On Fri, Aug 22, 2008 at 11:18 AM, Jones Beene <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> --- Terry Blanton (aka hohlraum) wrote:
>
>> That would be 'hoHlraum'.
>
>>
>
> Yes and a hearty: Ho-ho-hoh. A moniker you have
> adopted as your own,no?
Yes, it describes my head perfectly.
Terry
--- Terry Blanton (aka hohlraum) wrote:
> That would be 'hoHlraum'.
>
Yes and a hearty: Ho-ho-hoh. A moniker you have
adopted as your own,no?
Unfortunately also a mutterspracker 'loaner' word,
which is obviously not yet in my spell checker ;-)
...which BTW I am convinced has been 'infected'
On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 9:11 PM, Jones Beene <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In a word - Nova... or maybe I should say: Nova +
> holraum.
That would be 'hoHlraum'.
Terry
Jones Beene wrote:
WRT - the Letts, Cravens, Haglestein Laser experiment
"They finally tried the wavelengths Peter suggested
Your post on the use of multiple photons reminded me of the work done by
the man who posted the paper speculating on the physics behind the
Bedini Machine. He
In reply to Robin van Spaandonk's message of Fri, 22 Aug 2008 14:53:05 +1000:
Hi,
[snip]
>In reply to Jones Beene's message of Thu, 21 Aug 2008 18:11:40 -0700 (PDT):
>Hi,
>[snip]
>>One would suspect that a denser metal like Osmium
>>would work better, but perhaps there is something
>>intrinsic to
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Thu, 21 Aug 2008 18:11:40 -0700 (PDT):
Hi,
[snip]
>One would suspect that a denser metal like Osmium
>would work better, but perhaps there is something
>intrinsic to gold when coherent radiation is involved?
[snip]
Gold is one of those elements that only has o
--- Edmund Storms wrote:
> When evaluating the laser result, you need to take
into account that it does not work unless the cathode
is coated with gold. Consequently, the effect depends
on how deep the laser energy goes.
If gold is critical to this, then I would comment that
perhaps the depth (li
When evaluating the laser result, you need to take into account that it
does not work unless the cathode is coated with gold. Consequently, the
effect depends on how deep the laser energy goes. Does the effect have
any relationship at all to the properties of palladium?
Ed
Jones Beene wrote:
WRT - the Letts, Cravens, Haglestein Laser experiment
> "They finally tried the wavelengths Peter suggested
(8, 15, 20 THz) and the effect now turns on
reproducibly. Not only does the heat appear when the
laser is applied..."
Most interesting result, but darn, wonder if they
tried 30 THz ? or was
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