[Vo]:Converting hydrogen to work better in the Ni/H reactor

2014-09-22 Thread Axil Axil
Molecular hydrogen occurs in two isomeric forms, one with its two proton spins aligned parallel (orthohydrogen), the other with its two proton spins aligned antiparallel (parahydrogen). At room temperature and thermal equilibrium, hydrogen consists of approximately 75% orthohydrogen and 25% .

[Vo]:new taxonomy of our field

2014-09-22 Thread Peter Gluck
Dear Friends, I have just published a paper about an important subject. http://egooutpeters.blogspot.ro/2014/09/new-lenr-taxonomy.html I think we have to focus more on the NiD way that is entirely new; we cannot be for ever angry with our colleague Mizuno just because he perfidiously converts

RE:[Vo]:Converting hydrogen to work better in the Ni/H reactor

2014-09-22 Thread Roarty, Francis X
Good insight! I know Jones has often mentioned these percentages of ortho to para but I don’t recall if he suggested methods to alter these numbers in favor LENR.. you know my attraction toward ZPE and I could even see ruthenium’s ability to disrupt these percentages as a type of demon sorting

RE: [Vo]:Converting hydrogen to work better in the Ni/H reactor

2014-09-22 Thread Jones Beene
Hydrogen molecules are shown to be slightly diamagnetic no matter which alignment they are in. Since protons are fermions, the anti-symmetry of the wavefunction imposes restrictions on the rotational states - with the result that the molecule is always diamagnetic. Consequently,

RE: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread Jones Beene
I've looked through the isotope charts again - searching for reactions that rapidly decay back to the starting element or to any stable isotope which has already been reported to be there, and have not found any other possibility... ...other than Ni58 (d,Cu59) - Ni60 which happens by EC or

Re: [Vo]:Converting hydrogen to work better in the Ni/H reactor

2014-09-22 Thread Axil Axil
The first step in the hydrogen doublet fusion process is the formation of one or more atoms of 2He. Helium-2 or 2He, also known as a diproton, is an extremely unstable isotope of helium that consists of two protons without any neutrons. According to theoretical calculations it would have been

RE: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread Arnaud Kodeck
Jones, Why not consider also the Ni58 + 2p - Zn60 - Cu60 - Ni60? Zn60 has a spin 0. _ From: Jones Beene [mailto:jone...@pacbell.net] Sent: lundi 22 septembre 2014 17:34 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Subject: RE:

Re: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread Axil Axil
If you look at the ICCF-18 transmutation study of nickel and palladium study by Cook, you will see that Mizuno shows the same isotopic shifts in nickel that DGT shows. Ni61 does not participate in the reaction but all other isotopes of nickel do. Sorry, that link to this reference is broken. On

RE: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread Jones Beene
From: Arnaud Kodeck Jones, Why not consider also the Ni58 + 2p - Zn60 - Cu60 - Ni60? Zn60 has a spin 0. _ the suggested reaction is Ni58 + D - Cu60 - Ni60

Re: [Vo]:Converting hydrogen to work better in the Ni/H reactor

2014-09-22 Thread Axil Axil
It seems that the popular LENR catalyst acts like a superconductor for protons where protons pair up into a cooper pair. See *http://arxiv.org/pdf/0807.1386.pdf* http://arxiv.org/pdf/0807.1386.pdf This work emphasizes that atoms in the crystal-field of KHCO3 are not individual particles

RE: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread Arnaud Kodeck
Yes, in my view, the DDL state diatomic hydrogen (shrunken hydrogen) reacts with Ni58. Should both atoms be in shrunken state? Is the DDL atoms small enough to go in the lattice? We can consider as well with pD or DD DDL state if natural hydrogen is used.

Re: [Vo]:new taxonomy of our field

2014-09-22 Thread Axil Axil
*Dear Peter, * *This comment too long to put into your last blog post: *NEW LENR TAXONOMY *There is good reason to believe that magnetism is the prime mover in LENR. Under this speculative paradigm, it is interesting to consider the options and consequences of this conjecture. In such a

Re: [Vo]:new taxonomy of our field

2014-09-22 Thread Peter Gluck
thank you I will read it tomorrow Peter On Mon, Sep 22, 2014 at 9:57 PM, Axil Axil janap...@gmail.com wrote: *Dear Peter, * *This comment too long to put into your last blog post: *NEW LENR TAXONOMY *There is good reason to believe that magnetism is the prime mover in LENR. Under this

