On Sun, 16 Jan 2011 14:06 in response to Terry Blanton, Jones Beene wrote:
-[snip]
It would seem to me that the hydrogen molecule must first be dissociated
before being robbed of its atom's electron by Ni.
That would be
One of the Wiley editors sent me a cheerful note saying that Krivit is an
editor, not a writer. I think this editor is unaware of the upcoming
textbook. He cited this: Nuclear Energy Encyclopedia. The sections on
cold fusion are indeed edited by Krivit. Here are cold fusion sections of
the table
Fran - I am working on a 'spillover' essay which may help pull some of these
questions together.
FWIW - It's curious that Arata was focusing on spillover 17-18 years ago,
and not many people took notice. It took the progression to nano materials
to really make this insight stand out.
Jed sez:
...
By the way, I am just Mr. Rothwell. No PhD.
My background is linguistics, programming,
and translating Japanese technical articles into English.
Methinks Jed is shilling a unique proposal of his own:
How to Read Japanese
for Dummies
I bet you'd be good at it too. ;-)
Regards
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Fri, 18 Feb 2011 11:45:48 -0800:
Hi Jones,
[snip]
For instance, AFAIK - Mills does not mention clusters of hydrinos, and yet
when you combine Robin's version of redundancy being the equivalent of loss
of electron charge, then it makes perfect sense that dozens
Steven V Johnson wrote:
Methinks Jed is shilling a unique proposal of his own:
How to Read Japanese
for Dummies
I bet you'd be good at it too. ;-)
You don't need a book for that. It is a piece of cake!
Old method: Marry a Japanese person and have your spouse read it.
New method: Have your
I must say, this is a very impressive book that Krivit edited:
http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0470894393,subjectCd-EN60.html
It is surprising that Wiley chose someone with no academic credentials
to edit this. Krivit does good work -- there is no denying it. I
couldn't
From Robin:
...
Note that as Hydrino molecules shrink, the protons get closer
together, so their magnetic fields get stronger. If the magnetic
field increases with the inverse cube of the distance, and the
distance itself goes with the inverse square of the primary
quantum number, then that
Hi,
Putt putt boats draw in water which flashes into steam and is then ejected
mostly as fluid. Given that the water was delivered to Rossi's device in pulses,
it seems possible that it also ejected water in pulses, at least to some extent,
as the leading edge of each pulse flashed into steam.
On Sun, 16 Jan 2011 14:19: Robin van Spaandonk wrote
[snip]Radioactivity produces fast particles which can trigger an avalanche
Hydrino
creation mechanism that rapidly converts local H into Hydrinos of whatever size
was originally at hand. If these are small enough to result in fusion/fission
More potential candidate for Rossi's secret additives? Pd, cerium, ytterbium
See article New material provides 25 percent greater thermoelectric conversion
efficiency
http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-02-material-percent-greater-thermoelectric-conversion.html
In reply to Roarty, Francis X's message of Fri, 18 Feb 2011 19:20:42 -0500:
Hi Fran,
I suspect that my original post (a few years back) was before you joined Vortex.
The mechanism I was talking about works like this:-
1) Take a well shrunken Hydrino molecule.
2) Hit it with a fast particle
does classical mechanics always fail to predict or retrodict for 3 or
more Newtonian gravity bodies? Rich Murray 2011.02.18
Hello Steven V Johnson,
Can I have a free copy of the celestial mechanics software to run on
my Vista 64 bit PC?
In fall, 1982, I wrote a 200-line program in Basic for the
Hi Rick,
I've been very busy with all the rabble rousing going on at the State
Capital. I'm currently uploading more videos of the situation at the
Capital.
Don't know if I can answer your question thoroughly. But I'll do what I can.
I'm not an expert on the matter. However it's my
I'm thinking your findings of irreversibility reflected the idiosyncrasies of
floating point math represented in binary numbers, and not the physics itself.
Sent from my iPhone.
On Feb 18, 2011, at 22:17, Rich Murray rmfor...@gmail.com wrote:
does classical mechanics always fail to predict
I'm thinking your findings of irreversibility reflected the idiosyncrasies
of
floating point math represented in binary numbers, and not the physics
itself.
I'm not sure what you mean by irreversibility but if you are referring to
my Celestial Mechanics computer programs, I have never stated
Please feel free to check out my latest batch of You Tube videos of the
continued pandemonium (called democracy in action) occurring on the square
and within the state capital of Madison, Wisconsin, concerning protests
against Governor Scott Walker's bill that would destroy 50 years of the
right
The only access to the physics itself we have with finite nervous
systems is by using digital approximations with finite number strings,
processed by algorithms of finite instruction size, so there are
always round-off errors, which always diverge without limit, even if
there are no close
18 matches
Mail list logo