It's bad news, but it's important.

In short, the contention now is that Celani did not account for effect of
pressure changes within the cell. Reducing the gas pressure reduces the
thermal conductivity of the gas. This reduces the temperature of cell
components like the metal flanges that are mostly heated by the gas.

So at lower gas pressure, the flanges don't get as hot and so don't radiate
away as much heat. But the electrical heating is constant, so measured
temperatures at other points in the cell must rise. HUG is contending that
this pressure-modulated rise in temperature elsewhere in the cell is what
Celani measured as excess heat.

http://www.quantumheat.org/index.php/follow/163-a-partial-explaination

Jeff

Reply via email to