Mirage Men
From: Terry Blanton
UFOs used to be a common topic on Vortex. Since things are a little slow,
here's an interesting one:
https://www.dailygrail.com/2018/09/utsuro-bune-a-japanese-ufo-story/
Most reports of superluminal effects are not hard to debunk. This one is more
difficult.
https://www.space.com/41724-neutron-star-merger-superfast-jet.html
All one can say about this reasoning, or lack thereof, is “lame”… or to be
more precise: “invented.”
The conclusion of superluminal
Don’t take this too seriously – even if the numbers are entirely factual. Here
is a paper from a respected journal
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10426914.2016.1244833?journalCode=lmmp20
The abstract says:
The sintering densification behaviors of titanium hydride are investigated
This is curious…
https://synthestech.com/science_en
Their purpose appears to be investment “advice” on new energy ….
Perhaps we are seeing the remnants of a new kind of “fallout” from Sochi.
This particular group professes to be better connected in the field of LENR
than Rothwell, but
You can bypass that software product altogether by going directly to Sci-hub
From: Jed Rothwell
I have no business criticizing this product but . . . I am a little surprised
to find it is marketed by a mainstream company. This is the company that makes
EndNote. The product is called
Oops a bit dyslexic – the 2:1 ratio is between deuterium and titanium – TiD2
and not the other way around... every atom of titanium binds two deuterons…
---
Another interesting detail is the ratio of titanium to deuterium. This is the
so-called loading ratio. In cold fusion, the
Another interesting detail is the ratio of titanium to deuterium. This is the
so-called loading ratio. In cold fusion, the goal is to reach 1:1 ratio of
palladium to deuterium and this ratio is difficult to achieve and a main reason
for failed results.
In contrast all titanium hydride will
Terry,
It looks like the uncompressed hydride TiD2 has a density of 3.9 g/cm3
The pure Ti metal has a density of 4.5 g/cm3
The normal hydride which has not been compressed contains 4% hydrogen but as a
result is reduced in density by 13%
Adding hydrogen as a hydride would normally be
Periodically, new public information comes along which hints at the possibility
that LENR/cold fusion has military application. This could be of interest to a
few countries which do not yet have facilities for the enrichment of U. Keeping
LENR in the category of pathological science also
In the last 20 years, the hunt for planetary systems which may be habitable has
uncovered dozens of oddities. A few of these planets have novel chemistry which
could be consistent with denser forms of hydrogen.
There are many findings of hot Jupiter sized planets which are hotter than our
Although the argument that cold fusion and superconductivity are linked (in
some causative but previously unknown way) may sound a bit tenuous at first
glance, it does have strong points and can provide an explanation for prior
mysteries.
This is especially true if we frame the
When looking at the intersection of cold fusion with HTSC - high temperature
superconductivity - the paper below from India offers a possible and surprising
connection which goes back to the often mentioned detail from the early P
experiments. The most success was had using the palladium
just myth?
From: Roarty, Francis X
Calcium is a transition metal… found in limestone and coral and several
levitation legends.
From: JonesBeene
https://arxiv.org/abs/1807.08572
“Evidence for Superconductivity at Ambient Temperature and Pressure in
Nanostructures”
Dev Kumar Thapa, Anshu Pandey
https://arxiv.org/abs/1807.08572
“Evidence for Superconductivity at Ambient Temperature and Pressure in
Nanostructures”
Dev Kumar Thapa, Anshu Pandey (Submitted on 23 Jul 2018) India Institute of
Science.
Specifically the authors who appear to be relatively unknown, found the HTSC
and
Honest… this is the exact cut-and-paste verbiage taken from the Abstract of a
USPTO application:
"Self-Sustaining-extensible-multi-stage-Vibrational-and-Acoustic-Piezoelectric-Resonator-Acoustic-Refrigeration-Core
Generator of Electricity, Heating and Cooling comprises a plurality of
In the Rice U article on the manufacture of hematene, which is basically a 2D
phase of hematite with similarities to graphene, the process turns out to be
surprisingly low tech.
That is the claim - and we can imagine why calcining the powder does not work
as well. It misses the purpose of
The preferred catalyst of Holmlid for creation of dense hydrogen by surface
contact is a commercial product known as “Shell 105”. It is mostly hematite –
iron oxide, with potassium.
