----- Original Message -----
From: "Frederick Sparber" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "vortex-l" <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, April 19, 2006 5:15 PM
Subject: Re: Energy, Force and Gravity
BTW, Michel.
High E Field birefringence effects on a 24 Mev Gamma Photon
should degenerate it (or lower energy ones) to thermal energy photons.
IOW, 24MeV/2^24.5.= ~ 1
No idea what you are talking about Fred, as often ;)
OTOH. 2^8005551212 power is the toll-free information number
for the galaxy.
Watched "The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy" lately? :-)
I have read all the five books, several times, my favorite trilogy of four
:)) The original in English, not the French translation which is pathetic.
Douglas Adams was an absolute genius, it would have taken a genius to do a
good translation I guess.
Michel
Fred
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/Polarization.html
Polarization:
"Propagating light consists of a transverse electric and magnetic field, a
single photon will oscillate on a line perpendicular to the propagation
direction. If the coordinate system is not aligned with the electric field
direction, it can be broken up into two perpendicular components."
Pockels Effect:
"An electrooptical effect in which the application of an electric field
produces a birefringence which is proportional to the field."
Kerr Effect:
"The development of birefringence when an isotropic transparent substance
in placed in an electric field."
Electric Polarization P is defined as the difference between the electric
fields D (induced) and E (imposed)
P = D - E
or
P = eoXeE
Electric Susceptibility Xe = K*eo/eo] - 1 = P/eoE eo = 8.8452e-12
C^2 N^-1 m^-2 or Farad m^-1
From: Frederick Sparber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 4/19/2006 8:32:00 AM
Would it be better to make the - 50 KV collector
a point so that the D+ ions converge in a small area?
A Boron-10 tip Perhaps? (neutron + Boron-10 ---> He4 + Li7 + ~ 3.2 MeV)
Fred
>
> Michel Jullian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> "Fred wrote"
> >
> > > Do atoms spontaneously ionize at high values of E?
> >
> > Yes they do Fred, that's how the "soft ionization membrane" works:
it's
a
> > capacitor like you describe with holes in it, through which you push
the
> gas
> > you want to ionize.
> >
> > Michel
> >
> Thanks Michel.
>
> That being the case, would a Pd "soft ion membrane" act as
> a deuteron accelerator if hooked something like
> this with 5.0 millimeter spacing, (E = 10e7 volts/meter) or so?
> D2 gas in grounded can
> + 50 KV ------------------------Pd membrane
> vacuum
> - 50 KV ___________________
> vacuum
> Fred
>