In prior thread, the premise was suggested that there are two different species
(allotropes) of carbon which are being called carbon-13. One of the two species
is the normal isotope with 7 neutrons, but the second is carbon-12 with a
deeply embedded proton of UDH (the ultra-dense hydrogen) of Ho
On Sep 3, 2017 11:09 PM, "Kevin O'Malley" wrote:
> They did. See article below.
>
> Physicists Demonstrate Record Breaking Long-Distance Quantum
> Entanglement in Space
> Futurism.com ^
> Posted on 9/2/2017, 8:35:07 PM by TBP
>
> IN BRIEF
>
> Chinese physicists managed to demonstrate long-dista
Andrea Rossi confirms that the E-Cat QX will be demonstrated late in October.
Also that he has started building a commercial unit, (with an output of more
than 1 MW?), where he will sell the heat output, not the reactor.
It looks like his plan is to gather operating experience and not sell E-Ca
Jed, can I make a request? Acknowledging your fluency in Japanese and
relationship with Mizuno ...
In Mizuno's paper, he describes the deposition the preparation of the Ni
and the Pd with a good deal of text, but in the final part of the
preparation (page 8, figure 10) he describes heating the c
Here is a detail which came up earlier – the embedded proton concept works best
in the context of the Mills’ “hydrino hydride” where the proton and two very
tight electrons combine into a stable ion which replaces carbon’s innermost
orbital electron. The innermost orbital of carbon would need to
Bob,
One can sputter the daylight with Pd in a simple D2 plasma under very simple
conditions!
From: Bob Higgins [mailto:rj.bob.higg...@gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, September 4, 2017 11:42 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: [Vo]:Mizuno latest
Jed, can I make a request? Acknowledgi
As I understand it, there are two hydrino-like transitions that could
occur, perhaps on a 12C atom. Suppose that the 12C is subject to catalytic
hydrino formation wherein one of its electron enters a (1/p) state. Such
an electron would enter an orbital around the nucleus that is smaller than
the
C12 is a boson and as such is LENR capable. C13 is a fermion and therefore
decisive to the formation of a bose condensate of atoms. It is reasonable
to expect that C12 will aid in the production of ultra dense hydrogen.
The same boson characteristic will support the use of lithium that has been
en
Correction
therefore decisive
should read
therefore destructive
On Mon, Sep 4, 2017 at 12:37 PM, Axil Axil wrote:
> C12 is a boson and as such is LENR capable. C13 is a fermion and therefore
> decisive to the formation of a bose condensate of atoms. It is reasonable
> to expect that C12 wil
Hi Russ - Yes, that may be true, but Mizuno did not talk about sputtering
during the final deposition. Should we presume there was a bias and a
deuterium plasma? I hate missing details.
On Mon, Sep 4, 2017 at 10:16 AM, Russ George wrote:
> Bob,
>
>
>
> One can sputter the daylight with Pd in a
Bob Higgins wrote:
> In Mizuno's paper, he describes the deposition the preparation of the Ni
> and the Pd with a good deal of text, but in the final part of the
> preparation (page 8, figure 10) he describes heating the ceramic heater
> wrapped in Pd wire to 700-800°C for 10-20 hours to deposit
I now have the entire 9 hours of the 120 W calibration. I have uploaded the
spreadsheet here:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vTcriHguOWtGhIQmTR1f0PZamEsAjyWHHvCYvUTg74to3nDJNRdFJk5ItVZEQYguD8iWilv7s3rgqXA/pubhtml
I uploaded a graph from the Excel version here:
https://www.lenr-f
I believe that Mizuno heated the ceramic to 700-800C with Pd ire of small
dimension. The surface temperature of the wire could easily exceed 1400C
From: Russ George
Sent: Monday, September 4, 2017 12:16 PM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: RE: [Vo]:Mizuno latest
https://phys.org/news/2017-09-robots-jobs-spurs-bold-idea.html
Fear of robots taking jobs spurs a bold idea: guaranteed pay
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