Gold can come in many colors. Since ancient times, glass artists and
alchemists alike have known how to grind the metal into fine particles that
would take on hues such as red or mauve. Carbon nanotubes are the same,
different sizes shade water in different colors.
At scales even smaller,
Hey, if you can build superatoms why not make the collapse and explode,
triggering secondary fusion and fission reactions. I'm just say'n...
*Form Of Matter Shows Ability To Collapse Explode*
Led by CU-Boulder Distinguished Physics Professor Carl Wieman and NIST
Senior Scientist Eric Cornell,
A classical example of an old material that turns out to be
incredibly hi-tech. Don't throw sawdust away...
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21528786.100-why-wood-pulp-is-worlds-new-wonder-material.html
mic
No, no Axil,
1. Storms ballet ok:
http://coldfusionnow.org/an-explanation-of-low-energy-nuclear-reactions-cold-fusion-by-edmund-storms/
See the dance line of hydrogen atoms oscillating in the crack as illustraited
by the Gif
representation in time frame 22:21 of the Carat interview.
BUT
My question has been deleted from PESN. No answer to the question is
evident.
On Sat, Aug 25, 2012 at 4:18 PM, James Bowery jabow...@gmail.com wrote:
In Part I: My Concerns About
Inteligentryhttp://pesn.com/2012/08/21/9602163_Part_I--My_Concerns_About_Inteligentry/
Sterling
Alan asserts:
Before getting too worked up over the superatom, remember that it may be a
good metaphor for energy gain in condensed matter systems but the
superatom simply cannot be involved in the Rohner scam.
BTW - even Stirling Allan is covering his backside on this scam and
apparently now believes
There's a lesson here:
If indeed the Papp effect is simply due to induced eddy currents in th aluminum
ring, it goes to show that even a seasoned, experienced and highly qualified
doctor like Mike McKubre could be taken in by clever tricks. All the more
reason to be more careful.
Jojo
Jones,
I like your description. I liken it to a hot condensate under extreme
pressure and temperature within a void) If you relieve pressure quickly
(structural failure of the lattice containing it) it might flash matter
to achieve a new equilibrium. Just food for thought.
On Sunday, August
Yes, Stewart good point - and it does not have to be complete structural
failure of the cavity.
A former contributor here, Michel Julian, notoriously described this
mechanism the sphincter effect
which is decidedly not food for thought.
Whatever happened to Michel anyway?
When a
James Bowery jabow...@gmail.com wrote:
My question has been deleted from PESN. No answer to the question is
evident.
I assume you mean the question you posted here was what you asked on PESN.
They deleted it?!? That's terrible. That's irresponsible.
- Jed
*…it may be a good metaphor for energy gain in condensed matter systems –
but the superatom simply cannot be involved in the Rohner scam.*
It is possible that the papp engine can work and also be used in SCAMs by
both papp and J. Rohner. It would be a crime against humanity to through
the baby
If Structural failure is what you want to achieve, that can be done rather
easily with my idea of carbon nanohorm mats. All you have to do is pump a
larger amount of electrical spark energy and that would burn up and totally
blow up the CNT.
Would that provide the dynamic casimer effect. The
Yup. That could work, with or without failure.
It cannot hurt that the CNT will have some kind of local superconductivity.
Nano rail gun ???
From: Jojo Jaro
If Structural failure is what you want to achieve, that can be done rather
easily with my idea of carbon nanohorm mats.
I agree, just one micro void collapse triggering a flash of ultra hot
radiation as the condensate restabilizes or evaporates completely. The
more voids of the correct size the more the effect is seen.
The up pumping could be the added energy from quantum scale gravity
further collapsing the
I agree, just one micro void collapse triggering a flash of ultra hot
radiation as the condensate restabilizes or evaporates completely. The
more voids of the correct size the more the effect is seen.
The up pumping could be the added energy from quantum scale gravity
further collapsing the
If oil is not needed for fuel and plastics, what markets will be left
for the oil industry?
lubricants?
harry
On Sun, Aug 26, 2012 at 8:08 AM, Michele Comitini
michele.comit...@gmail.com wrote:
A classical example of an old material that turns out to be
incredibly hi-tech. Don't throw
On Sun, Aug 26, 2012 at 12:38 PM, Harry Veeder hveeder...@gmail.com wrote:
If oil is not needed for fuel and plastics, what markets will be left
for the oil industry?
lubricants?
Fertilizer.
T
Harry Veeder hveeder...@gmail.com wrote:
If oil is not needed for fuel and plastics, what markets will be left
for the oil industry?
With cold fusion I predict there will be no markets left for the oil
industry. It will eventually be cheaper, safer and easier to manufacture
hydrocarbons on
I wrote:
Even now they make oil from organic waste with depolymerization.
Note that this has a negative cost. They pay you to take the raw materials.
For example, a turkey processing plant paid someone to set up a small
depolymerization to convert the waste into high grade oil.
It is
Yes. That question was first posted to PESN, then here to vortex-l. It
was there, at PESN for while. I have repeatedly tried to locate it to no
avail.
On Sun, Aug 26, 2012 at 10:54 AM, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.comwrote:
James Bowery jabow...@gmail.com wrote:
My question has been
See:
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21528797.100-can-cold-fusion-research-survive-pioneers-death.html
I cannot get the full article, because I am not a subscriber.
Mike is wrong about the Planck quote. That's not what Max meant.
