Here is “Evidence of electromagnetic radiation from Ni-H Systems”


http://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/FocardiSevidenceof.pdf



Emissions derived from undefined nuclear reactions were detected in three
successive experiments in a temperature range between 350 and 750 K.


On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 6:32 PM, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax 
<[email protected]>wrote:

> At 12:12 AM 5/29/2011, Terry Blanton wrote:
>
>> That's one heck of a frequency conversion!
>>
>
> No, it simply requires that the gammas be absorbed by the apparatus. That,
> I believe, places an upper limit on the gamma energies, but I'm not about to
> calculate it, and this would also depend on the shielding thickness and the
> shielding material.
>
> He implies that there is gamma radiation generated during the reaction,
> which would point, by the way, to a scientific demonstration, showing a
> nuclear reaction, but it's one he does not want to do, because all that has
> to happen is for someone to measure the energy of those gammas, and the
> E-Cat could be out of the bag.
>
> Note that this demonstration would not rule out fraud. Fraud is very
> difficult to rule out by any sort of supervised demonstration, which is why
> I don't expect it to be ruled out until Rossi gets his patent protection.
>
> It's really weird. If Rossi is a scammer, he is being *protected* by US
> patent office refusal to grant patents, because it gives him a complete
> excuse to not disclose what he's doing, completely.
>
> Patents for something considered impossible should be issued. The patent
> applicant pays all the cost of the examination, and the patent (all patents)
> should clearly state that the practical operation of the device is not
> guaranteed by the patent office. The argument that issuance of a patent is
> some sort of seal of approval is preposterous, as to substance. All kinds of
> patented stuff has been completely useless.
>

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