Did that.

http://www.angelfire.com/scifi2/zpt/chapterb.html#Pg6 

Maybe it is the case of cooling the experiment with liquid nitrogen, to avoid 
self interference with the experiment. 8THz blackbody is a peak around 140K, so 
71K is far away from that peak.





-----Original Message-----
From: Daniel Rocha <danieldi...@gmail.com>
To: vortex-l <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Sent: Thu, Apr 5, 2012 10:13 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Stimulation of LENR using dual lasers, creative engineering 
needed


Maybe it is the case of cooling the experiment with liquid nitrogen, to avoid 
self interference with the experiment. 8THz blackbody is a peak around 140K, so 
71K is far away from that peak.






2012/4/5 Abd ul-Rahman Lomax <a...@lomaxdesign.com>

At 12:30 PM 4/5/2012, Daniel Rocha wrote:


If you are not concerned with a narrow broad band, you could use a blackbody 
emission. According to Wien's displacement law, 14.8THz to 22.5THz,


<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wien%27s_displacement_law#Frequency-dependent_formulation>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wien%27s_displacement_law#Frequency-dependent_formulation

gives 251K to 387K.


The frequencies of interest are far infrared, or sometimes called mid-infrared. 
Blackbody emissions certainly exist in the range, but are are at low levels and 
are not coherent.

I've been speculating, though, as an aside, that the erratic results of cold 
fusion might have to do with the presence or absence of environmental THz 
radiation. I don't know if anyone looked for this, and don't place a lot of 
weight on the idea....




 

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