Re: [Vo]:Water, helium and earthquakes in Oklahoma

2016-01-11 Thread Eric Walker
I wrote: I would like to take Yamomoto's suggestion and modify it, by proposing that > when the water is injected into the ground, it induces alpha decay in alpha > emitters in the soil to a significant extent. > Sorry -- I did not mean "soil," which probably means topsoil if it means anything. I

[Vo]:Water, helium and earthquakes in Oklahoma

2016-01-11 Thread Eric Walker
I would like to put forward an idea that came to me after reading Hiroshi Yamamoto's ICCF-12 paper entitled "An Explanation of Earthquakes by the BlackLight Process and Hydrogen Fusion." Yamamoto suggests that injecting water into wells in Japan and the US might have been triggering earthquakes th

Re: [Vo]:How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time

2016-01-11 Thread Rich Murray
http://www.unamur.be/services/sevrex/sevrexp/librecourriel/2013/lcl-79/fuzfa-andre/view nice friendly happy bright confident open face ah, what will be emerging by 2116... ?? !! Rich On Mon, Jan 11, 2016 at 6:42 PM, Axil Axil wrote: > The Rodin coil is raped in a vortex. It produces a monopol

Re: [Vo]:A new explanation of why sodium explodes in water

2016-01-11 Thread Brad Lowe
Great video Harry. Basically the electrons shoot off the surface of the metal into the water in and leave positive ions that repel each other explosively. Here is a link to the paper: http://marge.uochb.cas.cz/~jungwirt/paper263.pdf and another video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CdFlgnl8rPs

Re: [Vo]:How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time

2016-01-11 Thread Axil Axil
The Rodin coil is raped in a vortex. It produces a monopole magnetic field. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZefDwDzHKLA On Mon, Jan 11, 2016 at 8:48 AM, Jack Cole wrote: > Saw this posted to the Google+ LENR group. Seems interesting and has at > least been accepted for publication in Physica

Re: [Vo]:The New Energy World Symposium

2016-01-11 Thread Jed Rothwell
Alain Sepeda wrote: > A satisfied client who sign the receipt is probably Rossi's answer. > That would be a compelling answer! > The definition will be business, as scientifically there are better > evidence than a 1MW boiler, since long, and nobody was satisfied. > Yes. I hope that once co

Re: [Vo]:Return of incandescent light bulbs more efficient than LEDs

2016-01-11 Thread Axil Axil
Whatever material is used to reflect heat back onto the filament of a incandescent bulb would be great to use in a LENR reactor since the production of SPP's are optimized in a perfectly reflective optical cavity that traps infrared light in an optical cavity until infrared photons entangle with el

Re: [Vo]:Return of incandescent light bulbs more efficient than LEDs

2016-01-11 Thread Eric Walker
On Mon, Jan 11, 2016 at 5:08 PM, H Veeder wrote: ​Return of incandescent light bulbs as MIT makes them more efficient than > LEDs > Not speaking to the article you link to, I'd just like to mention that the LED lights I got for my house have been interesting to use. The light is not bad at all

[Vo]:Return of incandescent light bulbs more efficient than LEDs

2016-01-11 Thread H Veeder
​Return of incandescent light bulbs as MIT makes them more efficient than LEDs Researchers at MIT have shown that by surrounding the filament with a special crystal structure they can bounce back the energy which is usually lost http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/science-news/12093545/Retur

Re: [Vo]:The New Energy World Symposium

2016-01-11 Thread Alain Sepeda
A satisfied client who sign the receipt is probably Rossi's answer. The definition will be business, as scientifically there are better evidence than a 1MW boiler, since long, and nobody was satisfied. 2016-01-11 22:08 GMT+01:00 Peter Gluck : > Diplomatic answer, however in the best case > there

Re: [Vo]:The New Energy World Symposium

2016-01-11 Thread Jed Rothwell
Peter Gluck wrote: Diplomatic answer, however in the best case > there will be a high average daily COP . . . > In my opinion, the concept of a COP has no meaning in cold fusion. Cold fusion does not in any sense convert input power to output power. It does not move heat the way heat pump does.

Re: [Vo]:The New Energy World Symposium

2016-01-11 Thread Peter Gluck
Diplomatic answer, however in the best case there will be a high average daily COP and open problems - control, maintenance, continuity bureaucratic etc.Such a technology needs many teams Say COP 6 an absolute minimum? What's the gossip? Peter On Mon, Jan 11, 2016 at 10:54 PM, Jed Rothwell wrote

Re: [Vo]:The New Energy World Symposium

2016-01-11 Thread Jed Rothwell
Peter Gluck wrote: > What is the definition of a "clearly positive result"? > What can make the results "negative"? > I think a common sense definition will suffice. > Who or what decides? > I will decide for me. - Jed

Re: [Vo]:The New Energy World Symposium

2016-01-11 Thread Peter Gluck
Dear Jed, What is the definition of a "clearly positive result"? What can make the results "negative"? Who or what decides? Thanks, Peter On Mon, Jan 11, 2016 at 10:26 PM, Jed Rothwell wrote: > I wrote: > > >> This is a meeting scheduled for June 2016. It is being organized by Mats >> Lewan. I

Re: [Vo]:The New Energy World Symposium

2016-01-11 Thread Jed Rothwell
I wrote: > This is a meeting scheduled for June 2016. It is being organized by Mats > Lewan. It is contingent on a positive report from Rossi this month or next. > Okay, the announcement says March. I gather the results may be available before that. I have no idea what these results will be, or

