Beautiful work. I've always admired Claytor's work and I think it easily demonstrates to the lay physicist that there are low level physical conditions were fusion is demonstrable. Think asteroid or comet hitting Jupiter, it could be causing a fusion trail as it sinks into the charged high pressured atmosphere. Metallic meteors might give some tritium signatures when they fall into the jovian atmosphere.
On Wed, Jul 8, 2015 at 9:51 PM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]> wrote: > See: > > > http://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/index.php/Thread/1814-New-Brillouin-Energy-USPTO-patent-application/?postID=6013#post6013 > > > Brillouin Energy has just announced in the forum that "Tom Claytor of Los > Alamos National Labs did his own first principles test of the hypothesis > [...and...] Was able to reliably generate tritium 12 out of 12 times using > this method[...]"! > > > *TRITIUM PRODUCTION FROM A LOW VOLTAGE DEUTERIUM DISCHARGE ON PALLADIUM > AND OTHER METALS * > *T. N. Claytor, D. D. Jackson and D. G. Tuggle Los Alamos National > Laboratory Los Alamos, NM 87545 * > > ABSTRACT Over the past year we have been able to demonstrate that a plasma > loading method produces an exciting and unexpected amount of tritium from > small palladium wires. In contrast to electrochemical hydrogen or deuterium > loading of palladium, this method yields a reproducible tritium generation > rate when various electrical and physical conditions are met. Small > diameter wires (100 - 250 microns) have been used with gas pressures above > 200 torr at voltages and currents of about 2000 V at 3-5 A. By carefully > controlling the sputtering rate of the wire, runs have been extended to > hundreds of hours allowing a significant amount (> 10’s nCi) of tritium to > accumulate. We will show tritium generation rates for deuterium-palladium > foreground runs that are up to 25 times larger than hydrogen-palladium > control experiments using materials from the same batch. We will illustrate > the difference between batches of annealed palladium and as received > palladium from several batches as well as the effect of other metals (Pt, > Ni, Nb, Zr, V, W, Hf) to demonstrate that the tritium generation rate can > vary greatly from batch to batch. > >

