From: Mark Iverson

...  Anything interesting about the numbers 83 and 105? [wet water
structure]


I cannot find any connection in number theory. 

The best site on the web for water structure, as vorticians know - is Martin
Chaplin's, but it does not specify anything special about these values, per
se - as being either important or stable for water structure.

http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/abstrct.html

The favored nano-geometry for water, and this is applicable to both liquid
or gas - is the icosahedron - 20 sides. But the subunits for forming the
sides are much larger than a single molecule; and in general there are 3
basic kinds of stable subunits (clusters) of 5, 8, or ten water molecules.
The most stable structure of all has an average of 280 molecules. 

An interesting experiment comes to mind. If one passes 100% water vapor
through a long Teflon tube (real-charge electret) and get free electrons via
tribology, then "free" water-splitting could be imagined. 

Jones

Hey ... <g> ... in the case of E-Cat, this kind of thing would be expected
to give "dry steam" on recombination, no?

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