We have known about temperature anomalies since Langmuir associated with 
hydrogen plasma and Now Rossi gives us a temperature which would melt Ni 
powder. My point gets back to an earlier thread regarding the hydrino being 
able to permeate through the stainless Steele reactor to leak out - this and 
the Langmuir temperature anomalies taken together suggest the plasma may be 
relativistically offset on the time axis -not only appearing "smaller" but also 
"faster" to any temperature sensing equipment. Since a thermometer by design is 
passive it may be able to measure the relativistic equivalent speed of the 
atoms being maintained by the dihydrinos in the plasma without sinking it. The 
reactor atmosphere internally is likely a Black Light plasma lamp that is 
bathing the temp sensor in some fraction with relativistic hydrogen. The 
"apparent" temp should drop and orbital expand as the fractional hydrogen 
disassociates and h1 is able to translate freely to the ambient density 
level/inertial frame. IMHO, if it forms fractional h2 and has to disassociate 
multiple times on it's return to ambient this might explain Life after death 
and the high temperature capability of atomic hydrogen welding - the ability to 
tap ZPE by forming h2 such that the free translation is opposed and the change 
in energy density / pressure on the atoms repeatedly snaps the bond 
mechanically which then reforms at lesser fractions releasing the same energy 
each time they reform.
Regards
Fran


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, May 06, 2011 12:06 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:What is the D2 Canister next to the H2 Canister

In reply to  Axil Axil's message of Thu, 5 May 2011 04:09:15 -0400:
Hi,
[snip]
>The very fact that the Rossi process can ever got to 1600C indicated that
>the active nuclear areas in the catalyst survived to at least that
>temperature level. This indicates that the melting point of the catalyst was
>a few hundred degree C above that 1600C temperature. NiO melts at 2000C.
[snip]
He also didn't say how long it was at that temperature, it may have only been a
split second. ;)

Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html

Reply via email to