A question: what would be the net effect of all these extra electrons being 
pulled over from the Dirac Sea? Would this not eventually produce some kind of 
unholy electrostatic issue. Or worse?

Steve High

On Apr 13, 2014, at 6:40 PM, "Jones Beene" <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> From: David Roberson
> 
> If you take another reaction, such as burning of a liquid hydrocarbon, does 
> your technique still demonstrate an unbalance? 
>  
> No- bare protons must be present for positronium to get involved. We are 
> talking about the need to reach an interface with another spatial dimension – 
> and if the proton approaches one dimensionality, it may be possible to 
> disrupt that other dimension.
>  
> The main possibility for a continuous energy anomaly with nascent hydrogen 
> seems to be a reactor where H2 is repeatedly split into protons using a 
> spillover catalyst and then recombining, over and over again, sequentially - 
> but where there is no significant nuclear reaction. Sound familiar?
>  
> If there is excess heat with little gamma radiation and little transmutation 
> – there are only a few possible ways to explain the situation. Mills provides 
> one hypothetical way, but I think his explanation is insufficient for the 
> Rossi effect. A reversible diproton reaction is also possible. Conceivably, 
> several relatively exotic hydrogen reactions could be happening at the same 
> time. This is one of them.
>  
> The bottom line is that this epo hypothesis is being offered as an 
> alternative for understanding the results which Rossi’s collaborators will 
> likely report in a few weeks.
>  
> Jones
>  
>  

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