Okay, "cubic milliliters" is redundant. Like round circles.
Brian Ahern wrote:
> 1 mm3 is 1/100,000 of a leter not 1/1000,000 !
>
Nope, it is a million. There are 1000 cubic millimeters in a milliliter (10
x 10 x 10), and 1000 cubic milliliters in a liter. 1000 x 1000 = 1,000,000.
Confession: I am bad at arithmetic, so I also asked Mr. Google. Or try thi
Bob , didn’t mean Casimir cavity per se but was trying to suggest the
fractional hydrogen plasma loading deeper and deeper into the lattice powder
inside the reactor expands into a larger area of Casimir like suppression that
opposes the dilation direction of the muon. My rabbit hole was your in
Yes, of course why would anyone not do so. The methods used were all of the
usual state of the art methods, just do your reading into the complexities of
measuring helium in metals and you’ll see how it is done. It’s all at your
Googling fingertips.
From: Jed Rothwell [mailto:jedrothw...@gm
1 mm3 is 1/100,000 of a leter not 1/1000,000 !
From: Jed Rothwell
Sent: Wednesday, November 16, 2016 5:34 PM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: [Vo]:How much helium?
Years ago, Russ George told me that in one of his experiments he could "see
helium bubbles." At t
Russ George wrote:
Jed’s senility is showing in his recollection. In my work I have repeatedly
> shown helium bubbles, known as “loop punching” in the proper solid state
> science vernacular. These ‘bubbles’ form inside solid cold fusion metals.
>
Did you confirm the gas in the bubbles was heliu
Russ George wrote:
Jed’s senility is showing in his recollection. In my work I have repeatedly
> shown helium bubbles, known as “loop punching” in the proper solid state
> science vernacular. These ‘bubbles’ form inside solid cold fusion metals.
>
Well, you did not specify. But anyway, that woul
I wrote:
> Divide Avagadro's number by 10E11 gives 1.66E-12 moles, or 6.64E-12 g
> helum, which multiplied by 345,000 MJ/g gives 2.3 W. Close enough!
>
Oops. 1 mole of deuterium is 2 g. So that's 1.2 W. Even closer.
2 moles of deuterium fuse to form 1 mole of helium.
- Jed
Jed’s senility is showing in his recollection. In my work I have repeatedly
shown helium bubbles, known as “loop punching” in the proper solid state
science vernacular. These ‘bubbles’ form inside solid cold fusion metals. They
are perfectly consistent with ‘loop punching’ “bubbles” formed in nu
Years ago, Russ George told me that in one of his experiments he could "see
helium bubbles." At the time I said that is impossible because if you could
see the bubbles the reactor would be producing more power than any
laboratory experiment. However, yesterday I ran the numbers and found I may
be w
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/16/opinion/the-coal-industry-isnt-coming-back.html
This is an interesting analysis from M. Webber of U. Texas. There are some
interesting aspects of this which are not well known. For example, one of
the reasons East Coast coal companies are going out to businesses i
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.ro/2016/11/nov-16-2016-lenr-info.html
peter
--
Dr. Peter Gluck
Cluj, Romania
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com
An article featuring Russ George, but not in a good way:
http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/future_tense/2016/11/how_dumping_iron_in_the_ocean_can_help_fight_climate_change.html
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