Iron oxide has a long history as a petrochemical catalyst and of course is very
economical. Both iron, oxygen
It’s not easy to popularize a deep and complicated TOE like E8, or any other
“theory of everything”… but one diverse group
(http://www.quantumgravityresearch.org ) has gained traction in a relatively
short time frame…
Courtesy of YouTube and the emergence of glamor-sci, good funding and not
Mitchell took on the patent office pro se which is acting as his own attorney.
The best thing one can say about this tactic is that it saved him a million
bucks (compared to P)
The Court decision was poor IMO – in that that it was based on this statement:
The burden of proof therefore
Hi Robin,
Your post makes me think that we would be facing a terrible crisis (in terms of
nuclear terrorism) if it turns out that Mills, Holmlid and now Glass are
accurate.
There could be a form of UHW – or “ultra heavy water” which is composed of
oxygen and dense deuterium so that the
e and
having to be replaced will be expensive machinery. The energetic neutrons will
make hot fusion energy expensive.
JonesBeene wrote:
Bob,
Well, given that there are claims of small amounts of neutrons and gammas in
cold fusion by a number of reputable experiments, one cannot arbit
reaction is widely regarded as being 2-ion hot fusion.
I have that report, but have only scanned it so far. It could be that the
neutron and gamma rates reported were small compared to the energy released by
the reaction - do you know?
JonesBeene wrote:
Bob,
Did you mean that as humor?
It would
Bob,
Did you mean that as humor?
It would be almost “pathological” to define cold fusion in such a way as to
exclude the known outputs of nuclear fusion in general.
In fact, in terms of the applied heat, palladium fusion at 2 volts has the
equivalent input temperature of 20,000°K per atom of
And this wasn’t “fracto-fusion” which has been disputed, nor was it the
Farnsworth Fusor (1964) which was labeled as “warm fusion” (ICE).
As we now know, LENR driven by a chemical reaction (combustion shock wave) was
invented around 1980, probably in several places including the USA, for
Quote of the Day
“People will defend their scientific claims until their death. As scientists,
we should be aware that people are often wrong.”
— Julia Rohrer, one of the researchers working on the Loss of Confidence
Project, a website where psychologists can report flaws in their own work.
Press Release:
Brillouin Energy Closes Second Paid Commercial License Within the Asia-Pacific
Region
BERKELEY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jul 2, 2018--Brillouin Energy Corp. (
http://brillouinenergy.com ), a leading company in the low energy nuclear
reaction (LENR) field, announced that it has
The mention of a mysterious magnetic interaction at the basis of LENR also
brings to mind the YT video of Tom Claytor’s lecture where he mentions that the
output of tritium increased from pico-Curies to nano-Curies with a change in
the electrode to Co-netic-AA (nickel-iron alloy).
Co-netic
Oops again. Where is Robin when we need him?
.
A. Mass of palladium-105 104.905 amu
B. Mass of deuteron 2.014 amu
C. Mass of silver-107 106.905 amu
Excess mass of fusion of A and B 14 amu or about 13 MeV
well.
At any rate, by the standard of “conservation of miracles” there are still two
miracles required so no help from 105.
From: JonesBeene
{these numbers have been corrected}
BTW – here are some numbers suggesting why there was no radiation signature
from the Pons cathode when it was producing e
BTW – here are some numbers suggesting why there was no radiation signature
from the Pons cathode when it was producing excess heat from cold fusion.
A. Mass of palladium-105 104.905 MeV
B. Mass of deuteron 2.014 MeV
C. Mass of silver-107 106.905 MeV
Excess
As a point of historical reference, a cursory search was done wrt the isotope
Pd-105 and its relevance to cold fusion, which turns up many hits including a
very old and very provocative detail (patent application) – which only now is
coming to light via the Biberian disclosure. AFAIK this
For anyone not familiar with the Aerospace Corporation
http://www.aerospace.org/about-us/history/
… they are the crème-de-la-crème of official Pentagon R insofar as aerospace
in general, is concerned.
I doubt that it is any accident that Garwin appears early-on.
It would surprise no one to
Fabulous cover art
https://www.lackluster.org/releases
… illuminating the oeuvre of the World’s only composer of cold-fusion music…
but … do not see USB-sticks offered. Isn’t it a bit premature?
BTW – since you are quite adept at English puns, here is another one for your
collection:
From: Axil Axil
➢ How many fusion reactions of 3 Mev produce that 20 megawatt burst?
