It doesn't look like an independent test. The name of the researcher is the same as in many of BlackLight tests. I think they just rented a lab and did tests.
2012/2/14 Roarty, Francis X <[email protected]> > Replication of Black Lights anomalous energy in impossible EUV range by > Harvard and the recent 5 million dollar research grant to Rob Duncan at U > of MO is what Rossi and Defkallion should be worried about. The race is on. > Fran > > _____________________________________________ > *From:* Jones Beene [mailto:[email protected] <[email protected]>] > *Sent:* Monday, February 13, 2012 3:05 PM > *To:* [email protected] > *Subject:* EXTERNAL: [Vo]:GEN3 Partners report from testing at Harvard > > > Best evidence yet about the power source that I am calling the T-effect > (Thermacore Effect) after the original Patent holder … > > *http://www.blacklightpower.com/pdf/GEN3_Harvard.pdf*<http://www.blacklightpower.com/pdf/GEN3_Harvard.pdf> > > … which is the physical excess energy effect with no complete explanation > yet (despite CQM’s Rydberg connection)… which is behind “Langmuir’s > torch”, Rossi, DGT, Piantelli, Focardi, Mizuno, Celani, Mills, Ahern etc. > All of these are gainful experiments where hot hydrogen and a host metal > (Ni, W, Ti or alloy such as NiCu or NiPd) produce thermal anomalies – and > in addition, when it is looked for: EUV in an “impossible range” below 30 > nm wavelength. > > Langmuir would get full credit for the effect, as he was the first to > document gain beyond chemical - except that he publicly denied (at Bohr’s > insistence) his own findings of strong gain with atomic hydrogen on > tungsten. > > Jones > > > > -- Daniel Rocha - RJ [email protected]

