How do you plan to get Non-Existant Argon-41
out of Mass 2  (already energy depleted) out
of "Hydrinohydride" ?


> [Original Message]
> From: Jones Beene <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[email protected]>
> Date: 4/24/2006 9:30:58 AM
> Subject: Special-K
>
> Robin,
>
> > A simplistic explanation is that much Ar40 may actually be K39
> > with a "chemically" bound hydrinohydride attached. The bond
> > strength would be at most 70 eV, allowing for slow but regular
> > exchange. As "Argon" it is chemically inert, and hence gaseous,
> > while without the hydrinohydride, it reverts to true Potassium 
> > and
> > once again becomes an ion ending up back in the water.
>
>
> I like this! ... But the 70 eV is probably in error in the 
> end-product - that applies to the initial hydride bond which 
> becomes moot once absorbed. This would likely happen very quickly 
> in the oceans.
>
> It would seem that solar-derived hydrinos (of high shrinkage) will 
> certainly accumulate in the oceans of Earth over geologic time (if 
> they are real - and produced in the solar corona - then this 
> process is a given). The potassium preferentially bonds with them, 
> but due to the small radius they lodge well within the electron 
> cloud - perhaps mostly at the normal k-shell radius WRT the 
> nucleus.
>
> ERGO that is EXACTLY why you get this typical k-shell energy level 
> of 3672 eV - and subsequent Auger cascade - when the hydrino is 
> forced out by applied energy, as in the numerous laser implosion 
> studies which show this. This is the critical detail and proof.
>
> Mainstream science is calling it "efficient" radiation. HA ! If 
> they only knew !
>
> Cool. It now seems so obvious. I can't believe that Mills himself 
> has missed this !!
>
> Now - if we could just figure out how to enrich this entity from 
> normal Argon gas. It would be the same size and atomic weight, but 
> possibly not quite as chemically inert, even though the outer 
> shell is technically full. However - it should have a vastly 
> different magnetic moment.
>
> From the spectra in this studies, I would guess that it must exist 
> in the 100 ppm range of the normal gaseous Argon which is bought 
> from a supplier. Get that up to 1% and you've got one heck of a 
> fuel - certainly manufacturable at home for automotive and home 
> power... but (sadly ;-) eliminating the middleman... And that is 
> why this info needs to be put in the public domain ASAP.
>
> Better yet: Get it up to 100% and you've got the ways-and-means 
> for interstellar space travel ...
>
> ... say, maybe that is why this whole thing has been 
> semi-officially ignored by the powers-that-be...and, say, what is 
> that silent black helicopter doing outside my window this morning?
>
> Before I am neutralized (and be glad you are in Oz) let me ask. 
> What shall we call this fraction of normal Argon - "Special-K" ? 
> "Hy-K" ? "K2R" ?
>
> Wow. This is most interesting...
>
> Jones
>



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