Hmmm… looks like single fusion reaction would be sufficient for a very short
burst. You did not specify a pulse length.
Chirped laser pulses reach the attosecond range of time. A Coulomb of charge
Without getting too Clintonesque, the resolution to any disagreement here most
likely depends on the meaning of “exist”… (or what is ‘is’)...
If the lifetime is sufficiently short, then either stance is viable. A ‘meme’
exists for quarks, which if nothing else, guarantees (almost) eternal
According to the ORNL paper, which may not be related to this - the propagation
wave does not consist of conduction band electrons but “phasons” which is a
much heavier particulate, like a phonon but also much faster. Wouldn’t it be
interesting if potassium ferrite was such ceramic?
That
From: Bob Higgins
One of the things I will mention in my presentation at ICCF-21 next month is
detection of a non-Fourier heat transfer mode in thermal modeling work I did
for a calorimeter. Interestingly, Piantelli implicates such a mode as stimulus
of LENR in his Ni rod experiments.
Another prior device comes to mind – the Qu-tube. Still a mystery. The test
below showed a sample to conduct heat up to 30,000 times better than copper
http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20080009660_2008009120.pdf
… thus the Qu-tube is said to be a superconductor of heat.
The following table gives the speed of sound in selected solids.
Most types of glass and ceramic have a speed of sound of about 5000 meters per
second. In air it is about 340 m/sec which is 767 mph.
Diamond
12000
Pyrex glass
5640
Iron
5130
Aluminum
5100
Brass
4700
Copper
3560
Gold
3240
Argon hydride or ArH (which is unstable on earth) is called “argonium” in
cosmology. It is common despite argon being supposedly ‘inert’.
At least in interstellar space, the widespread presence of argonium proves that
argon is not inert under the proper conditions, and preferentially binds
. The polaritons are the source of the magnetism that
binds the nanoparticles togither. The SunCell uses this smoke to form a dusty
plasma that can produce a self sustaining LENR reaction.
JonesBeene wrote:
This video is (reputedly) what dense hydrogen looks like, in response to a
strong magnet
This video is (reputedly) what dense hydrogen looks like, in response to a
strong magnet –
https://youtu.be/Epenv-PPLJM
Somewhat mind boggling, shall we say. If not dense hydrogen, it is unclear what
else the ghostly filaments could be.
Apparently it is paramagnetic and possibly
I’m jumping into this thread a bit late but the concept of a “mystery”
radiation or particle is intriguing, especially in the context of Holmlid’s
muons. (which as Bob Higgins sez are unlikely to be muons).
Could Holmlid be seeing something else instead of muons (mesons, pions, kaons,
etc) ?
Not new and almost forgotten…
https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn20049-atomic-disguise-makes-helium-look-like-hydrogen
http://science.sciencemag.org/content/331/6016/448
This is interesting in the context of Holmlid’s muons.
“The neutral muonic helium atom may be regarded as the heaviest
The latest (and only useful) technology to use dirty coal is the Allam cycle –
which uses supercritical CO2
and carbon capture. China will be the main customer.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S187661021731932X
China has more deaths per year attributable to dirty coal than
and
discretely identified LENR as a new disruptive technology. I believe they have
the facts. And the light they are seeing is not new for them.
Bob Cook
From: JonesBeene <jone...@pacbell.net>
Sent: Monday, April 23, 2018 6:43:33 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: RE: [Vo]:Cold Fusion Catalyz
Speaking of neutron identity in the context of Widom/Larsen (ultra low momentum
neutron) or in the context of Meulenberg dense hydrogen (DDL) – which may be
identical if the truth be known… ;-}
… there is the possibility that an advanced and small fission design could
benefit greatly from an
Coupling is not needed. Neutrons are created in the fission of U, as there is
always a slight excess of neutrons in the larger nucleus - and of course all
particles will share some of the excess energy of the fission reaction. IIRC
this works out to about 1 MeV per neutron on average when it
Robin,
➢ The 8.8 MeV gamma may have enough energy to fission the U all by itself
through
giant dipole resonance.
Yes, that could happen but the probability is low. Spontaneous fission is also
possible but unlikely. They are saying that deuterium disintegration is
relatively high
There have been a few papers coming out of Poland/ Russia – mostly from 6-8
years ago concerning a new type of nuclear fission reactor known as the DNFR.
The design combines features of cold fusion (deuterium loaded palladium) with
uranium fission.
