-Caveat Lector-

[Any one with even a casual interest in physics and cosmology
will be glad as hell to have waded thru this, i.e., GREAT READ!
--MS]


From:

http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/9951/baard.shtml


QUANTUM LEAP
BY ERIK BAARD

Dr. Randell Mills says he can change the face of physics. The
Scientfic Establishment thinks he's nuts.



Times are tough on Robert Mills Sr.'s 91-acre grain farm in
Chester County, Pennsylvania. "This year is very, very bad," he
confides. "I'm glad the kids got out."

His eldest, Robert Jr., has a water well drilling business, his
daughter Raeleen is a massage therapist. And his younger son,
Randell, recently bought a 53,000-square-foot space satellite
manufacturing plant near Princeton, New Jersey, from Lockheed
Martin. He then stocked it with millions of dollars of high-tech
gear. Here the younger Mills plans to overturn quantum theory as
it's been understood for decades.

Randell Mills, a Harvard-trained medical doctor who also studied
biotechnology and electric engineering at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, says he's found the Holy Grail of
physics: a unified theory of everything. A central part of
Mills's theory explains the basis of the traditional, and
paradoxical, "duality" concept of the electron as both a particle
and a wave with a model where electrons are charges that travel
as two-dimensional disks and wrap around nuclei like fluctuating
soap bubbles. He calls them "orbitspheres."

Mills says that with this new understanding he's produced clean
and limitless energy and an entirely new class of materials and
plasma that will reshape every industry in the coming decade.
Mills also claims breakthroughs inartificial intelligence,
cosmology, medicine, and perhaps even a form of gravitational
jujitsu.

"I've made the electron real," the 42-year-old Mills says. "It's
a revolution very fitting to the 21st century, in a chain of
revolutions man has had with fire, steel, fossil fuels, and
Maxwell's description of electromagnetism. This is grandiose
stuff, and when I say it, it delivers a beating from critics. But
on the other hand it's fun."

Though the topics he broaches could be coming from a B-movie mad
scientist, Mills's cadences are more often like those of a
motivational speaker. He moves his six-foot-five frame with
athletic ease and drives a BMW sports car. He and his wife, an
investment banker, have two young sons and another child due in
March.

His company, BlackLight Power Inc., formed in 1991, expects to
receive in January patents on the energy and chemicals, which
Mills says derive from "shrinking" the hydrogen atom's
orbitsphere. BlackLight Power, with a research staff of 25, will
submit its findings to premier scholarly journals by that time,
he adds.

Despite howls from the scientific establishment that Mills is a
relic of the "cold fusion" trend quashed a decade ago, BlackLight
Power Inc. has raised more than $25 million from about 150
investors. While that's hardly a huge sum in this Internet-crazed
era, it's coming from serious money and energy people. Prominent
among them are multibillion-dollar electric utilities PacifiCorp,
based in Oregon, and Conectiv, which serves Mid-Atlantic states.
RS Funds, Eastbourne Capital Management, and executives retired
from the top echelon of Morgan Stanley have also put in millions.
With Mills holding on to controlling shares, BlackLight Power now
is turning away private investors.

"I'm impressed with how Randy's gone about this," a retired
Morgan Stanley executive says, "with experiments to test the
theory at every step. And the potential payoff is almost
unimaginable."

Conectiv senior vice president David Blake concurs: "We're past
the scientific verification stage. The talk now is about
commercial applications," perhaps within seven years, he says.
Blake sits on the BlackLight Power board of directors.

Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co. is considering a public offering
of BlackLight Power stock in 2000. The investment bank says that
the two chief needs that will trigger an IPO are a licensing
agreement with a "household name company" and more substantial
academic validation of its technologies. BlackLight Power is in
discussions with DaimlerChrysler, and three major corporations
are already examining materials it has produced, say Mills and
company executives.

In the next year, Mills promises, the revolution will be
"hydrinoized."

