Bushnell became interested in W/ L several yrs ago
http://www.wfs.org/April-May2010/Bushnell.htm : "Low-energy nuclear reactors
(LENRs), otherwise known as cold fusion reactors, were considered impossible
to build a decade ago but are gaining attention thanks to the work of Allan
Widom and Lewis Larsen, who have proposed a new theory to explain how LENR
might work. NASA is conducting experiments in an attempt to verify their
theory, which explains the decades-long LENR experiments as products of
quantum weak interaction theory applied to condensed matter, not fusion."

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Jones Beene" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, April 28, 2011 3:45 PM
Subject: [Vo]:Bushnell interview in EVworld


> This is fabulous news! Spread it around the WWW - as it could open up
> funding for many who are doing Rossi replications.
>
> Dr Dennis Bushnell (chief scientist at NASA's Langley Research Center) has
> now gone public with NASA's upcoming Rossi replication attempt!
>
> We had heard rumors of this two weeks ago, and were hoping that it would
not
> become some kind of 'black' project. Now it looks like a "go." Halleluiah!
>
> EVWORLD Update 4-28-11
>
> "The Future of Energy" by Bill Moore
>
> Talking with Dennis Bushnell is both exhilarating and chilling, not to
> mention just a bit intimidating. The chief scientist at NASA's Langley
> Research Center, he seems to have his fingers in just about every aspect
of
> both aeronautics and astronautics, with a special interest in energy
sources
> of the future, both near-term (advanced solar PV) and far (drill
geothermal
> and LENR).
>
> It was, in fact, a comment he made recently about Low Energy Nuclear
> Reaction that caused me to contact him and set up a telephone interview on
> Earth Day this year, which also fell on Good Friday, the day commemorating
> Jesus crucifixion and sacrifice for the sins of mankind. As I would
realize
> deep into our discussion, there is a sobering synergy that links the two.
>
> Bushnell is no stranger to doing interviews, or giving talks, or writing
> papers. He is refreshingly candid in his views, which include the
conviction
> that the planet crossed the peak oil summit sometime around 2008 or 2009.
He
> is both upbeat about the promise of some exciting new technologies, while
> being less sanguine about the prospects of our amygdala-dominated culture.
>
> As you'll hear in the "Future In Motion" podcast available on the EV
> World.com web site, what I wanted to know was his view on which energy
> technologies held out the greatest hope for solving our looming energy
> crisis. He made no bones about the fact that the current rise in fuel
prices
> is only the start.
>
> Surprisingly, LENR tops his list. You'll recall that we talked about this
in
> Edition 11.15 two weeks ago, recounting the work of Rossi and Focardi in
> Bologna, Italy. Their device produces more heat energy than what's put
into
> it. The question is why? Bushnell's NASA colleagues now think they know
what
> is going on at the atomic level. They are about to attempt to replicate
what
> the Italians have done. If LENR proves both predictable and reliable, it
> will, in Bushnell's words, change everything.
>
> From the lead column by Bill Moore.
>

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