I have posted the cross-section of the hotCat as I have surmised it to be
constructed.  The active medium is entirely in a hermetically sealed
stainless coaxial tube arrangement.  The reactor vessel itself IS the
Faraday cage.  It is not a part of the test, it is a part of the hotCat.

Bob Higgins

On Thu, Oct 2, 2014 at 6:21 PM, Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com> wrote:

> How do you know that a faraday cage is part of the test?
>
> On Thu, Oct 2, 2014 at 5:25 PM, Bob Higgins <rj.bob.higg...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> The 3.6 keV x-ray photons are easily detected with an x-ray spectrometer
>> such as the Amptek X-123SDD at
>> http://www.amptek.com/products/x-123sdd-complete-x-ray-spectrometer-with-silicon-drift-detector-sdd/
>> .  See their chart at this URL for the different window options that will
>> easily allow detection down to 1 keV:
>> http://www.amptek.com/products/c-series-low-energy-x-ray-windows/ .  I
>> am hoping to get one of these some day.
>>
>> The bigger issue is that not much will make it out of the hotCat even if
>> that is the primary channel for conveying the heat.
>>
>> In the case of RF, I would expect almost none to escape the hotCat
>> because the reaction is in a Faraday cage.  The RF that could penetrate
>> would have to be below 1 kHz.
>>
>>

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