RE: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread Jones Beene
_ From: Arnaud Kodeck Yes, in my view, the DDL state diatomic hydrogen (shrunken hydrogen) reacts with Ni58. Should both atoms be in shrunken state? Yes, that would seem to be highly beneficial. The reaction looks less

[Vo]:Chase Peterson dies

2014-09-22 Thread Jed Rothwell
Chase Peterson, who was the President of University of Utah in 1989, died on September 14, 2014. See: http://infinite-energy.com/iemagazine/issue118/chase.html Here is most of chapter 12 of his book, which is the chapter about cold fusion: http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/PetersonCtheguardia.pdf -

Re: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread mixent
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Mon, 22 Sep 2014 08:33:43 -0700: Hi, Typo- the suggested reaction is - Ni60 [snip] Ni58 + D - Cu60 + 11.252 MeV Normally one would expect prompt gammas from this reaction totaling 11.25 MeV. If no gammas are detected, what do you propose happens to the

[Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Chase Peterson dies

2014-09-22 Thread hohlr...@gmail.com
Was he instrumental in releasing FP finding to the Press? Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE Smartphone - Reply message - From: Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com To: vortex-l@eskimo.com vortex-l@eskimo.com Subject: [Vo]:Chase Peterson dies Date: Mon, Sep 22, 2014 4:57 PM Chase

RE: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread Jones Beene
The usual lame rationalizations we have used is that the energy was borrowed in advance to overcome the Coulomb barrier or shed in advance to achieve the redundancy ... But you're right - fusion numbers simply don't work well for the reality of a Rossi type reaction, as there is too much excess

Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Chase Peterson dies

2014-09-22 Thread Jed Rothwell
hohlr...@gmail.com hohlr...@gmail.com wrote: Was he instrumental in releasing FP finding to the Press? In the chapter I uploaded, he said no: Fleischmann reportedly said (for reasons never clear) that the University of Utah had required the two investigators to go public when they did. When I

Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Chase Peterson dies

2014-09-22 Thread Terry Blanton
On Mon, Sep 22, 2014 at 8:10 PM, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote: hohlr...@gmail.com hohlr...@gmail.com wrote: Was he instrumental in releasing FP finding to the Press? In the chapter I uploaded, he said no: Fleischmann reportedly said (for reasons never clear) that the University

[Vo]:John Farrell vs John Farrell

2014-09-22 Thread James Bowery
Obviously this John Farrell http://cosmosmagazine.com/features/in-wikipedia-we-trust/ (writing for Cosmos Magazine) is not the same as this John Farrell https://web.archive.org/web/20050128120420/http://www.blacklightpower.com/pdf/GUT/Review%20by%20John%20J.%20Farrell%20021004.pdf (who is

Re: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread mixent
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Mon, 22 Sep 2014 16:32:02 -0700: Hi, [snip] The usual lame rationalizations we have used is that the energy was borrowed in advance to overcome the Coulomb barrier or shed in advance to achieve the redundancy ... But you're right - fusion numbers simply don't

Re: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread Eric Walker
On Mon, Sep 22, 2014 at 9:26 AM, Axil Axil janap...@gmail.com wrote: If you look at the ICCF-18 transmutation study of nickel and palladium study by Cook, you will see that Mizuno shows the same isotopic shifts in nickel that DGT shows. Ni61 does not participate in the reaction but all other

Re: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread Eric Walker
On Mon, Sep 22, 2014 at 8:01 PM, mix...@bigpond.com wrote: I would still be inclined to consider reactions that produce heavy charged particles. The heavier and slower, the better. E.g. fusion/fission reactions. The reactions I've been looking at recently have charged particles as daughters

Re: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread mixent
In reply to Eric Walker's message of Mon, 22 Sep 2014 21:08:59 -0700: Hi Eric, [snip] On Mon, Sep 22, 2014 at 8:01 PM, mix...@bigpond.com wrote: I would still be inclined to consider reactions that produce heavy charged particles. The heavier and slower, the better. E.g. fusion/fission

Re: [Vo]:Mizuno, Rossi copper transmutation

2014-09-22 Thread Eric Walker
On Mon, Sep 22, 2014 at 10:33 PM, mix...@bigpond.com wrote: ...but wouldn't you expect 1/2 to fly away from the surface, and half to fly into it? I would expect there to be an anisotropy. As I envision it, there's an electric arc pulling a mass of protons into a recess. For a fraction of a