Fwd: [Vo]:Isotope separation technology can be improved

2013-05-21 Thread Edmund Storms
Vortex will not accept an attachment so you will have to find the  
paper elsewhere.


J. Condensed Matter Nucl. Sci. 11 (2013) 1–15
Research Article
Nature of Energetic Radiation Emitted from a Metal Exposed to H2
Edmund Storms∗ and Brian Scanlan

Begin forwarded message:


From: Edmund Storms stor...@ix.netcom.com
Date: May 21, 2013 5:40:25 PM MDT
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Cc: Edmund Storms stor...@ix.netcom.com
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Isotope separation technology can be improved

Jones, I have a unified theory that explains helium, tritium and  
hopefully deuterium while using only one miracle. This miracle is  
required to explain anything involving CF, including transmutation.   
The phenomenon shows that a nuclear reaction, either fusion or  
transmutation must take place by a process that can dissipate the  
energy in an unconventional way.  This is the unique aspect of the  
discovery that needs to be acknowledged. This is not in any way like  
hot fusion. The phenomenon is unique, but requires only one miracle.  
Proposing transmutation as the nuclear reaction does not change this  
requirement. In fact, this process requires not one but several  
miracles. That is why I'm amused by all the attention applied to  
transmutation only because Rossi claims this is the source of  
energy, even though this reaction has huge conflicts with known  
behavior.


As for looking for the radiation, several people have done this and  
found radiation, including myself. This information has all been  
published and is summarized in the attached paper.  The low energy  
of the radiation cause most to be absorbed by the apparatus, with  
only a small fraction being available for detection.


Ed Storms
On May 21, 2013, at 5:08 PM, Jones Beene wrote:




From: Edmund Storms

Jones, there is no ash because no one has looked for deuterium.  
Everyone who might find enough deuterium to detect is focused on  
transmutation. If they now find deuterium, their favorite  
explanation will go up in smoke and the patents that claim to need  
nickel will be useless.  I'm trying to get someone to look for  
deuterium and report the results. So far, no luck. Until this test  
is made, no conclusion is worth accepting.


Hi Ed,

Almost everyone agrees that deuterium (and helium and tritium)  
should be looked for in the ash of this device, but that this  
probably will not happen soon. Your explanation of why Rossi  
doesn’t want to know this could be absolutely correct. He shoots  
himself in the foot. Someone else must do this, if it is to be done.


If the ratio of H to D in the gas was 6,500:1 when it was filled –  
and after a week of run-time the ratio was 5,000:1 then that  
finding would be meaningful. Hydrogen is unlikely to leak  
preferentially, so the large change in ratio would indicate fusion  
as the prima facie explanation.


However, if protium was fusing into deuterium, which is an  
extremely rare reaction to begin with, there should be gamma  
radiation. If you say there is no gamma radiation because this is a  
novel type of fusion reaction which shows none, then there is still  
a huge problem (aside from the extra miracle) – tritium. At a  
certain point, tritium is favored and its decay radiation will be  
obvious – even after shutdown… yet none shows up, when any  
decent monitor should see it.


You probably do not want to add a third miracle by suggesting that  
no tritium happens. Thus, the lack of tritium makes the search for  
extra deuterium of lower priority than it otherwise would be. In  
the end, if the H/D ratio is substantially different – we will  
have found something that indicates a novel form of hydrogen  
fusion, which Rossi’s patent does not cover.


However, another smart thing to do– if someone besides AR really  
wants to find out the modus operandi would be to first look for the  
lower energy photons – EUV. Rossi does not want to do that because  
of the huge portfolio of prior art from BLP. OTOH, Mills and  
company might want to do this kind of testing in a replica AR cell,  
as a way to get royalties from Rossi, in the event that he beats  
them to market.


Many theories suggest the gain could be coming from EUV photons -  
and it is easier to document them than deuterium, but I doubt we  
will know form Rossi. I hope that Mills looks at the Ni-62  
possibility, in the context of his theory.


This could pay off handsomely, Randy …


From: Bob Higgins

I don't understand why 62Ni would make a difference in the  
reaction.  Are we now seriously considering that the Ni nucleus  
participates in the nuclear reaction that causes the heat


IMO this is a “Mills type” reaction (BLP), involving deep  
hydrogen redundancy - and the Ni does not transmute into another  
element.


This particular isotope is simply a much better catalyst for deep  
redundancy at the 300 eV level. This mechanism goes beyond Randell  
Mills theory into QM and wave function collapse, which Mills rejects.


Rossi 

Re: Fwd: [Vo]:Isotope separation technology can be improved

2013-05-21 Thread mixent
In reply to  Edmund Storms's message of Tue, 21 May 2013 18:28:19 -0600:
Hi,
[snip]
 However, if protium was fusing into deuterium, which is an  
 extremely rare reaction to begin with, there should be gamma  
 radiation.

There is no gamma radiation from the p-e-p reaction (as distinct from the p-p
reaction). The energy disappears with the neutrino. Therefore *effectively* this
reaction produces no energy.
However useful energy would be released from subsequent fusion reactions
involving the D formed in the p-e-p reaction.

Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html