I think a 5 to 10 mil diameter Pt wire (63.8 ohms/circular mil-foot 0.003 temp coefficient, 10.6 micro-ohm cm) working temp 1200 C, MP 1720 C) pulsed with 12 volts D.C. (or Pd?) immersed in H2O or D2O might create "cavitation-type" collapsing bubbles as well as Stimulated Brillouin Scattering (SBS) in the water. Several years ago I tested some Pd-Jacketed-Aluminum wire electrical fuses (for space application) that the vendor claimed to have an exothermic reaction forming a Pd-Al compound at their blow current to interupt the circuit.
I tested a bunch of them 100% above their blow current at a few microns pressure to exclude O2 and they glowed like light bulbs for weeks. Fred Jones Beene wrote, > > > --- Frederick Sparber wrote: > > > Doesn't this suggest a thin film of Palladium > > deposited on a quartz slide electrically heated > > to about 1000 K immersed in D2O to get ~3000 nm-0.4 > > eV photon (~1.0e^14 Hz) Infrared? > > Sounds like the "rosy" glow of a Mizuno experiment... > > > MAHG back from the shadows and running some OU on > > Stimulated Brillouin Scattering, Jones? > > IF they should ever decide to face up to the power > measurement problems, and If the MAHG is still OU then > we should should take another look at that > "downshifted" microwave component, due to collisonal > frequency of the dense plasma, which we talked about > earlier? Maybe there is an Alfren wave too? > > "Alfven Waves May Illuminate Solar Mysteries" > third story down: > http://unisci.com/stories/20014/1029016.htm > > Jones

