--- Frederick Sparber wrote:

> Do you need any current, really?


At first, the full implications of this observation
did not dawn on me. 

One would normally think that to charge a capacitor,
electrical current of the normal EM variety is
required. And I'm not sure how Fred meant it, but
Robin seemed to pick up on the possibility that the
stored charge could be related not to normal charge
but to epo's - that is to say: positrons/electrons
instead of heavier ions.

This makes sense to me. The low voltage charge in the
plates is not charging the water-bubbles directly but
instead is causing  the normal epo background to
polarize temporarily. This would mean that the bubbles
may somehow be extending the normal short lifetime of
the positron up into the millisecond range.

One lesson from this might be - you want to place the
cell as close to the intake manifold as possible so
that the time-denominated decay losses are less
severe.

Jones

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