Jones,
This is precisely my point.. that the atomic oven, MAHG and now
Mills and Rossi are all chasing a form of super catalytic action that exceeds
the portion already hidden/rolled into COE. The tapestry of DCE can extend down
below the limits set by Liptschitz when hydrogen becomes fractional [or IMHO
relativistic] to a level that breaks the isotropy by trumping the levels set in
our gravitational well or any inertial frame even a spatially stationary one by
creating a warp –negative value of vacuum pressure even relative to stationary.
The geometry that produces the quantum effect also acts as a segregation device
aka separating fractional hydrogen atoms from fractional hydrogen molecules by
virture of opposition to random motion such that it creates a type of
Maxwellian demon. I have said before that this would explain the different type
of anomalous claims…hot vs cold and radioactive decay rate acceleration vs
deceleration. I am quite happy to call it Epicatalysis but am convinced there
will be a relativistic component soon discovered as the research progresses.
Fran
From: Jones Beene [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, September 14, 2014 11:05 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: EXTERNAL: RE: [Vo]:Experimental Test of a Thermodynamic Paradox
From: H Veeder
Suppose epicatalysis can cycle between hydrogen and shrunken hydrogen instead
of just between H2 and H.
That would be the logical progression to Mills’ view, especially if UV was
present - except RM sez there is no shuttling, just a one-way, but strongly
bonded shrunken state.
If there is to be net gain from any kind of chemical asymmetry, it seems likely
that a shuttling to f/H and then back again, rather than or in addition to
atomic and molecular asymmetry, is likely – since the physical evidence for f/H
is slim.
In terms of the long mean free-path, many of Mills earlier experiments were run
at vacuum. For Sheehan - the free path is not really all that long - about a
micron and about 10^17 atoms/cc. Mills often uses a stronger vacuum which is
less populated.
Definitely, Sheehan should look for UV emission.