Re: MAHG: How does H2 avoid constantly itself blowing apart?

2005-07-12 Thread Michael Huffman
Am Dienstag, 12. Juli 2005 01:38 schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Can somebody offer a reasonable explanation as to why atomic hydrogen when it recombines doesn't blow itself apart in the act? If the amount of theorized OU heat generated during the recombination is a much as claimed how do the

Re: MAHG: How does H2 avoid..

2005-07-12 Thread RC Macaulay
Michael Huffman wrote... My picture is of a somewhat variable elastic H atom that is able absorb and store some of the energy of the impact of H+H recombination but not enough to allow an H2 molecule to stay together until a sufficient amount of energy has been stored in the two individual

Re: MAHG: How does H2 avoid constantly itself blowing apart?

2005-07-12 Thread Frederick Sparber
Knuke Huffman wrote: My picture is of a somewhat variable elastic H atom that is able absorb and store some of the energy of the impact of H+H recombination but not enough to allow an H2 molecule to stay together until a sufficient amount of energy has been stored in the two individual

Re: MAHG: How does H2 avoid constantly itself blowing apart?

2005-07-12 Thread Terry Blanton
From: Frederick Sparber If the jiggle is an RMS value tracking the ZPE fluctuations, minor adjustment (increasing the H2 fill pressure) would bring it dead on. Care to speculate as to the result of achieving such efficiency?

Is 2.5 Hz a natural energy frequency?

2005-07-12 Thread Jones Beene
More rambling speculation... The earth's natural frequency has been stated to be ~7.8 Hertz (cycles per second) also known as the Schumann Resonance (actually 7.83 Hz ). All prior attempts to tap into it have failed. One wonders if 2.5 Hz is also natural to some (presumably larger) system like

Re: MAHG: How does H2 avoid constantly itself blowing apart?

2005-07-12 Thread orionworks
From: Michael Huffman ... The individual H atoms cannot remain reunited until their internal energy states match exactly, and are sufficiently high enough to remain in equilibrium with the rest of the universe. Once they are in this state, gravity can hold them together. Gravity?

RE: Is 2.5 Hz a natural energy frequency?

2005-07-12 Thread Frederick Sparber
Jones Beene wrote: Is 2.5 Hz a natural energy frequency? Of Course. That should be the Natural Cosmic Frequency. All other frequencies (even the Bohr Orbit frequencies 6E15 Hz are contained in low frequencies. It IS NOT Electromagnetic, the electromagnetic frequencies are due to it's

Re: MAHG: How does H2 avoid constantly itself blowing apart?

2005-07-12 Thread Frederick Sparber
Terry Blanton wrote From: Frederick Sparber If the jiggle is an RMS value tracking the ZPE fluctuations, minor adjustment (increasing the H2 fill pressure) would bring it dead on. Care to speculate as to the result of achieving such efficiency? I'd rather not. Speculative Sand

Re: Is 2.5 Hz a natural energy frequency?

2005-07-12 Thread Terry Blanton
From: Jones Beene More rambling speculation... Build your own ELF receiver: http://www.anomalous-images.com/elf/elf_receiver.html

Re: Is 2.5 Hz a Natural energy...

2005-07-12 Thread RC Macaulay
Jones wrote.. is there any place where onemight expect to see large scale evidence of such an effect - in terms ofenergy being "coupled" but in a place where it shouldn't be? Yes Jones.. Arctic and antarctic. Shouldn't be snowpacks that deep. Can't happen. Richard

Re: Langmuir Moller

2005-07-12 Thread Terry Blanton
From: Jones Beene Any bettors out there? My money is on 5.68 Ghz. I posted the following on the JLN Labs list: We have been speculating on the source of ou the MAHG on another list. I noticed that Jean-Louis took some measurements of ionizing radiation, a wise move for his own personal

Old BLP attempted replicaton

2005-07-12 Thread Jones Beene
For those who have not seen it, here is Scott Little's attempted replication of the BLP gas phase experiment is similar to MAHG. http://www.earthtech.org/experiments/blp/prelim.html Actually the index with many photos is here: http://www.earthtech.org/experiments/blp/ The replication was

[Humor] New Element Discovered

2005-07-12 Thread Terry Blanton
Found on Sarfatti's list: New Discovery A major research institution has recently announced the discovery of the heaviest element yet known to science. The new element has been named - Governmentium. Governmentium has one neutron, 12 assistant neutrons, 75 deputy neutrons, and 11

FWIW

2005-07-12 Thread Jones Beene
Speaking of Tungsten anomalies Back in '22... ah yes, I remember it well... a few years before Irving Langmuir and his infamous torch Gerald Wendt and Clarence Irion of the University of Chicago, then an institution ranking with Harvard and Berkeley in prestige, reported their

Fusion is easy

2005-07-12 Thread Jones Beene
How long will it be before the $20 billion ITER produces as many fusion neutrons as this way-cool Fusor built by El Dr. Frank? Look at the dome, halfway down - yup, you guessed it this is a glass salad bowl inverted in a machined out mag. tire rim. with lots of second hand parts in the

Re: Fusion is easy

2005-07-12 Thread Michael Huffman
Jones, You might also notice the complete lack of any kind of shielding on this rig. The circuit board for the He3 detector looks like some of the reefer plumbing that was done on the Polar Bear - totally incomprehensible. By the looks of the workbench, Dr. Frank may have worked on the Polar

Re: Fusion is easy

2005-07-12 Thread Jones Beene
Knuke, I think reefer may be the operative word with El Dr. Frank... Jones after all it is in Copenhagen - Original Message - From: Michael Huffman [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Sent: Tuesday, July 12, 2005 2:52 PM Subject: Re: Fusion is easy Jones, You might also

Re: MAHG: How does H2 avoid constantly itself blowing apart?

2005-07-12 Thread Michael Huffman
Am Dienstag, 12. Juli 2005 16:07 schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Gravity? I thought covalent sharing of electrons was responsible for the bonds that glue H2 together. Moin Steve, It is called a covalent bond depending on which context or subset of the language of chemistry or physics that you

Re: Fusion is easy

2005-07-12 Thread Christopher Arnold
Jones, It does look like a salad bowl. Farnsworth only used a small bell jar, so this guymust havetaste but did he clean out all the blue cheese first? Actually it looks pretty cool, however the larger the vacuum chamber, the harder it is to trigger fusion and the plasmadoes not look very