I can just see the oxygen and hydrogen lines running throughout my house, with 
the solar panels powering the electrolysis cell outside. There would be little 
pieces of marble clamped onto ceramic stand-offs with tiny torches aimed at 
them.

"Did you change the marble chips this week, Honey? The light in the kitchen is 
getting a little dim."

Well OK, maybe not. But it solves the battery problem. And the limelight really 
is pleasing compared to carbon arc for example. I can't really explain why.

Who is claiming that lime light is OU?


========================================================================================

 Tuesday, July 28, 2020, 09:35:04 PM UTC, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> 
wrote:

>Maybe not impracticable, Michael, especially given the simplicity. Perhaps a 
>"use" or many uses would materialize if indeed there was found to be an excess 
>photon flux anomaly.

>The bright output of such a light source should be tested using a simple 
>specialty meter against a known incandescent source,for instance. Simply by 
>using a lumen or light meter (less than $100) which are accurate and not 
>complicated by environmental conditions, we would bypass the mystique of 
>proper flow calorimetry.

>Excess photon emission essentially means that the photon flux times the energy 
>per photon would exceed unity which would be the chemical energy of the 
>hydrogen burning in O2. This would seem to be a feasible way to show net 
>energy gain from limelight - and assuming calcium is a catalyst for formation 
>of dense hydrogen, it could be the easiest way... plus maybe the most 
>convincing... when the goal is to show this kind of anomaly.
  

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