2010/2/2 Abd ul-Rahman Lomax a...@lomaxdesign.com:
...
A single
SRI experiment has been published that made strong efforts to recover all
the helium, and it came up with, as I recall, about 25 MeV.
That experiment was discussed in the paper submitted by Hagelstein,
McKubre et al to the DOE in
Two things to consider: (1) reversing the current *does* dissolve
the Pd surface, and (2) previous work has shown that helium
production takes place near but below the surface (order of microns),
while tritium production tends to take place on or very close to the
surface (within a few
Underground work is practically a standard for use of energy
discriminating neutron counters, due to the very low neutron flux
from CF experiments. This low flux is why integrating plastic
counters are useful. The following were taken from Dieter Britz's
abstracts:
Zhu R, Wang X, Lu
2010/2/7 Horace Heffner hheff...@mtaonline.net:
Two things to consider: (1) reversing the current *does* dissolve the Pd
surface,
True, but extremely slowly I believe. A Pd anode is known to dissolve
relatively fast in acidic electrolytes such as D2SO4, but I don't
think that's what they used.
On Feb 6, 2010, at 3:51 PM, Jones Beene wrote:
... IOW muon fusion is ongoing but rare.
I think cosmic ray triggering may be very important to triggering
cold fusion burst events. Also to surface volcano creation
frequently observed.
Small but important distinction.
Therefore, I
On Feb 7, 2010, at 4:42 AM, Michel Jullian wrote:
2010/2/7 Horace Heffner hheff...@mtaonline.net:
Two things to consider: (1) reversing the current *does*
dissolve the Pd
surface,
True, but extremely slowly I believe. A Pd anode is known to dissolve
relatively fast in acidic electrolytes
-Original Message-
From: Horace Heffner
Cosmic rays are isotropic. At the surface their effect is not
isotropic due to a slight east-west bias due perturbation of cosmic rays by
the earth's magnetic field, however diurnal *flux* variation is small ... I
think it is neutrino flux
In reply to Horace Heffner's message of Sun, 7 Feb 2010 05:52:36 -0900:
Hi,
[snip]
No, most of the 4He reactions occur sub-surface. What do you think
produces a volcano? A surface reaction? The typical 4He produced
by CF does not have MeV kinetic energy, and is not surface produced.
If
On 02/07/2010 11:48 AM, Frank wrote:
What is relativistic velocity of earth to micro and nanoscopic material
in space? I don’t recall the earths orbital velocity
Roughly 20 miles per second, or about 0.01% C (i.e, C/1)
Escape velocity from the Sun is something like 40 miles per second
Stephen,
thank you for the answer. It appears relativistic velocities like
the muon are not as common as I imagined but even these lesser velocities
you mention would accumulate into time dilation like the protracted decay of
the muon just on a smaller scale. Normally this dilation is
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