Could it be that Rossi is using words in the wrong way to describe his
invention as follows:

It might be that Rossi is meaning that when the temperature of the Cat
raises, the mouse is turned off. When the temperature of the cat lowers,
the Mouse is turned on.


Otherwise. "the temperature of the Cat raises when the Mouse is turned off"

If these words are being used correctly, then the Mouse is a negative
feedback device that dampens the Cat like a nuclear control rod. The Cat is
therefore supercritical.

 "lowers when the Mouse is turned on" is also consistent with a dampening
mechanism.


On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 3:26 PM, Alan Fletcher <[email protected]> wrote:

> From: "Daniel Rocha" <[email protected]>
> Sent: Sunday, December 29, 2013 10:13:46 AM
>
> 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.
>
> - - -
>
> You might be right on that one :
>
> Andrea Rossi
> December 29th, 2013 at 6:10 PM
>
> Hank Mills:
> ...
> 4- the temperature of the Cat raises when the Mouse is turned off, lowers
> when the Mouse is turned on
>
>

Reply via email to