In one of BlackLight Power's cavernous laboratories sits the
prototype energy-and chemical-producing cell that is the heart of
Mills's ambitions. Mills explains that in this contraption,
resembling a souped-up home furnace, water is electrically then
catalytically broken down into atoms of oxygen and hydrogen.
Potassium atoms are introduced as a gas into the very
low-pressure hydrogen gas waiting inside the cell. Under specific
conditions, the potassium acts as a catalyst to collapse
hydrogen's electron orbit. The energy once used to maintain the
higher orbit is released as ultra-violet light, Mills says.

The heat from that process can build pressure to turn a turbine
for a generator or an engine, BlackLight Power notes in a
marketing plan. The smaller hydrogen atoms, called "hydrinos,"
remaining in the cell can then react with other elements placed
there to form novel compounds with amazing properties, Mills
claims. "This will change how most everyday things in the 21st
century are made and used," he says. For example:

EHydrinos combined with inorganic elements produce conductive,
magnetic plastics that would revolutionize circuitry and
aerospace engineering, and shrink and speed up semiconductors.

EHydrinos combined with highly oxygenated matter would form the
basis of batteries the size of a briefcase to drive your car 1000
miles at highway speeds on a single charge, without gasoline.

EOne type of hydrino combined with an acid would produce
incredibly powerful explosives or rocket propellants.

EHydrino and metal compounds make for super-strong coatings, some
of which could make ships rustproof, dramatically reducing crew
complements.

There are "millions and millions of possible combinations" in the
commercial world, Mills says, revealing himself as a practical,
earthy businessman.

These qualities emerged in his teens when he made good money
raising corn and hay on land he leased. He had no college plans,
and skipped so many high school classes his diploma was in doubt.
But when he sliced up his hand and arm in an accident falling
into a glass door, the five hours of surgery rattled his sense of
immortality.

"At that point," Mills recalls, "I figured if I'm going to die
eventually, I'd like to at least know why. I wanted to know how
it works. All of it, from the human brain to the universe."

He used profits from the farm to cover the tuition at Franklin &
Marshall College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, where he graduated
first in his class. After that he breezed through medical school
at Harvard University, while simultaneously taking science
courses at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The son of a farmer, and a farmer himself, turned out to be an
academic superstar.

"It's the American story," says Dr. Rob-ert Park of the American
Physical Society. "But he's still wrong."

Park has concluded that the hydrino theory is wrong in his
upcoming book, Voodoo Science: The Road From Foolishness to
Fraud. Park is not alone is being rankled by hydrinos. The
hydrogen atom is the simplest, most common, and most tested
element. It's nearly universally agreed that a free-floating
hydrogen atom is in what's called "the ground state"you can't
bring its electron closer into its nucleus. Telling physicists
that they've got that wrong is like telling mothers across
America that they've misunderstood apple pie. It's that
fundamental.

"If you could fuck around with the hydrogen atom, you could fuck
around with the energy process in the sun. You could fuck around
with life itself," claims Dr. Phillip Anderson, a Nobel laureate
in physics at Princeton University. "Everything we know about
everything would be a bunch of nonsense. That's why I'm so sure
that it's a fraud."

Dr. Michio Kaku, a theoretical physicist based at City University
of New York, adds that "the only law that this business with
Mills is proving is that a fool and his money are easily parted."
Kaku is a cofounder of "string"-field theory, which posits that
all matter and energy are actually manifestations of vibrations
occurring in 11 dimensions. String-field theory, considered
radical when it was introduced, is now pretty much the only game
in town for mainstream physicists seeking a grand unified theory.

BlackLight Power boosters scoff that they've seen no practical
application of quantum theory since the atomic bomb and nuclear
power, and say they have little time for theorists who call Mills
a charlatan while teaching that the fundamental mechanics of
cause and effect are subverted at the subatomic level. Mills's
camp responds: Fraud? Let's talk about fraud. Quantumists have us
living in myriad dimensions filled with "probability waves" and
unobservable "virtual particles" that flit in and out of
existence, and they say we may one day slip through wormholes in
space to visit other universes or go back in time.

Kaku insists that such seemingly far-out visions direct us toward
truths we can't yet see, whereas Mills, Kaku contends, is
promoting something already shown to be impossible.

