On Sun, Dec 29, 2013 at 10:13 AM, Daniel Rocha <[email protected]>wrote:

 The "mouse" is nothing more than a ceramic canister within his SS tube
> full of (most probably) MgH and Ni acting as a catalyst to brake the
> released H2 to atomic from its solid state MgH at high temperatures. If H
> or Mg are in contact with air or moister then a Lungmuir toarch reaction
> (reaching 3400C) and/or a violent reaction of Mg with H20 give such
> "explosing" results lasting for some seconds. Such are not desirable
> results but accidents due to poor controllability.
>

Interesting idea.  You say this with some confidence -- can you elaborate
on the basis of this confidence?

If the "mouse" is a ceramic canister with MgH (or something comparable), I
think the implication is that it is Rossi's Hot Cat, specifically, that is
prone to meltdowns, and not the underlying LENR itself?  Why is it
necessary to break down H2 into monoatomic H if the H is going to recombine
right away once it migrates away from the ceramic canister, presumably well
before it gets to the Ni?  If some Ni is in the "mouse," what is in the
"cat"?

What is a Langmuir torch reaction?  Is this rapid hydrogen recombination?

Eric

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