Frank,

 

Wow – you mean we can finally pin down a real-world prediction?  Like what is 
the ideal particle size for nickel (a proton conductor) in pressurized hydrogen 
at its Curie temp (350 C)? Why does expelling other fields result in gain?

 

>From there we want to ask: would it be the same parameter for palladium 
>(another proton conductor)? IOW does the actual metal involved make no 
>difference – what about metals that are marginal proton conductors but show no 
>thermal gain (iron)? You are saying the every proton conductor has the same 
>response to hydrogen? That would be the implication of a “constant” - if it is 
>a real constant.

 

From: [email protected] 

 

The constant means something.  It is the frequency and geometry at which a 
proton conductor becomes dia-magnetic to the electromagnetic, 
gravitomagnetic,and nuclear spin orbit fields.  It expels all of these fields. 

 

 

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