- Jed
At 11:10 PM 8/23/2012, mix...@bigpond.com wrote:
In reply to Terry Blanton's message of Wed, 22 Aug 2012 21:15:15 -0400:
Hi,
[snip]
Dead moving pixies?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2192008/Are-Martian-
The experiments led by Randall Hulet at Rice University from 1995 through
2000 showed that lithium condensates with attractive interactions could
stably exist, but only up to a certain critical atom number. Beyond this
critical number, the attraction overwhelmed the zero-point energy of the
Speaking as someone who ran the software development for automated
inspection of ordnance at SAIC:
You always want to characterize your sensors to the greatest degree that
resources permit. In this case, where you've just spent billions to get
the sensor into service, and you are dealing with
At 10:54 AM 8/26/2012, Jed Rothwell wrote:
James Bowery mailto:jabow...@gmail.comjabow...@gmail.com wrote:
My question has been deleted from PESN. No answer to the question is evident.
I assume you mean the question you posted here was what you asked on
PESN. They deleted it?!? That's
Hello group,
I just happened to find this video showing in great detail (at 1080p)
Celani's portable demo shown at ICCF17 and NIWeek2012. This might turn
out useful for some people:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HN4VK82Mngc
Cheers,
S.A.
I have used that quote myself many times, always in the sense that author
Cartwright says is incorrect. So I sent him a polite email asking why he
believed that the more conventional interpretation is the wrong one. I will
email the list if I get a response.
Jeff
On Sun, Aug 26, 2012 at 10:23
Jeff Berkowitz pdx...@gmail.com wrote:
I have used that quote myself many times, always in the sense that author
Cartwright says is incorrect.
I think the author is McKubre.
Anyway, here is a more complete version of the quote, from the intro to my
book:
. . . as Max Planck put it, progress
I see your point. Glad I was polite. I will follow up with him.
Jeff
On Sun, Aug 26, 2012 at 1:35 PM, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:
Jeff Berkowitz pdx...@gmail.com wrote:
I have used that quote myself many times, always in the sense that author
Cartwright says is incorrect.
I
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/saltlaketribune/obituary.aspx?page=lifestorypid=159356226#fbLoggedOut
On Sun, Aug 26, 2012 at 4:48 PM, Terry Blanton hohlr...@gmail.com wrote:
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/saltlaketribune/obituary.aspx?page=lifestorypid=159356226#fbLoggedOut
I could not find a direct link for Hal's Journal of New Energy. Many
are available here:
Abd, I asked the first question because I believed it to be true. When the
reporter is present, making the claim based upon his spade work, in asking
him a question I am not obliged to go do spade work through hours of video
tapes that I have watched and pages upon pages of prose I've skimmed if
Le Aug 23, 2012 à 10:16 PM, Axil Axil janap...@gmail.com a écrit :
http://cdn.intechweb.org/pdfs/17002.pdf
The above paper attempts to prove that carbon nanotubes are superconductive
at very high temperatures by imbedding nickel nanoparticles in the outside
wall of a multi walled nanotube
In reply to Abd ul-Rahman Lomax's message of Sun, 26 Aug 2012 13:27:33 -0500:
Hi,
[snip]
Yes. Pixels in image sensors can be marginal or noisy, plus we may be
seeing artifacts of how images are combined from pixels. Analysis of
the raw data would show, through statistical analysis.
...and how
Le Aug 26, 2012 à 2:59 PM, mix...@bigpond.com a écrit :
BTW what happened to the part that lowered Curiosity to the surface then took
off? Could it now be in orbit? Was something left in orbit to relay radio
signals?
I think it crashed somewhere nearby and sent up a plume of dust that was
All in all, this Zhao paper reinforces the strategy of JoJo and/or anyone
else who may be considering it - to work with hydrogen and CNT. I hope that
a number of experimenters can get hold of adequate material to try, and will
report results, even if negative.
If you want to tie this paper into
On Sun, Aug 26, 2012 at 5:59 PM, mix...@bigpond.com wrote:
Was something left in orbit to relay radio
signals?
Yes, Odyssey:
Odyssey and Curiosity
Odyssey now acts as a relay for UHF radio signals from the Mars
Science Laboratory rover Curiosity [9]. Several days before the MSL's
landing in
At 12:23 PM 8/26/2012, Jed Rothwell wrote:
See:
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21528797.100-can-cold-fusion-research-survive-pioneers-death.htmlhttp://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21528797.100-can-cold-fusion-research-survive-pioneers-death.html
I cannot get the full article, because
At 01:15 PM 8/26/2012, James Bowery wrote:
Speaking as someone who ran the software development for automated
inspection of ordnance at SAIC:
You always want to characterize your sensors to the greatest degree
that resources permit. In this case, where you've just spent
billions to get the
In reply to Terry Blanton's message of Sun, 26 Aug 2012 19:53:28 -0400:
Hi,
So the moving object in the first series of photos could be Odyssey.
On Sun, Aug 26, 2012 at 5:59 PM, mix...@bigpond.com wrote:
Was something left in orbit to relay radio
signals?
Yes, Odyssey:
Odyssey and
Jones,
I don't understand how you can call 2 protons (which combine to form
a bosonic quasiparticle) a 'condensate' (transient or otherwise) since
protons are Fermions and only 1 quasiparticle boson is formed from 2
protons. A single boson (pair of protons) is not a condensate. In Kim's
The Lady with the Scythe has apparently acquired now the habit to take the
old cold fusioneers. I will ask Her to slow down a bit, we are already at
the border of the Promised LENR+ Land.
Unfortunately, my old friend Hal could not enter there despite
his great merits. I wrote about him when after
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