Re: [Vo]:why is this object glowing?

2010-04-09 Thread Terry Blanton
On Thu, Apr 8, 2010 at 6:25 PM, Jones Beene wrote: > And please, Terry, no Uranus punage. How about Klingons? T

Re: [Vo]:why is this object glowing?

2010-04-08 Thread Michel Jullian
2010/4/9 Abd ul-Rahman Lomax : ... > I.e., radioactive decay. Come to think of that, isn't > this LENR? After all, nuclear, and takes place at low temperatures Good point. > (I've never seen anyone use LENR to refer to radioactive decay, mostly > because something that happens with a single nucle

Re: [Vo]:why is this object glowing?

2010-04-08 Thread Abd ul-Rahman Lomax
At 04:02 PM 4/8/2010, Jones Beene wrote: http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/tag/the-astrophysical-journal/ Since the glow cannot be evidence of hot fusion, a few vorticians may be led to wonder - what about LENR? or fractional hy

RE: [Vo]:why is this object glowing?

2010-04-08 Thread Jones Beene
-Original Message- From: Steven V Johnson > Someone ought to let R. Mills in on the anomaly... But he does not want anyone to conflate LENR and hydrino. Which is the logical progression. And please, Terry, no Uranus punage. Anyway, you can add this bit of data, courtesy of Wiki (paraphr

Re: [Vo]:why is this object glowing?

2010-04-08 Thread OrionWorks - Steven V Johnson
Someone ought to let R. Mills in on the anomaly. I bet he might be interested. Mr. Carrell! Do you still have his ear? Regards Steven Vincent Johnson www.OrionWorks.com www.zazzle.com/orionworks

RE: [Vo]:why is this object glowing?

2010-04-08 Thread Jones Beene
-Original Message- From: Terry Blanton > Formerly a single star struck by a rogue planetoid donating some fusing mass and capturing the invader? Terry - Something like that is probably more likely. At least until the reality of LENR in cosmology is proved. Here's what I was going a

Re: [Vo]:why is this object glowing?

2010-04-08 Thread Terry Blanton
Formerly a single star struck by a rogue planetoid donating some fusing mass and capturing the invader? The rogue's glow would be short lived in such case I would think. T On Thu, Apr 8, 2010 at 4:02 PM, Jones Beene wrote: > http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/tag/the-astrophysical-journal/ > > A

[Vo]:why is this object glowing?

2010-04-08 Thread Jones Beene
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/tag/the-astrophysical-journal/ A mystery companion planetoid forms a binary system with a brown dwarf, located 460 light-years away in Taurus. The object is too small to be another brown dwarf, too young to have formed by accretion, and heavier than most planets -