RE: [Vo]:Steinetz paper sort of about cold fusion

2020-09-18 Thread JonesBeene
Maybe it’s the fish season … but this catch  doesn’t smell right. On several 
levels.

You have to laugh in a way at how wrote up a research as supposedly using  
Erbium and Thulium – two very rare elements. 

There  would be zero chance of commercializing it. Even the pentagon is yawning.

Could these elements instead be code names for more useful heavy metals ?

But catch-22 – if you tell the truth, you never get published. National 
security. Proliferation, Intellectual property …etc

Thalium being a code for Thorium, par example.  Erbium  LOL. Give me a break.


From: H LV

Here is an infographic
https://www1.grc.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/Lattice-Confinement-Fusion-POC-with-PRC-links-July-17-Final-3.pdf

Harry




Re: [Vo]:Steinetz paper sort of about cold fusion

2020-09-18 Thread H LV
Didn`t David Nagel prefer the term Lattice Enabled Nuclear Reactions?
Nagel's terminology can encompass this research.

My father who was skeptical but not closed minded about the field, thought
it should have been called low
temperature nuclear reactions instead of low energy nuclear reactions,
since it is possible for individual
atoms to have very high kinetic energies while the bulk of the lattice
remains relatively cool.

Harry



On Fri, Sep 18, 2020 at 4:20 PM H LV  wrote:

> Here is an infographic
>
> https://www1.grc.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/Lattice-Confinement-Fusion-POC-with-PRC-links-July-17-Final-3.pdf
>
> Harry
>
> On Fri, Sep 18, 2020 at 12:57 PM Jed Rothwell 
> wrote:
>
>>
>> https://asiatimes.com/2020/09/nasa-lands-on-a-middle-path-to-nuclear-fusion/
>>
>> NASA lands on a middle path to nuclear fusion
>>
>> Lattice confinement fusion breakthrough is in the promising Goldilocks
>> zone between hot and cold fusion
>>
>> References:
>>
>>
>> Novel nuclear reactions observed in bremsstrahlung-irradiated deuterated
>> metals
>>
>> Bruce M. Steinetz et al.
>>
>> https://journals.aps.org/prc/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevC.101.044610
>>
>> Nuclear fusion reactions in deuterated metals
>>
>> Vladimir Pines, Marianna Pines, Arnon Chait, Bruce M. Steinetz, Lawrence
>> P. Forsley, Robert C. Hendricks, Gustave C. Fralick, Theresa L. Benyo,
>> Bayarbadrakh Baramsai, Philip B. Ugorowski, Michael D. Becks, Richard E.
>> Martin, Nicholas Penney, and Carl E. Sandifer, II
>>
>> https://journals.aps.org/prc/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevC.101.044609
>>
>>


Re: [Vo]:Steinetz paper sort of about cold fusion

2020-09-18 Thread H LV
Here is an infographic
https://www1.grc.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/Lattice-Confinement-Fusion-POC-with-PRC-links-July-17-Final-3.pdf

Harry

On Fri, Sep 18, 2020 at 12:57 PM Jed Rothwell  wrote:

>
> https://asiatimes.com/2020/09/nasa-lands-on-a-middle-path-to-nuclear-fusion/
>
> NASA lands on a middle path to nuclear fusion
>
> Lattice confinement fusion breakthrough is in the promising Goldilocks
> zone between hot and cold fusion
>
> References:
>
>
> Novel nuclear reactions observed in bremsstrahlung-irradiated deuterated
> metals
>
> Bruce M. Steinetz et al.
>
> https://journals.aps.org/prc/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevC.101.044610
>
> Nuclear fusion reactions in deuterated metals
>
> Vladimir Pines, Marianna Pines, Arnon Chait, Bruce M. Steinetz, Lawrence
> P. Forsley, Robert C. Hendricks, Gustave C. Fralick, Theresa L. Benyo,
> Bayarbadrakh Baramsai, Philip B. Ugorowski, Michael D. Becks, Richard E.
> Martin, Nicholas Penney, and Carl E. Sandifer, II
>
> https://journals.aps.org/prc/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevC.101.044609
>
>