[Vo]:subscribe

2016-04-04 Thread jean guy moreau


Provenance : Courrier pour Windows 10



[Vo]:Majoranas ?

2012-08-02 Thread jean guy moreau







A peek into the unknown... 
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/08/120801113540.htm?utm_source=feedburnerutm_medium=emailutm_campaign=Feed%3A+sciencedaily%2Fstrange_science+%28ScienceDaily%3A+Strange+Science+News%29
 JG Moreau 
  

RE: [Vo]:Rossi’s new reactor core design

2012-07-05 Thread jean guy moreau

Speaking of UFO and LENR, might be worth watching this video.Interesting to see 
the burns on the poor man chest as he faced direct exhaust from LENR heated air 
;)) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uLtb8ph2WQQ JG MoreauQuebec
 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Rossi’s new reactor core design
From: dlrober...@aol.com
Date: Thu, 5 Jul 2012 17:11:52 -0400


It is no secret that Rossi has had many inputs from readers of his journal. I 
have suggested a flat design to both Rossi and DGT for over a year that sounds 
similar to what he has. To me it was obvious that a flat design would be far 
superior to a round one if you were interested in scaling the power. First, you 
find an ideal thickness that has the thermal characteristics that you desire, 
then you can grow it in the same plane as required. The heat then can escape 
through the same general path length but over a larger area as the system power 
needs rise.


 


The funny thing is that they have told me on several occasions that their 
original design was better than a planar one.  Maybe now they are beginning to 
understand my reasons.


 





Why would the government want to help Rossi get ahead of the other competitors? 
 Perhaps they found an LENR device powering one of those UFO's that they have 
in storage. 


 





Dave 
  

[Vo]:boiling helper

2012-02-16 Thread jean guy moreau

Might be useful in the new boiler age:
 
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/02/120215155316.htm?utm_source=feedburnerutm_medium=emailutm_campaign=Feed%3A+sciencedaily%2Ftop_news%2Ftop_technology+%28ScienceDaily%3A+Top+News+--+Top+Technology%29
 
JG Moreau 

RE: [Vo]:Feb 1st 2012 National Research Council News Release Report: NASA's 16 top technical challenges for the next 5 years

2012-02-06 Thread jean guy moreau

How about heating air for aviation ?
 
JG Moreau
 



Date: Mon, 6 Feb 2012 18:08:29 +
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Feb 1st 2012 National Research Council News Release  Report: 
NASA's 16 top technical challenges for the next 5 years
From: robert.gulliver.l...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com

There is simply no way that LENR will be useful for getting stuff to orbit - 
unless it is used as a method for making cheaper chemical rocket fuels, and 
even then rocket fuel costs are only a few % of a launch.
- LENR power density is far too low (a 3500kg SSME delivers 9GW of power, ie 
2.5MW/kg)
- The temperature (700°C) is too low to heat hydrogen sufficiently to give a 
competitive specific impulse to match the density and performance of other 
chemical fuels.  With LENR/LH2 at 1000°C you might get to 6000m/s exhaust 
velocity but LOX/LH2 can do 4700m/s and is a far more dense and cheap fuel 
combination than using all expensive LH2 (a tremendously bulky and expensive 
fuel requiring enormous well insulated tanks).


However LENR will be tremendously useful for moving stuff around slowly in 
orbit and interplanetary space using various types of high Isp plasma drives.



On 5 February 2012 21:06, Chemical Engineer cheme...@gmail.com wrote:




http://ns1.nianet.org/workshops/pdfs/Olds%20LaRC%20Workshop%20Presentation%20Final.pdf


Page 14 shows an LENR thermal propulsion prototype from 2009 - 18 GW!

LENR Rocket
Fully Reusable SSTO Vehicle powered by Low Energy Nuclear Reactions (LENR) 
Propulsion
Reactor Power
Payload
LOX-Augmented Nuclear Thermal Rocket
(H2) with LENR Reactor
18 GW
20,000 lbs to LEO




On Sat, Feb 4, 2012 at 9:04 AM, Chemical Engineer cheme...@gmail.com wrote:




I will interpret Nuclear Thermal Propulsion to including LENR... 5 years 
would not be too bad for something not on the near horizon 1 year ago.  
Hopefully we can have a residential HVAC/Generator before that or at least 
something to heat our coffee.

