Hi Keith, you wrote
>
> > Hi Horace, you write:
> > However, Graneau and Graneau do
> > indeed suggest there exists some mechanism whereby energy can be stored in
> > molecular bonds, and that the source of the energy so stored is solar.
>
> > However, Graneau and Graneau do
> > indeed suggest there exists some mechanism whereby energy can be stored in
> > molecular bonds, and that the source of the energy so stored is solar.
>
> Calling Fred Sparber, come in Fred Sparber, here's the
> first experiment that seems to show the effect of
> solar Sparberinos.
> first experiment that seems to show the effect of
> solar Sparberinos.
>
I'm here, Keith. Older and Wiser on my 72nd Birthday. Happy Birthday to Horace Heffner, Vince Cockeram,
and Martin Fleischmann, too.
I think the proper term for the molecular (solar stored) energy effect is called Fluorescence, Keith. :-)
Although it might require the presence of CO2 as a "catalyst":
CO2 + H2O <---> H2CO3 (in atmospheric water clusters or liquid water in a pan) exposed
to the solar spectrum.
Photography has been using this "metastable" energy storage effect for almost two centuries.
Frederick