This could have been huge if China had
electrons like Pb? Is it only s shell electrons that become/are sufficiently
heavy to cause the higher voltage during an oxidation/reduction? Thorium
comes to mind as likely having heavy s shell electrons.
Bob Cook
From: JonesBeene
Interesting...
I have reproduced a version of Vysotskii's
transfer quanta of spin energy - following which their velocity
is replenished by the zero point field.
The spin would initially interact with thermal waves in the THZ or IR range in
the process of downshifting.
JonesBeene wrote:
Despite its 150 year-old history, the lead-acid battery
From: bobcook39...@hotmail.com
Is there data on how relativistic the paired electrons need to be to have an
effect?
Bob,
The paper is behind a paywall but you can use the DOI number to get it from
Sci-Hub
Rajeev Ahuja, et al. “Relativity and the Lead-Acid Battery.” Physical Review
Letters
Despite its 150 year-old history, the lead-acid battery is not as
well-understood as one might suspect. On paper it should hardly work at all.
Tin – a similar metal to lead will not work when substituted.
More recently, in experiments in 2011 it was demonstrated that most of the
power of
Fran,
Brian expresses the sentiment of many experts – sine the handling of the
announcement by LM was almost brain dead. I realize you worked there once, so
please forgive the innuendo.
And they did not do this quietly – as the story was milked for its small
technical value from the start.
From: Eric Walker
I'm curious whether any of those replications have been outside of the LENR
field.
Eric
Several years ago, not long after the P announcement - this was a hot topic
on various forums. I participated in one replication attempt, since at the time
I had a working Tesla coil
There is also the Barker effect.
This is an altered radioactive decay rate due to high static voltage.
The patent is here. It has been widely replicated but has found no commercial
niche.
https://patents.google.com/patent/US5076971
From: Axil Axil
Purcell effect
Robin,
You might want to add something about Energy Localization and Anharmonic
Oscillators (including solitons and the Fermi-Pasta-Ulam (FPU) anharmonic
oscillators)
Ahern has a Power Point floating around on this.
Basically it presents the conditions where your “powerful wave” is more
Here is one general relationship which may enter into this discussion. When
metals - or any electrical conductors - are heated they become more resistive,
not less. As they are cooled they become more conductive. If any experiment
depends on electrical input, as do all electrolysis
/pair/PublicPair
Nigel
JonesBeene wrote:
Strange that there is no patent number – only an application number but they
call it a patent.
Justia has been know to screw up in the past and the Inventor: Victor M.
Villalobos has claimed fantastical inventions before. I would love to see this
proved
FAIL
Apparently this is too an issue which is either not important or too technical
for you. I looked at the few of these references and none of them mention COP
wrt thermal feedback.
A lack of comprehension of the value of COP as an intuitive and accurate metric
in LENR and the silly
to do with ZPE or cold
fusion, but things change…
Anyway this is curious – shall we say…?
From: Nigel Dyer
And there is this 'Zero Point Energy Magnetic Battery'
https://patents.justia.com/patent/20180059704
Nigel
JonesBeene wrote:
The recent announcement from University of Texas of a far more
Please cite any “widely replicated experimental evidence” for positive thermal
feedback leading to increased COP
I contend that there is none but there is the possibility that you do not
understand what positive thermal feedback means…
From: Jed Rothwell
JonesBeene wrote:
In short
feedback
mechanism in LENR which can increase COP” stands…
(slightly modified ;-}
From: Jed Rothwell
JonesBeene wrote:
In short, there is NO positive thermal feedback mechanism in LENR.
That is incorrect. See Fleischmann or Miles, for example p. 16:
http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat
Why is this not a glorified Farnsworth Fusor?
The basic configuration, voltage and electrode placement is similar, as are the
outputs including production of He3 and neutrons.
Did they even credit Farnsworth? He invented the desktop electric plasma
machine with spherical plasma and
From: Alain Sepeda
Jacques RUER have demonstrated using standard engineering that
- if you have a low COP LENr reactor proven
- if there is a positive temperature feedback then you can engineer a device
with any desired COP.
https://www.iscmns.org/work12/RuerJpreventingtherm.pdf
True, but
Maxwell’s demon is usually interpreted to imply some kind of sorting mechanism
which discriminates among particles in order to produce at least two
populations which vary in a desired property. The property does not have to be
heat – here is one based on photonics.
Is the self-charging battery a new type of pico-electret storage device ?
