This behavior of alumina that you are rendering could be just another assumption. There needs to be many cross checks and calibrations to find out what assumptions are reliable and which observations are not reliable.
There seems to be many weird things that are going on inside the reactor like the melting mystery. It is important to determine where the invalid assumptions are. On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 2:00 PM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]> wrote: > Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote: > > It could be that the nature of the light is very unusual as produced by >> the reactor. If only infrared photons were monochromatically emitted (like >> a laser) that all corresponded to the exact temperature of 1400C. and no >> other photon energy wavelengths was produced, then the light would not be >> blackbody radiation. >> > > This monochromatic light would strike the alumina from the inside, heat it > up, and then it would glow with white incandescence. There may be something > very unusual about the cold fusion reaction inside (assuming there is one), > but outside this is ordinary alumina material which does not have any > ability to act like a laser. > > The authors have not responded to questions about issue. There may be a > prosaic explanation. Perhaps that photo was taken before the cell heated up > much. Let us wait to see what they say. I see no point to speculating about > this. > > - Jed > >

