Re: Primordial Hy ?

2005-10-11 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Mon, 10 Oct 2005 21:33:35 -0700: Hi Jones, [snip] >When this hydrino-hydronium ion reaches the ocean, where there are >potassium and other catalytic ions already partly ionized, it will >then eventually be enticed to shrink to a state where... as you >agreed

Re: Primordial Hy ?

2005-10-10 Thread Jones Beene
Robin, Let me combine your objections to the previous hasty hypothetical scenario, into a revised version of how a solar-derived hydrino might get incorporated into a "metastable" deuteron via ocean water... this being the candidate for easy "stripping," of Mizuno and others. If the hydrino

Re: Primordial Hy ?

2005-10-10 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Mon, 10 Oct 2005 08:54:18 -0700: Hi, [snip] >Although the tonnage of these hydrinos reaching earth in the "solar wind" is >not great in any given year - this process has been ongoing for 5 billion >years. Ergo, there could be now a substantial population of h

Re: Primordial Hy ? - Solar Wind

2005-10-10 Thread Alex Caliostro
From: "Jones Beene" In the late 1990s the UV instrument on board SOHO observed the solar wind emanating from the poles of the Sun, and found that the wind accelerates much faster than can be accounted for by normal physics (thermodynamic expansion) alone. in addition to adiabatic expansion

Re: Primordial Hy ? - Solar Wind

2005-10-10 Thread OrionWorks
> From: Jones Beene > Here are some pictures of the sun in "hydrino light" or EUV: > http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/whatsnew/WIND/SOLWIND.HTML > In the late 1990s the UV instrument on board SOHO observed the solar > wind emanating from the poles of the Sun, and found that the wind > accelerat

Re: Primordial Hy ? - Solar Wind

2005-10-10 Thread Jones Beene
Here are some pictures of the sun in "hydrino light" or EUV:http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/whatsnew/WIND/SOLWIND.HTML In the late 1990s the UV instrument on board SOHO observed the solar wind emanating from the poles of the Sun, and found that the wind accelerates much faster than can be acco

Re: Primordial Hy ? - "Where's the Mass!"

2005-10-10 Thread Jones Beene
Steven comments, > If they really do exist and if they have been bombarding our planet since the primordial beginning  many billions of years ago I can't help but speculate on what kind of additional Earthly mass they might contributing to the overall composition of our planet.I don't think

Re: Primordial Hy ? - "Where's the Mass!"

2005-10-10 Thread OrionWorks
Speaking of the alleged accumulation of hydrinos on our planet. If they really do exist and if they have been bombarding our planet since the primordial beginning many billions of years ago I can't help but speculate on what kind of additional Earthly mass they might contributing to the overall

Primordial Hy ?

2005-10-10 Thread Jones Beene
Does anyone out there in Vo-land - especially Robin (who follows these things intently) care to go out on a limb and speculate on the further implications of the following scenarioFirst, let us assume that hydrinos ("redundant ground state" hydrogen and/or deuterium) are produced in larg