[Vo]:Re: Magnetic levitation experiments

2015-11-01 Thread Bob Cook
H Ucar-- I may have responded to your original question in the context of low energy nuclear reactions (LENR) and not what I believe to be in the realm of particle physics. I did not realize the focus of your question about particle physics, instead answering the comment you made— >“Stabilit

[Vo]:Re: Conventional dense hydrogen and LiH6

2015-11-01 Thread Bob Cook
RE: [Vo]: Conventional dense hydrogen and LiH6Jones-- Have you seen any data on the dimension of the dense hydrogen nuclei in the Li or Iron alloy? The Li lattice dimension may be smaller than the corresponding Fe dimensions, and, if the hydrogen clusters occur inside a lattice cell of Li, the

RE: [Vo]:Particles are relative

2015-11-01 Thread Frank roarty
Axil, that was very well said but you still seem unwilling to turn the next page! You stop at the examples of observers accelerating toward or away from each other with an assumed baseline of zero velocity. We know that relativistic effects are difficult to produce this way because C and dV are

RE: [Vo]: Conventional dense hydrogen and LiH6

2015-11-01 Thread Jones Beene
Of interest: An unrelated string of experiments which are parallel to Holmlid but different, in approach, has been located. The chief investigator is Swiss - Charles Pépin https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-01204564/ Surprisingly both iron and lithium figure into his approach – which is a “brut

Re: [Vo]:Magnetic levitation experiments

2015-11-01 Thread jjam...@gmail.com
I wrote: “On the latest videos the magnet orbit plane slowly rotates. It appears a precessional effects and this rotation rate directly affected by presence of magnetic field on Z direction. If this magnet supposed an electron this slow precession correspond to Larmor precession.” On the latest

Re: [Vo]:Magnetic levitation experiments

2015-11-01 Thread jjam...@gmail.com
Bob Cook-- I had watched Suskind lecture and induced me many questions. Overall the electron spin defined in qm is minimalist and may not serve to model complex magnetic interactions like in this magnet experiments. First of all electron spin is used both define its angular momentum and its magn

RE: [Vo]:Magnetic levitation experiments

2015-11-01 Thread Jones Beene
Hamdi, Does the rapidly rotating field have any kind of effect on a flame? What I was thinking about was possible charge separation – as in MHD. From: jjam...@gmail.com I am conducting experiments on keeping pm magnets in air by interacton of a rotating magnet driven by small d

Re: [Vo]:Magnetic levitation experiments

2015-11-01 Thread Patrick Ellul
Reminds me of this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VylZJrep1MM regards. On Mon, Nov 2, 2015 at 7:26 AM, jjam...@gmail.com wrote: > > I am conducting experiments on keeping pm magnets in air by interacton of > a rotating magnet driven by small dc motor. > > > Stability is basically provided by M

Re: [Vo]:Magnetic levitation experiments

2015-11-01 Thread Bob Cook
H Ucar-- The Leonard Susskind lecture on the nature of electron spin in a magnetic field is instructive. See the following link to Susskind’s series of lectures at Stanford Univ. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZCymP87zFwc Susskind presents how electrons can respond in a magnetic field to

[Vo]:Magnetic levitation experiments

2015-11-01 Thread jjam...@gmail.com
I am conducting experiments on keeping pm magnets in air by interacton of a rotating magnet driven by small dc motor. Stability is basically provided by Mathieu eq. so there would be no 'new physics', I think. OTH, it provide new solutions to magnetic levitation by achieving stability on six de

[Vo]:Re: Conventional dense hydrogen and LiH6

2015-11-01 Thread Bob Cook
Conventional dense hydrogen and LiH6On additional idea regarding dense H consisting of Cooper Pairs in a BEC---a pair may be induced to capture an electron to form a D particle and the proximity of D’s in a lattice of Li (and/or other metallic lattice) may form an alpha with release of a large

Re: [Vo]:Conventional dense hydrogen and LiH6

2015-11-01 Thread Bob Cook
Conventional dense hydrogen and LiH6It’s not apparent what is unique relative to a Li lattice and a Ni or Pd lattice as to the ability to form local metallic structures with lots of H—dense H. If a local magnetic field is important in aligning H nuclei so as to form dense H, Ni and Pd may be

[Vo]:NOV 01, 2015- AN ESSENTIAL SUBJECT AND LENR, ROSSI, AXIL

2015-11-01 Thread Peter Gluck
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.ro/2015/11/01-nov-2015-lenr-almost-sunday-lectures.html I want to call your attention to Igor Ponomarev's book All the best, my friends! Peter -- Dr. Peter Gluck Cluj, Romania http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com

RE: [Vo]:Conventional dense hydrogen and LiH6

2015-11-01 Thread Jones Beene
Several typos: if we look at the use of LAH7 … (should be LAH4)

[Vo]:Conventional dense hydrogen and LiH6

2015-11-01 Thread Jones Beene
More on dense hydrogen… Lest we forget, there is a known branch of physics/cosmology that deals with dense hydrogen. In this case, dense hydrogen is the cold liquid metal which is thought to be found all over the Universe on cold, giant gas planets like Jupiter, under extreme pressure. Here is