit diffraction
Youtube - Single electron double slit wave experiment (1mn video) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZJ-0PBRuthc http://www.hitachi.com/rd/research/em/doubleslit.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-slit_experiment#When_observed_emission_by_emission http://l-esperimento-piu-bello-della-fisica.bo.imm.cnr.it/Resources/Rosa-PhilSci_Archive-Jan2008.pdf The latter article features a fairly complete bibliography for those experiments. The Hitachi experiment seems the most well-known. Tonomura, A., Endo, J., Matsuda, T., Kawasaki, T., and Ezawa, H. [1989]: `Demonstration of Single-Electron Buildup of an Interference Pattern', American Journal of Physics, 57, pp. 117–120. Michel 2010/6/24 Alexander Hollins : > Hey all, a friend on a more bio based list is asking about electron > slit diffraction experiments. Anyone have links or sources on some > good ones to pass on, in particular where the experimenter did their > math completely? > >
RE: [Vo]:The Richter meme was: North Korea claims fusion breakthrough
Jones Beene wrote: Apparently the "control" was inadvertently skewing results which were already at a level that was near their detection limit, so they retracted everything due to the faulty control, but not because they did not think it would work. I believe they concluded the helium in both cases was migrating through the glass. Charles Beaudette told me he thinks that conclusion is right, the helium was migrating in, and they did not have a valid cold fusion result. - Jed