Eric-- You noted:
>>>This should be a warning sign that Dr. Ahern might not be seeing much of >>>interest. Ahern actually reported seeing something of interest in what he described as an explosion resulting from an internal pressure of a LENR reactor vessel. It was associated with very small particles--< 5 nm. (Too much surface area in one location and/or extreme local magnetic fields with very close NAE sites.) He also reported a phenomena that I had not heard about before---The absorption of thermal energy associated with the use of Ti resulting in cooling instead of heating. It seems there may be a reversibility associated with LENR. It may allow for air-conditioning as well as heating---no noisy compressors necessary. Bob ----- Original Message ----- From: Eric Walker To: [email protected] Sent: Wednesday, April 09, 2014 7:35 PM Subject: Re: [Vo]:Mats Lewan book : An Impossible Invention On Wed, Apr 9, 2014 at 8:39 AM, Bob Cook <[email protected]> wrote: Ahern seems to believe magnetic effects are at the heart of LENR phenomena. Each experimentalist and theorist has a pet theory about what is going on. What is important is whether one is able to subjugate one's personal hunches to a more objective and systematic pursuit of what is going on. He does not think nuclear reactions are involved. This should be a warning sign that Dr. Ahern might not be seeing much of interest. What seems clear is that some researchers get very pronounced results. Eric