Consider 3 devices as a progression over time: the electret, the EESTOR and
the glass battery of Goodenough.
In the late 1930s the Electret was invented by Dr. Eguchi, a Japanese
physicist. He sandwiched a decent
The recent announcement from University of Texas of a far more powerful
solid-state "glass” battery technology from John Goodenough's lab has yet to
sink in for most of the scientific community. There is evidence of a ten-fold
increase in energy density between charges, so long as there are
Curiously, the MIT Download which carried Hawking’s obit also ran the following
story on “Netcome”… which adds an odd possibility that Hawking “almost” had a
chance at being a part of. Who knows? Maybe he did participate since no one was
ever really sure who was behind some of his
This is fabulous.
http://neutronsymphony.com/wp/
The main proponent seems to be DW Chakeres. The “Published Papers” segment has
the relevant details with no pay-wall.
The premise includes a “Scale-Free Derivation of the Neutron, Hydrogen Quanta,
Planck Time, and a Black Hole from 2 and π”
This wiki entry has a list of SPP metamaterials, a few of which may have
applicability to LENR
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasmonic_metamaterial
Graphene is one of these which is not difficult to make and deposit as an ink.
Robert Murray Smith has an evolving method shown on his YouTube
Re: the possibility that new discoveries will turn up a metamaterial which can
reacts with neutrinos to a much greater extent than expected could be bolstered
by evidence from cosmology presented below. There are many lose ends, however.
Could UDH be used in two ways – both as the target for
It is worth repeating that in Holmlid’s article cited by Axil, we find several
problems with his claim of copious muon production (aside from the massive
transfer of energy which becomes undetectable).
Holmlid: “The muons formed do not decay appreciably within the flight distances
used here.
they are in production and he hopes that will be
before the end of 2018.
-Original Message-
From: JonesBeene
Wait a minute – Adrian says he has independent evidence of a factory.
This seems at first blush to be irrational if not silly… but heck -- let’s
hear or see this evidence !
Hopefully
idence
that he has indeed started a factory to produce them and he remains optimistic
production will start in 2018.
If the QX does perform anywhere near what he claims it is truly insulting to
suggest he "stumbled" upon it.
-Original Message-
From: JonesBeene <jone...@pacb
BTW - Wouldn’t it be a hoot if muons showed up on a particular detector as
1/f^2 noise ??
Nigel,
Since you noticed the fit initially, were you looking for it based on phenomena
from another field ?
I see from Alan’s posting that the context is no mystery – except to someone
who was not
There is plenty of excellent work from other researchers (other than Rossi) on
this site.
If we accept the reality of LENR we cannot reject Rossi solely because he is a
dishonest scam artist.
There is even the possibility that Rossi could stumble onto something valid at
this juncture (2018)
overlay a 1/f^2 line over the red
dots the fit is perfect, indeed it is so good that it almost looks as if that
is how it was generated.
JonesBeene wrote:
Looks quasi-Maxwellian to me.
Where is the inverse peak?
From: Nigel Dyer
I have been looking at the graph titled
"After the MA
Looks quasi-Maxwellian to me.
Where is the inverse peak?
From: Nigel Dyer
I have been looking at the graph titled
"After the MASSIVE broad band 'turn on' pulse, the excess heat mode is
between 0 and 100KeV"
at
>From the start of LENR it was thought by the experts that deuterium fusion
>should yield far more neutrons than helium – based on knowledge of hot fusion
>branching ratio. Yet neutrons were almost never found.
Now in order to answer two problems Holmlid gives us a brilliant answer – and
From: Jed Rothwell
➢ This is one of the most comprehensive papers about Ni-H cold fusion:
Mengoli, G., et al., Anomalous heat effects correlated with electrochemical
hydriding of nickel. Nuovo Cimento Soc. Ital. Fis. A, 1998. 20 D: p. 331
http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/MengoliGanomaloush.pdf
➢
Those of us who are completely focused on LENR or new sources for alternative
energy may have missed the big picture story. We have not been “following the
buck” so to speak.