[Vo]:The New Energy World Symposium

2016-01-11 Thread Jed Rothwell
See: http://new-symposium.org/ This is a meeting scheduled for June 2016. It is being organized by Mats Lewan. It is contingent on a positive report from Rossi this month or next. The announcement says: In February 2015, Rossi and IH started a one-year commercial test of the technology on a cust

Re: RE:[Vo]:How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time

2016-01-11 Thread H Veeder
Could this process work in reverse, so that the energy of the electrons could be transferred to the nucleons and stored in the nucleus? Harry On Mon, Jan 11, 2016 at 10:23 AM, Bob Cook wrote: > > > I have long thought that the magnetic field in a metal aligns the spins of > the electrons as well

RE: [Vo]:How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time

2016-01-11 Thread Jones Beene
One point worth adding to this discussion is the most amazing claim of Holmlid for lots of muons produced from UDD irradiation. There is an almost mundane explanation for this. Actually it may involve space-time as well, but surprisingly – the muons seen could originate in Space, instead of as

[Vo]:Good news and the idea of "islands of rationality" for LENR(+)

2016-01-11 Thread Peter Gluck
plus a nice dispute too http://egooutpeters.blogspot.ro/2016/01/jan-11-2016-essential-concept-for-lenr.html peter -- Dr. Peter Gluck Cluj, Romania http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com

Re: [Vo]:North Korea... and the UDD "candle"?

2016-01-11 Thread Bob Higgins
As I recall, the Coulomb repulsion is an r^-2 effect whereas the forces between magnetic dipoles is more of an r^-3 effect. This means that the magnetic field effect falls off more quickly with radius, but on the other hand it increases more quickly with decreasing r. This is only true to a certa

RE: [Vo]:How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time

2016-01-11 Thread Jones Beene
Speaking of high current loops… (at the nanoscale, which is to say: nanomagnetics). High current loops have been associated with SPP. There is a tendency to toss around the term SPP or “plasmonics” as if it was synonymous with an intense magnetic field, but this not always true. SPP are surface

Re: [Vo]:Re: North Korea... and the UDD "candle"?

2016-01-11 Thread Bob Higgins
Jones, do you have a copy of Lawandy's paper that you can share? Miley appears in that paper to refer to the possible existence of the UDD (which he refers to as IRH) directly from Holmlid's reports; however, Miley's clusters are formed in dislocations in a metal lattice and would have no hexagona

[Vo]:Re: How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time

2016-01-11 Thread Bob Cook
Dave-- I would say so—it would be a surprise. Bob Cook From: David Roberson Sent: Monday, January 11, 2016 7:47 AM To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Subject: Re: [Vo]:How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time If you assume that energy is stored within the field structure then it follows that sp

Re: [Vo]:How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time

2016-01-11 Thread Bob Cook
The paper Jack identified addresses the issue of what happens to a photon in an intense magnetic field. This question was raised a few months ago on Vortex with regard to the control of radiation in LENR and the potential effect of intense magnetic fields associated with SPP’s. It seems anot

Re: [Vo]:How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time

2016-01-11 Thread David Roberson
If you assume that energy is stored within the field structure then it follows that space would be warped by the mass associated with that energy. Would it not be a surprise to find otherwise? Dave -Original Message- From: Roarty, Francis X To: vortex-l Sent: Mon, Jan 11, 20

Re: RE:[Vo]:How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time

2016-01-11 Thread Bob Cook
Fran-- It seems we have the same notions. I have long thought that the magnetic field in a metal aligns the spins of the electrons as well as the nucleons and provides a coupling mechanism to match resonances and hence allow transfer of nuclear spin potential energy to the phonic energy of

Re: [Vo]:How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time

2016-01-11 Thread Bob Cook
The connection between magnetic fields and gravity is potentially the explanation of Fran’s ideas about changing space time and its apparent effect on reaction rates of particles. The SPP is one possibility of large magnetic fields and the Idea Higgins presented about the stacking of UDD snowfl

RE:[Vo]:How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time

2016-01-11 Thread Roarty, Francis X
Hi Jack, I have been following this also and even the proposed use of large superconducting magnets in a collider are only expected to produce miniscule variations but just proving the correlation is a very important step and I think LENR will benefit enormously. Jones’ focus on a correlation be

[Vo]:How Current Loops and Solenoids Curve Space-time

2016-01-11 Thread Jack Cole
Saw this posted to the Google+ LENR group. Seems interesting and has at least been accepted for publication in Physical Review D . The full paper is available on Arxiv . They do

[Vo]:could Rydberg and relativistic be the same?

2016-01-11 Thread Roarty, Francis X
Rydberg orbitals are huge while we are told that fh and other condensed, Mill’s like models have orbitals lower than ground state but what if the Naudts model of relativistic model of the hydrogen atom is correct and achieved some of the smaller fractional values he was considering… how would

RE: EXTERNAL: [Vo]:Re: North Korea... and the UDD "candle"?

2016-01-11 Thread Roarty, Francis X
!!! Well said :_) From: Bob Cook [mailto:frobertc...@hotmail.com] Sent: Sunday, January 10, 2016 6:51 PM To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Subject: EXTERNAL: [Vo]:Re: North Korea... and the UDD "candle"? Assuming that whatever the reaction is that produces a lot of energy from potential energy, that energ