That is a very interesting story Mark.  I wonder how his device would be able 
to keep things like vacuum cleaners and other electric motors from bombing it 
out.  Did he happen to mention anything about the frequency response of the 
device?  I can imagine that it has a very low cutoff frequency, maybe a couple 
of hertz.

Dave


-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Iverson-ZeroPoint <[email protected]>
To: vortex-l <[email protected]>
Sent: Mon, Jan 9, 2012 3:00 pm
Subject: RE: [Vo]:Stress-induced negative coefficient of temperature?



A little off topic, but perhaps interesting for some rookies in the Collective…
For some first-hand experience with how rock fracturing affects it’s magnetic 
properties, and how that manifests in anomalous geomagnetic activity (for EQ 
prediction), see this post:
    http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg47319.html
 
-Mark
 

From: James Bowery [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, January 09, 2012 5:43 AM
To: vortex-l
Subject: [Vo]:Stress-induced negative coefficient of temperature?

 
Something that occurs to me about the emergence of a negative coefficient of 
temperature at high loading of hydrogen in metallic lattices is that it may be 
related to the stress imposed by that loading.  If stress reaches a point where 
charge carriers to emerge, then increasing the temperature may enhance the 
emergence of those carriers.

 

The emergence of charge carriers with stress is theorized to occur in igneous 
rock:

 




 
Stress-Induced Changes in the Electrical Conductivity of Igneous Rocks and the 
Generation of Ground Currents


Author:Friedemann T. Freund, Akihiro Takeuchi, Bobby W. S. Lau, Rachel Post, 
John Keefner, Joshua Mellon, and Akthem Al-Manaseer


Abstract


    If we can ever hope to understand the non-seismic signals that the Earth 
sends out before major earthquakes, we need to understand the physics of rocks 
under increased levels of stress. In particular we need to understand the 
generation of electrical currents in the ground. We have begun to study how 
electrical conductivity of igneous rocks changes under stress and what types of 
charge carriers are involved. We show that quartz-rich granite and quartz-free 
anorthosite both generate electronic charge carriers when subjected to stress. 
The charge carriers are positive holes (p-holes), i.e., defect electrons on the 
oxygen anion sublattice. They spread out of the stressed rock volume, the 
“source volume”, into the surrounding unstressed rocks. Time-varying ground 
currents are required to generate pre-earthquake local magnetic field anomalies 
and low-frequency electromagnetic emissions. We posit that stress-induced 
activation of p-hole charge carriers and their outflow from the source volume 
is the basic process by which ground currents can be generated in the Earth’s 
crust. We propose that the arrival of p-holes at the Earth’s surface leads to 
changes in the ground potential that may induce ionospheric perturbations. We 
further propose that the build-up of high electric fields at the ground surface 
can ionize the air, hence cause ion emission and corona discharges. When 
p-holes recombine at the ground surface, they are expected to form 
vibrationally highly excited O-O bonds. The de-excitation of these O-O bonds 
will lead to stimulated mid-IR emission, which may explain the reported 
pre-earthquake “thermal anomalies” identified in satellite images.


Key word:Pre-earthquake phenomena, Electrical conductivity, Stress, Magnetic 
field, Ionization, EM emission, Thermal anomalies



 
Full_Text(pdf) 



 

 

 


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