LENR will not produce an explosive weapon, but it is well suited for beam type weapons, such as a disintegrator beam or a muon beam.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fCzqm8GzSb0 On Thu, Aug 16, 2018 at 3:36 PM, Frank Grimer <[email protected]> wrote: > Very interesting. > > People have got it the wrong way around though. Its not because the > positive pressure has gone up. It is because the negative pressure has gone > up, the pF has gone up. > > This relates to the first paper I published on the strength of > clay-cements and how it is affected by the degree of pulverization. I'm not > breaking the official secrets act because the info is in the public domain. > :-) > > What was happening is the the water menisci get smaller and smaller and so > the pF steadily increases. Mizuno achieved a similar effect electron > "water" menisci when he compacted powder into coin sized specimens (page 73 > and 74 of his book). > > The telling bit is: > > "One day when I performed this test an extraordinary thing happend. ,The > sample colour > suddenly changed from dark red, to red, to yellow--a clear indication that > the temperature was shooting up. The heat increased, the sample glowed > white, and after 10 or twenty seconds it began to melt. > > In a panic I ran the vacuum pump to remove the deuterium gas ... I could > no longer ignore the fact that this research was potentially hazardous." > > And potentially of great interest to the military. Have they weaponized > it? I wouldn't be at all surprised. > > > > > On Thu, 16 Aug 2018 at 17:37, hogana913 <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Z zerottc bcc can knb k BBMml . >> >> Xgvyb >> >> Sent from my Sprint Samsung Galaxy S® 6. >> >> -------- Original message -------- >> From: JonesBeene <[email protected]> >> Date: 8/16/18 12:39 AM (GMT-05:00) >> To: [email protected] >> Subject: [Vo]:The potential weaponization of LENR >> >> >> >> Periodically, new public information comes along which hints at the >> possibility that LENR/cold fusion has military application. This could be >> of interest to a few countries which do not yet have facilities for the >> enrichment of U. Keeping LENR in the category of pathological science also >> explains the motivation of “official neglect” of the field by DoE and DoD. >> >> >> >> Most LENR researchers doubt this weaponization possibility on its >> technical merits, and try to stay clear of any discussion related to the >> subject. >> >> >> >> Yet the ultimate threat - the worst possible “killer app”… so to speak… >> would be the CF- bomb – an explosive device which does not depend on >> enriched uranium or plutonium. Such a weapon could be the size of an ink >> pen. Even if the yield is much weaker than a typical fission weapon (a few >> tons) – as it is fueled by only a few grams of titanium deuteride, it >> would nevertheless be formidable and more powerful, pound for pound than >> any alternative (and can be drone-mounted). >> >> >> >> Here is an older report containing a detail overlooked in previous >> efforts ( to find information pointing to such weapons). There is >> provocative information in official documents about densification, some of >> which has inadvertent mention of LENR materials but not by name. >> >> >> >> http://isis-online.org/isis-reports/detail/questions-and- >> answers-regarding-iranian-document/ >> >> >> >> If you scan down the document - there appears to be a mystery wrt the >> appearance of titanium deuteride in the Iranian effort – which derives from >> the earlier Pakistan effort. >> >> >> >> For some years there had been rumor that either a trigger or a complete >> device had been developed in that part of the world which amounted to a new >> kind of explosive. This goes along with the similar but different “red >> mercury” which may have had some validity despite official denials. It >> would be highly beneficial to the Iranians, for instance, to have weapons >> which avoided detection under the treaties which are in place. LENR would >> be perfect for their needs since it could be completely NON-radioactive. >> Red mercury is supposedly radioactive and easily detected. >> >> >> >> Why titanium? …one might ask, since it has not received that much >> attention in LENR studies compared to other host metals and does not appear >> to be especially energetic. Well, as it turns out in retrospect, one reason >> (not mentioned before) is the phenomenon of titanium hydride >> “densification.” There are a few papers which are unrelated to LENR or to >> military devices which indicate that titanium-deuteride, either as TiD2 or >> TiD3 can be mechanically pressed into a dense molecular form which is >> higher density than the metal itself. Imagine that. >> >> >> >> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10426914.2016. >> 1244833?journalCode=lmmp20 >> >> >> >> IOW the end result is that deuterium has completely lodged within the >> electron orbital of the titanium atom - which is most astounding given that >> Ti is the strongest metal to begin with - and has very low thermal >> expansion, in addition… both of which properties argue against such >> complete absorption. It is unprecedented. But apparently this extreme >> densification does happen and yet the application and end use for this is >> not obvious. Except to the Pentagon. >> >> >> >> In the end, this anomaly means that deuterium is absorbed under intense >> pseudo-pressure, creating maximum internal stress … which then in another >> step can be further multiplied via laser irradiation and compression via >> Coulomb explosion. >> >> >> >> Let’s hope this rambling is nothing more than SciFi fantasy or a >> far-out plot for the next Bond thriller. >> >> >> > > > -- > *quae est ista quae progreditur quasi aurora **consurgens * > *pulchra ut luna electa ut sol terribilis ut acies ordinata * > > >

