Re: [Vo]:Acoustic Fusion Article on the International Business Times

2012-02-07 Thread pagnucco
Since Energetics Technologies (featured on 2009 60 Minutes tv-show) uses
ultrasound -

Ultrasonically-excited electrolysis Experiments at Energetics Technologies
http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/DardikIultrasonic.pdf

- is it possible that their wideband ultrasound is really inducing
cavitation fusion on the electrode surfaces?

Axil Axil wrote:
 I wonder if sonoluminescence could be used as a cheap way to produce the
 Rossi reaction. I believe that Rydberg hydrogen is produced by the extreme
 high pressures occurring during cavatation. The intense ultraviolet
 radiation coming at or very near the end of bubble collapse is a clue that
 highly excited hydrogen gas is being generated. Any excited dirty plasma
 hydrogen will produce Rydberg atoms.

 If a large bubble can enclose a micro sized nickel particle, a Rossi type
 reaction might be produced.
 Cavatation is extremely powerful. It can produce 5 nanometer diamonds from
 graphite feedstock in a few nanoseconds.

 The nickel powder might be easily destroyed inside the collapsing
 cavitation bubble.

 Some fluid other than water might be better used to get rid of the oxygen;
 maybe a hydrocarbon.

 But such an experiment is easily done; just add some nickel powder of
 various sizes, start cavitation, and look for excess heat.

 Regards: Axil








 On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 11:16 PM, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

 From: Patrick Ellul

 *   Came across this article and I thought it might be of some
 interest
 to this forum.


 http://au.ibtimes.com/articles/294046/20120207/acoustic-fusion-potentially-g
 green-inexpensive-virtually-inexhaustible.htm


 This is fairly well-known group to many of us. Ross Tessien was formerly
 the
 head of Impulse Devices, and a poster on this forum many years ago. I do
 not
 know why he left the company - as seems to be the case. Here is his
 patent.

 http://www.freepatentsonline.com/7510321.html

 They have had a prototype device on the market for some time IIRC but
 seemed
 to be moving to sonochemistry instead of fusion.

 http://www.impulsedevices.com/







[Vo]:Acoustic Fusion Article on the International Business Times

2012-02-06 Thread Patrick Ellul
Hello all,

Came across this article and I thought it might be of some interest to this
forum.

http://au.ibtimes.com/articles/294046/20120207/acoustic-fusion-potentially-ggreen-inexpensive-virtually-inexhaustible.htm


Regards,
Patrick

-- 
Patrick

www.tRacePerfect.com
The daily puzzle everyone can finish but not everyone can perfect!
The quickest puzzle ever!


RE: [Vo]:Acoustic Fusion Article on the International Business Times

2012-02-06 Thread Robert Leguillon
Sonoluminescence is undisputed. There is certainly bubble creation and light 
release.
Notice that they lightly dance around the fusion claim in this article. All 
fusion statements are forward-looking.  I was reading in to their answers that 
they had observed fusion, until Question #6.
 Q6: Do you think acoustic fusion will gain more acceptance from the mainstream 
populace than cold fusion? 
Clearly, if acoustic fusion is achieved, the acceptance is a given. If you 
mean, will the possibility of acoustic fusion be more readily accepted, 
probably so

They claim that their computer models reflect the possibility of fusion - but 
they aren't there yet.

From: ellulpatr...@gmail.com
Date: Tue, 7 Feb 2012 14:40:31 +1100
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: [Vo]:Acoustic Fusion Article on the International Business Times

Hello all,
Came across this article and I thought it might be of some interest to this 
forum.
http://au.ibtimes.com/articles/294046/20120207/acoustic-fusion-potentially-ggreen-inexpensive-virtually-inexhaustible.htm
 

Regards,Patrick
-- 
Patrick

www.tRacePerfect.com
The daily puzzle everyone can finish but not everyone can perfect!


The quickest puzzle ever! 



  

RE: [Vo]:Acoustic Fusion Article on the International Business Times

2012-02-06 Thread Jones Beene
From: Patrick Ellul 

*   Came across this article and I thought it might be of some interest
to this forum.

http://au.ibtimes.com/articles/294046/20120207/acoustic-fusion-potentially-g
green-inexpensive-virtually-inexhaustible.htm 


This is fairly well-known group to many of us. Ross Tessien was formerly the
head of Impulse Devices, and a poster on this forum many years ago. I do not
know why he left the company - as seems to be the case. Here is his patent.

http://www.freepatentsonline.com/7510321.html

They have had a prototype device on the market for some time IIRC but seemed
to be moving to sonochemistry instead of fusion.

http://www.impulsedevices.com/

attachment: winmail.dat

Re: [Vo]:Acoustic Fusion Article on the International Business Times

2012-02-06 Thread Axil Axil
I wonder if sonoluminescence could be used as a cheap way to produce the
Rossi reaction. I believe that Rydberg hydrogen is produced by the extreme
high pressures occurring during cavatation. The intense ultraviolet
radiation coming at or very near the end of bubble collapse is a clue that
highly excited hydrogen gas is being generated. Any excited dirty plasma
hydrogen will produce Rydberg atoms.

If a large bubble can enclose a micro sized nickel particle, a Rossi type
reaction might be produced.
Cavatation is extremely powerful. It can produce 5 nanometer diamonds from
graphite feedstock in a few nanoseconds.

The nickel powder might be easily destroyed inside the collapsing
cavitation bubble.

Some fluid other than water might be better used to get rid of the oxygen;
maybe a hydrocarbon.

But such an experiment is easily done; just add some nickel powder of
various sizes, start cavitation, and look for excess heat.

Regards: Axil








On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 11:16 PM, Jones Beene jone...@pacbell.net wrote:

 From: Patrick Ellul

 *   Came across this article and I thought it might be of some interest
 to this forum.


 http://au.ibtimes.com/articles/294046/20120207/acoustic-fusion-potentially-g
 green-inexpensive-virtually-inexhaustible.htm


 This is fairly well-known group to many of us. Ross Tessien was formerly
 the
 head of Impulse Devices, and a poster on this forum many years ago. I do
 not
 know why he left the company - as seems to be the case. Here is his patent.

 http://www.freepatentsonline.com/7510321.html

 They have had a prototype device on the market for some time IIRC but
 seemed
 to be moving to sonochemistry instead of fusion.

 http://www.impulsedevices.com/