Bob, I would assume that the emissions from the plasma would contain spectral 
lines.   Mills states that the when the hydrino releases its energy into a 
receptor atom that this atom becomes ionized.  When a free electron recombines 
with the ion it seems likely that many transition states are possible on the 
way to the lowest energy state.  It seems likely that a broadband spectrum as 
well as a spectrum with lines would be emitted during that process.

Would you expect to see something of a different nature with regard to 
radiation from the plasma?

I agree that once the plate is heated only a blackbody radiation spectrum would 
be emitted which illuminates the solar cells.

Dave

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Bob Higgins <rj.bob.higg...@gmail.com>
To: vortex-l <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Sent: Thu, Feb 4, 2016 8:50 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:BLP demo video




But, but, but ... Mills showedthe spectrum and it was full of spectral lines - 
not broadbandblackbody.  It was only blackbody after all of the spectra 
wereabsorbed in the tungsten plate and thermalized and re-radiated from 
theheated plate.
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OnFebruary 4, 2016 6:08:02 PM Eric Walker <eric.wal...@gmail.com>wrote:


On Thu,Feb 4, 2016 at 6:22 PM, Bob Higgins <rj.bob.higg...@gmail.com>wrote:



Millstalked about the source voltage being "only 10V", but 10V has atleast the 
potential to deliver 10eV of energy.  10eV of energy is theenergy of a photon 
at 124nm in the extreme UV.  His "only 10V"statement was meant to dissuade the 
listener that high energy photons werenot possible directly from this source.

Interestingpoint.




I think Millsalso mentioned soft x-rays early on, which are in the low keV.  
And thespectrum he spent time discussing had an endpoint somewhere above 100 
eV. Such photons would presumably come from the excitation of inner 
shellelectrons in heavier elements such as silver.  Or the spiraling down of 
theelectron to lower levels, if one is persuaded that there are Hydrinos.  
Isthere a high energy tail in a 10V electric discharge?  I was under 
theimpression that there was not.


A detail for whichmuch is made of is that the photon spectrum is broadband.  I 
think theHydrino explanation was probably modified at one point to explain 
thisexperimental result.  But it's also what one sees with beta electrons,which 
have a broadband energy profile, with the neutrino carrying off theremainder 
(and majority) of the energy.


I'mopen to BLP having something.  I'm highly doubtful that Mills'stheory 
explainsit.


Eric






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