Hey Fred,

Sounds an easy hypothesis to test. Graneau and company could
just dope the water with a little carbonic acid, and see
if the excess energy increases or returns from spent water.

We're all talking about this, but have any of
you found and read the actual paper? Just what the hell _is_ a cold
fog accelerator anyway??? The mind boggles at such an
exotic piece of kit (wink). 

K. 


-----Original Message-----
From: Frederick Sparber [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 29, 2005 6:22 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: RE: ...water into wine...


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.
>
> Calling Fred Sparber, come in Fred Sparber, here's the
> 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

 

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