[Vo]:UFOs are getting dangerous

2019-05-27 Thread Axil Axil
UFOs are getting dangerous and there is concern that a hostile foreign power may have advanced technology. https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/28231/multiple-f-a-18-pilots-disclose-recent-ufos-encounters-new-radar-tech-key-in-detection Since the US Navy has upgraded their war fighting sensor t

Re: [Vo]:Superhydrides

2019-05-27 Thread Axil Axil
Thorium is a proliferation based controlled substance called source material. To use thorium in an experiment, you need a licence from the NRC. https://www.nrc.gov/materials/srcmaterial.html Source material can also be a combination of thorium, depleted uranium, and natural uranium and the materi

[Vo]:Superhydrides

2019-05-27 Thread JonesBeene
Palladium is considered fully loaded when the ratio of hydrogen to metal is 1:1. Several metals will form stable hydrides with 3 protons per each metal atom. Anything more than 3 per metal atom could be called a superhydride. Query: What is the only metal in the periodic table which can be redu

Re: [Vo]:The historical model for Danzik - Joe Newman

2019-05-27 Thread H LV
On Mon, May 27, 2019, 5:18 PM Jed Rothwell H LV wrote: > > >> A perpetual motion machine which is capable of generating enough energy >> to keep itself in >> motion despite the forces present, but not enough to perform any other >> work, such as lifting a weight or propelling itself uphill. >> Su

Re: [Vo]:Berlinguette, C.P., et al., Revisiting the cold case of cold fusion. Nature, 2019

2019-05-27 Thread Jed Rothwell
Here is something hilarious about the Nature webpage for this paper. Look at Reference 1. They just couldn't help themselves! 1. Fleischmann, M. & Pons, S. Electrochemically induced nuclear fusion of deuterium. *J. Electroanal. Chem. Interfacial Electrochem*. 261, 301–308 (1989). Article that in

[Vo]:Berlinguette, C.P., et al., Revisiting the cold case of cold fusion. Nature, 2019

2019-05-27 Thread Jed Rothwell
Berlinguette, C.P., et al., Revisiting the cold case of cold fusion. Nature, 2019 DOI https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-019-1256-6 Abstract The 1989 claim of ‘cold fusion’ was publicly heralded as the future of clean energy generation. However, subsequent failures to reproduce the effect

Re: [Vo]:The historical model for Danzik - Joe Newman

2019-05-27 Thread Jed Rothwell
H LV wrote: > A perpetual motion machine which is capable of generating enough energy to > keep itself in > motion despite the forces present, but not enough to perform any other > work, such as lifting a weight or propelling itself uphill. > Such a machine would still be useless in the sense of

Re: [Vo]:The historical model for Danzik - Joe Newman

2019-05-27 Thread H LV
Perpetual motion machines are usually classified as either being of the first kind or second kind. The first kind creates its own energy and can perform work in violation of the first law of thermodynamics. The second kind uses ambient thermal energy to perform work in violation of the second law

RE: [Vo]:The historical model for Danzik - Joe Newman

2019-05-27 Thread JonesBeene
From: Terry Blanton > Side note: if we simply rate the battery capacity higher, there is no > overunity. Or you just might have discovered a way to desulfinate the battery plates. http://teslachargers.com/   If Mr. Danzik has succeeded in proving otherwise let him shout it to the hilltops.  L

Re: [Vo]:The historical model for Danzik - Joe Newman

2019-05-27 Thread Terry Blanton
On Sat, May 25, 2019 at 3:28 PM Jones Beene wrote: > Side note: if we simply rate the battery capacity higher, there is no overunity. Or you just might have discovered a way to desulfinate the battery plates. http://teslachargers.com/ I cheer your perpetual optimism. Would but we could run a