If, as you say below, the deuteron is 'expelled' then wouldn't it be more
consistent to say 'expulsion' instead of 'propulsion'?

Harry


On 30/9/2007 1:16 AM, Michel Jullian wrote:

> I guess you mean venturi in relation with the flow restriction.
> 
> Following Harry's remark in the spin thread, how about "elastic constriction
> propulsion"? 
> 
> Seriously, anyone got an idea of how much energy this can put into the
> expelled deuteron or how it could be calculated?
> 
> Michel
> 
> P.S. Tsss, "Could it get us to Uranus", can't get over this one Terry :-)
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Jones Beene" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
> Sent: Saturday, September 29, 2007 4:39 PM
> Subject: Re: [Vo]:Re: #CF hypothesis (was Re: surface electron layer catalyzed
> fusion hypothesis)
> 
> 
> Ha! "sphincter propulsion" Luv it...
> 
> ... don't think anyone has evoked that exact wording before, but lest
> the skeptics out there latch-onto to something derogatory like
> "toilet-fizzix", can we just call it "venturi propulsion" or something a
> little less organic?
> 
> Jones
> 
> Michel Jullian wrote:
>> (#CF = DIESECF Desorbing-Incident Excess Surface Electron Catalyzed Fusion, #
>> being "dièse" in French)
>> 
>> As I suggested to someone in a private message a few weeks ago, I think the
>> desorbing deuteron must have more energy than that due to its free fall in
>> the electron layer's electric field, in the form of a "sphincter contraction"
>> like expulsion energy (sorry for the gruesome image). This would be due to
>> the elastic nature of the Pd crystal which could be expected to re-contract
>> locally with the participation of a large number of surface Pd atoms after
>> the deuteron's passage. This kinetic energy could be a welcome complement to
>> the electron layer's screening effect.
>> 
>> This complementary effect could explain why CF occurs with Pd and D, with Ni
>> (tighter lattice) and H (protium), but not (or less) e.g. with Pd and H,
>> because the smaller protium would flow "too easily" (with less sphincter
>> propulsion) out of the relatively roomy Pd lattice.
>> 
>> Hope this makes some sense. Do let me know anyone if this sphincter aspect of
>> hydrogen nuclei expulsion has been evoked before and/or quantified.
>> 
>> Michel
>> 
>> P.S. Of course the whole hypothesis, which I have presented in essentially
>> classical terms (my apologies to "real" theoreticians for that), will have to
>> be translated to quantum physics language and quantified before it can be
>> considered a proper theory. This will be done IF --big if-- it is confirmed
>> experimentally, there being obviously little point in theorizing further if
>> it is proved wrong.

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