"I'll have demonstrated an entirely new form of energy production
by the end of 2000," Mills responds. "If Dr. Kaku has escaped our
universe through a wormhole by then, I'll send my first $1000 in
profits to his new address."

And there's the nub, Mills's critics also charge. They're talking
the scientific method, and he's already spending his profits.

"The history of science in America since money became so easily
available to people making outrageous claims has gotten very
complicated," says Dr. Robert Cava, a materials science expert at
Princeton. "Scientists are constantly in competition and
constantly under extreme scrutiny. Don't think it's a picnic. So
when someone comes along and makes a big splash without going
through the rigors of peer review, it makes us think that the guy
has no business doing it."

Dr. Richard Wilson, a research professor of physics at Harvard
who says he's still skeptical of Mills's theory after a visit to
BlackLight Power's labs, says the culture clash between
scientists and captains of industry is natural.

"In my experience in science," Wilson says, "no one's more
gullible than the wildcatter in the oil industry. But they're
both gullible and successful. Sometimes they happen to be right.
They take chances. That's their game, but that's not what
scientists usually do."



The booming stock market of the 1990s

has loosed a torrent of cash in all industries, but wallets have
been especially fat in the U.S. utility industry in the last
couple of years since that $215 billion business began
deregulating. States have pushed electric companies to sell power
plants to new competitors at open auctions. The result: In
addition to coal, they have cash to burn.

A chunk of that money has been earmarked for new energy
alternatives to fossil fuels, reflecting mounting concerns about
global warming that have coalesced with long-standing unease with
North American, European, and East Asian dependency on unstable
regions for oil supplies. In the political climate of the U.S. at
least, nuclear power isn't an option.

Of course popular "green," or environmentally sensitive, energy
sources like solar, wind, and small-scale hydroelectric power
don't require revisions to science textbooks. Mills says
BlackLight Power is moving first on the energy and materials
front, even though he's more credentialed in medicine, mostly
because there are fewer regulatory hassles.

Out back behind Mills's laboratories is what is essentially a
150-ton thermos that he says will be the core of his first power
plant. Lockheed Martin used it to test satellite components for
the cold vacuum of space. But shielding on its one-inch-thick
skin could also hold in heat produced by banks of Mills's cells
placed inside. Old power plants could be retrofitted with
BlackLight Power reactors, which would produce no emissions or
hazardous waste, Mills says.

Conectiv has the right to license the BlackLight power process to
make electricity, David Blake says. Another board member is
Shelby Brewer, former chairman and CEO of ABB Combustion
Engineering, a leading maker of power plants and nuclear fuel.
Brewer has a Ph.D. in nuclear engineering from MIT, and was a top
nuclear official in the Department of Energy during the Reagan
administration.

"I think he has something here worth taking forward
commercially," says Brewer, who now has his own energy company.
But even those who say they've gotten positive results from
testing Mills's energy cells stop short of endorsing his theory.

Dr. Johannes Conrads, former director of the Institute for Low
Temperature Plasma Physics at Ernst Moritz Arndt University in
Greifswald, Germany, told a gathering of the American Chemical
Society in October that he was able to produce "remarkably high
energy" from a Mills cell. But Conrads said he thought the energy
could be coming from an effect within dense regions of plasma
produced through the BlackLight Power process.

Dr. John A. Spitznagel, chief scientist for Siemens Westinghouse
Power Corp.'s science and technology center in Pittsburgh, says
that several years ago he too was intrigued by energy he was
getting from a Mills cell, but that it wasn't enough to pursue at
that time. But he remains "in a sort of monitoring mode" should
Mills return with further verifications and the more refined
approach that BlackLight Power claims to have developed.

Despite many qualms about the hydrino theory, Spitznagel says
that he believes Mills "speaks with honesty and conviction."
Spitznagel notes that one reason Mills didn't pursue further
energy work with Siemens Westinghouse was that BlackLight Power
focused for a time on the novel compounds Mills was producing.

(continued in Part Two, which is WAY cooler than Pt One)


=================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:                    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      *Mike Spitzer*     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                         ~~~~~~~~          <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

   The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
=================================================================

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to