That is, when you look at the changes in the supply/demand of conventional
energy since the beginning of the Industrial
-utah-scientist-studying-potentially-most-dense-material-our-solar-system/1044139001/
JonesBeene wrote:
Do ”dark projects” exist in the National Labs? Of course they do. And a few
dark projects undoubtedly derive from disparaged civilian experiments or
uncrednetialed or cranky inventors
From: Jed Rothwell
[snip] A famous example of a dark project that was a waste of time & money was
when the CIA raised a sunken Russian submarine K129, with help from Howard
Hughes. I read that by the time they recovered it, the technology was long
obsolete and they learned nothing of
Do ”dark projects” exist in the National Labs? Of course they do. And a few
dark projects undoubtedly derive from disparaged civilian experiments or
uncrednetialed or cranky inventors. An example is the Hollywood actress who
invented Spread Spectrum technology but never got a dime from the
Speaking of Winterberg – here is his take on ultradense deuterium from arxiv
severak years ago…
Note the last sentence in the context of ICF laser fusion using a tabletop
laser: “ it would greatly facility the ignition of a thermonuclear detonation
wave in pure deuterium, by placing the
From: bobcook39...@hotmail.com
IMHO some folks, like those you identify at LLNL, are stuck in the dogma of hot
fusion being practical in the future.
Bob,
It’s not that simple. Sure, ITER is a long-running brain-dead boondoggle, but
there are signs of intelligence at other Labs.
In fact, a
The blog/page below has a good explanation of the Dirac electron… for anyone in
LENR who might like to put their own spin on things using excellent insight
from another (seemingly unrelated) field.
Problem is… that this information is coming from a different technological
background (which is
any folks are doing LENR
>theory. As I have indicated before, IMHO the magnetic coupling related to
>spin energy changes within coherent systems is what happens in LENR.
>consistent with the observation of little or no high energy radiation during
>LENR.
Bob Cook
From: JonesBeene
Timeline:
1) Previous century - Pyrolytic carbon shown to exhibit Meissner effect
(diamagnetism). Note: the interpretation of diamagnetism as a form of
superconductivity is controversial.
2) 2015 - Lithium layer on graphene shown to be superconductive at 2 degrees K
3) 2016 - Calcium layer
Jed
Rusi Taleyarkhan was working at ORNL some years ago – therefore - they are
probably referring to sonofusion
Jones
From: Jed Rothwell
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kensilverstein/2018/02/12/nuclear-fusion-could-be-a-silver-bullet-and-just-around-the-corner/#448cc3ac3747
QUOTE:
Another
ng that we
generally don't consider.
Andrew M.
JonesBeene wrote:
An interesting but slightly dated paper is available without the usual paywall,
which covers a number of advanced optics projects which were once classified,
and may still be partially hidden - like the photonic bomb…
https://www.en
An interesting but slightly dated paper is available without the usual paywall,
which covers a number of advanced optics projects which were once classified,
and may still be partially hidden - like the photonic bomb…
https://www.eng.yale.edu/caolab/papers/wrm03.pdf
"Brian Ahern"
There is a new study from NASA on dark matter/ dark energy and the
reinterpretation of the Chandra findings WRT the mystery radiation signature at
3.5 keV.
https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/chandra/news/a-new-twist-in-the-dark-matter-tale.html
CERN has a new report on DM as well. The
From: H LV
A beam of electrons should bend downward in earths gravity. Has that ever been
measured?
Experiments to determine the Force of Gravity on Single Electrons and Positrons
• FRED C. WITTEBORN
• & WILLIAM M. FAIRBANK
• Nature volume 220, pages 436–440 (02 November 1968)
My comment.
Bob,
There is a fair amount of both brilliance (cough, cough) and silliness in Mills
hand-waving. His misidentification of the Higgs boson is in the later category.
As for the “antigravity electron” see his patent app (thanks to the spice man
for this)
Patent WO1995032021A1 - Apparatus and
Speaking of loss of “gravitational mass” the electrons in graphene are called
massless.
One of the most controversial and defining properties is indeed an “apparent
loss of mass” which aside from semantics, is interesting for a number of
practical reasons in batteries and capacitors.
From: Brian Ahern
> I would like to put some perspective on the Mel Miles presentation.
1. No radiation accompanied the He-4… [snip]… A simpler explanation is that the
excess energy was that described by Gerald Pollack in: The fourth phase of
water. That avoids the need to explain the lack of
http://www.coldfusionnow.org/podcast/Ruby-Carat-Andrew-Meulenberg-Cold-Fusion-Now-003.mp3
Ruby interviews Andrew Meulenberg.
I like the deep electron theory and its variations far more than any other,
whether it comes from Holmlid, Mills, Meulenberg, or someone else - and AM
seems to hint
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