Mattia Rizzi wrote:

Because a single-phase calorimetric test is so easy and because they (dept. of physics) will instantly become internationally famous if they certificate "a new cheap energy source" . . .

Not at all. No one gets famous because they certify cold fusion. Thousands of scientists have done that, and I am the only person who even has a list of their names. People who certify the existence of cold fusion are disparaged and ridiculed; they do not became famous.


they WILL NOT put probes inside reactors, they WILL NOT lost data.

You need to get that idea out of your mind. You can sure that Levi but the probe into the outlet tube flow. No one would be so stupid as to put it anywhere else. I have seen many calorimeters large and small, and I have never seen one where the location of the temperature probe was open to question. You have to open the outlet tube and insert a "T" connector, and then make sure the thermocouple (or dial thermometer) is correctly installed and leak-tight.


It's simple, Jed. A "certification" from an *University* is MUCH MORE VALUABLE then a "certification" from an university researcher.

It is the same thing! A university consists of professors. They are the only ones who do experiments, write papers or "certify" anything. There are no publications issued by "Cornell University" or "Hokkaido University." All papers and books from these institutions are written by individual professors. The papers published by Levi and Villa are as official as any document issued by any university. The one from Levi even has the official seal of the university:

http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/LeviGreportonhe.pdf

What more do you want?


And it's MUCH MORE DANGEROUS if the "certification" is not well-done.

I do not know what you mean by "dangerous" in this context. The second test was done as well anyone can do it. No one has found any potential errors in it, as far as I know.

- Jed

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