http://www8.nationalacademies.org/onpinews/newsitem.aspx?RecordID=13354 


-- radiation mitigation for human spaceflight; -- guidance, navigation, and 
control; -- optical systems; -- long-duration crew health; -- solar power 
generation; -- high-contrast imaging and spectroscopy technologies; -- 
environmental control and life support systems; -- electric propulsion; -- 
detectors and focal planes; -- instruments and sensors; -- fission power 
generation; -- lightweight and multifunctional materials and structures; -- 
nuclear thermal propulsion; -- entry, descent, and landing thermal protection 
systems; -- active thermal control of cryogenic systems; and 

  

[Vo]:Chirping sounds in nature

2012-01-26 Thread jean guy moreau


Hi,
First English is not my native language so please forgive the way my phrases 
are structured.
 
From reading those fascinating messages on this list, i cannot help but notice 
that the basics of the magic reaction 
we are all wondering about is really simple after all. 
The right materials in the right geometry, plus a little helping energy and 
voila, bright future ahead.
 
If it is so simple, then nature must have found a way to utilize this source of 
energy, so maybe we should look again
at the energy balance of some living creatures, hummingbirds comes to mind, 
just dipping their tounge into a little nectar
and up they go flying hundred of Km.
 
Hummingbirds do something else that you can hear if you are close enough, they 
sing a strange chirping sound,
as do insect, in fact most animals produce some kind of sound, frequencies 
should we say ?
And of coures we have music all the time, in our ears and in our minds, don't 
we ?
 
So maybe Rossi is using a chirping RF generator to get his reactor going... 
 
Jean Guy Moreau
Quebec, Canada
  

RE: [Vo]:Control Mechanism

2011-11-09 Thread jean guy moreau

Heat a secondary effect ?
 
Could the heater be a coil fed with sawtooth pulses to create collapsing 
magnetic fields
that somehow promote the reactions ?
 
QM wonderland  ;)
 
Non physicist speculation here...
 
JG Moreau 



Date: Wed, 9 Nov 2011 14:29:56 -0500
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Control Mechanism
From: janap...@gmail.com
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com


If memory serves, someone on vortex saw that the internal heater was pulsed 
from looking at a movie of a scope either in the first or a very early demo.
 
I would think that an alternating plasma would increase the production of 
Rydberg matter since RM condenses out of the plasma as the ions cool.
 


On Wed, Nov 9, 2011 at 1:54 PM, Jeff Sutton jsutton.sudb...@gmail.com wrote:

Agreed regarding self-sustaining time and  there is something in the reactor 
that needs to be reset.  I suggest however, that simply adding heat again 
cannot be it as that is saying one type of heat is different from the other. 


Is the heater a DC device or AC with some important frequency?






On Wed, Nov 9, 2011 at 1:43 PM, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:


Jeff Sutton jsutton.sudb...@gmail.com wrote:



He has shown it in self-sustaining mode but always shuts it down after a few 
hours with some excuse.  Why does he do that when the blockbuster note would be 
the ecat just keeps on going.  I suggest this must mean that the ecat cannot 
just keep on running for 6 months has he notes; at least in self-sustaining 
mode. . . .


Did he say it can go 6 months in self-sustaining mode? I don't recall hearing 
that. He said that one of them ran for a year or so in Italy -- the address was 
listed in a patent. But I do not think it was self-sustaining the whole time. I 
don't know if it was self-sustaining at all. The data from that patent always 
shows some input power.


Technologically, there is no point to a self-sustaining reaction. A reaction 
with a low level of input power to control it is better.


Rossi has said lately that 6 hours is about the limit of a self sustaining 
reaction. The reasons are unclear. Maybe it peters out. Or does it go out of 
control? Who knows.


- Jed



  

RE: [Vo]:Calulations for 1 MW plant.

2011-09-20 Thread jean guy moreau

What are the 2 extra wires(22) for ?

 
 

 Date: Tue, 20 Sep 2011 22:10:34 +0200
 From: peter.heck...@arcor.de
 To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
 Subject: Re: [Vo]:Calulations for 1 MW plant.
 
 Am 20.09.2011 21:51, schrieb Joe Catania:
  They state there is an auxillary heater.
 Yes but they examined all cables and even lifted the devices to see 
 whats below and I think this extra heater was connected to the blue 
 control box where they measured the input current. If not, then they 
 should have reported this.
 
  attachment: E-Cat_27-kW_module_300.jpg