I just came back from another informal UFO gathering, a Milwaukee
pot-luck where two speakers shared fascinating information.
The first individual spoke of his extensive research into the 509th
composite group, the group that was intimately involved in the
dropping of the two bombs on Hiroshima
On Jul 13, 2009, at 12:30 AM, David Jonsson wrote:
On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 12:52 AM, mix...@bigpond.com wrote:
In reply to Terry Blanton's message of Sun, 12 Jul 2009 10:52:55
-0500:
Hi,
[snip]
But he provides a video of John Christie of Lutec and his magnetic
motor.
...Precisely. He's
At 11:59 PM 7/12/2009, you wrote:
All said, I see the gaping hole in Takahashi's theory being the
orders of magnitude lack of detectable high energy alphas. Perhaps
it is just a calculation error on my part. It wouldn't be the first
time such a thing has happened. 8^)
Sure. But Takahashi
On Jul 13, 2009, at 1:33 PM, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax wrote:
At 11:59 PM 7/12/2009, you wrote:
All said, I see the gaping hole in Takahashi's theory being the
orders of magnitude lack of detectable high energy alphas. Perhaps
it is just a calculation error on my part. It wouldn't be the first
On Jul 13, 2009, at 11:33 AM, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax wrote:
At 11:59 PM 7/12/2009, you wrote:
All said, I see the gaping hole in Takahashi's theory being the
orders of magnitude lack of detectable high energy alphas. Perhaps
it is just a calculation error on my part. It wouldn't be the first
Abd ul-Rahman Lomax wrote:
How much glory and, face it, money, is there in reproducing an
experiment and confirming it?
In the case of cold fusion these values are negative. Instead of
glory, you get the frozen boot (as the Russians call it). You don't
get money; you pay it, in lost income.
Oh, I forgot this question.
On Jul 13, 2009, at 11:33 AM, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax wrote:
Bremsstrahlung radiation has been mentioned. My understanding is
that it's been detected. Enough?
There has been evidence of emissions in the low energy x-rays or high
energy UV range. I personally
Horace Heffner wrote:
There have also been stunning heat after death radiographs of Ti
cathodes taken at BARQ India. The surfaces were active for
months. Search on radiograph on LENR- CANR.org.
Note however, that's lukewarm fusion. Not exactly cold. Way more
reactions than predicted by
On Jul 13, 2009, at 1:18 PM, Jed Rothwell wrote:
Horace Heffner wrote:
There have also been stunning heat after death radiographs of Ti
cathodes taken at BARQ India. The surfaces were active for
months. Search on radiograph on LENR- CANR.org.
Note however, that's lukewarm fusion. Not
You miss the point though.Personally to me it looks fake, probably because I
am not used to seeing glowing plasma ring UFO's, and possibly because
something didn't fit (for example no glow on clouds that I recall seeing).
There is a strong bias which requires extraordinary proof to prove
I made some mortor mix with heavy water.? I then stimulated the mix with a
signal generator.
No anamalous energy was detected. It looked like regular concrete.
I made a mix of polymer (the kind used in water treatment) and heavy water.? I
then stimulated the mixture with
a signal generator.
John,
You have stated:
I saw this and then read his comment, so I knew
what he was talking about and I had the same objection,
this disproves the person claiming his 10 year old faked it.
There are many prosaic reasons why a glowing ring would begin to
fade out as this alleged UFO appears to
Hi Mike,
Instead of speculating about possibly-fake photos, try explaining the crop
circles. I have the book by Steve and Karen Alexander, which contains over
100 high quality aerial and ground photographs from England and other
countries. There are links to studies of the nature and details
On Tue, Jul 14, 2009 at 1:22 PM, OrionWorks svj.orionwo...@gmail.comwrote:
John,
You have stated:
I saw this and then read his comment, so I knew
what he was talking about and I had the same objection,
this disproves the person claiming his 10 year old faked it.
There are many prosaic
Correction:
I wrote: I could be wrong, but I get the impression he has other
fish to fry.
That should be: As usual, I'm probably wrong, but ... .
Best regards,
Horace Heffner
http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/
Frank,
There are several companies that specialize in nano-powders. Actually dozens
-
Rather than waste time with mundane materials which have no history of an
anomaly with heavy water, why not at least try something like a nanopowder
of titantium, palladium (Arata), rhodium, nickel, or
Fumed silica, an inexpensive commercial product, is supposed to have particles
of between 4 and 50 nanometers. It's very strange stuff, forming a gel with
common liquids, including water. Whether the material would be useful for this
type of experiment, I have no idea.
I've often wondered if
Ed:
Although a significant proportion of the wealthy and powerful are jewish (and
they probably worked
hard and smart to get there), I think you could have left the religious
background out of your
statement and it still would have been accurate...
-Mark
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