Has anyone here seen the vials of supposed hydrinos that Mills used to show at 
conferences? Were they ever tested independently? He seems to have given up 
that gimmick (perhaps at the advice of his lawyer)…One wonders what materials 
would bind to dense hydrogen or even if the material could be contained at all. 

If H* is dense and chemically inert (except with other H*) then a natural 
source on earth would be unlikely to have been found in the past.  Any atoms of 
it which were created would essentially sink since no natural elements should 
be capable to contain the H* for long, given its compactness and density. 
Unless the species turns up in biology then it seems that  there is essentially 
no normal place for it to accumulate. Its density insures that it should 
preferentially move towards the center of earth with no means of stopping it 
except for weak diamagnetism -- Assuming that it is  diamagnetic like hydrogen

According to Mills, the solar corona is a vast factory for making dense 
hydrogen. In all of these Vortex posts, the various theories of dense hydrogen 
have been intentionally conflated and the name ‘hydrino’ is seldom  used - 
since most of the theorists now seem to agree that the single densest state is 
the only one which fits into theory seamlessly and not the stepwise progression 
of Mills with its 137 steps is counter-productive.

At any rate, if millions of tons per day of the stuff are being made in the 
solar corona and then finding it way to earth via the “solar wind” and 
collecting in the oceans of earth then it might be possible to work backwards 
to find a natural biological repository and then look there..

The best candidate I can think of would involve  the lifeforms  around the deep 
ocean vents. Maybe the mussel shells found there are high density and 
self-heating  😊

 
• If hydrinos are just more stable versions of isolated hydrogen atoms they 
should have been discovered in hydrogen gas using old technology many decades 
ago. But this is just a strawman argument against their existence. 
Harry 
What old technology, exactly, would have discovered them? That is an intriguing 
path to follow
BTW it could be a “fundable” inquiry involving a deeper look at old data.. 
should anyone here be looking for a new project. 
H* would have almost the same mass as hydrogen - but would be so  much denser 
that it  probably cannot react chemically in the same way, so they are 
relatively inert. 
For instance, there is unlikely to be found in nature a form of water where one 
of the protons is replaced with dense hydrogen as this could present a charge 
imbalance. 
It would be worth the effort to find the most likely place dense hydrogen 
should be found in nature (assuming it is real)
My guess is that it would be in biological lifeforms which use it for survival, 
somehow. 
Jones

Look for abnormally high energetic emissions from a hot hydrogen gas. That 
would be evidence of hydrogen relaxing below the ground state. The probability 
of the formation of hydrinos in an ideal gas would be very low.. However, I 
think the probability might increase as the gas got cooler. This would be in 
contrast with the probability of fusion increasing as the temperature of the 
gas increased.

Harry

It might be better to look for unusual absorption lines in a cold gas of 
hydrogen. This would indicate the hydrino atom was there but changed back into 
an ordinary hydrogen atom by absorbing energy.

Jürg

 
 

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