Could this be an indication of the establishment of entangled electron
states resulting in mass increase related to heavy electrons? Recently,
heavy electrons have been shown to be an indicator of an onset of
superconductive conditions.

Axil



On Wed, Jul 11, 2012 at 3:44 PM, <pagnu...@htdconnect.com> wrote:

>
> Could this be an indication of the onset of ballistic conduction in some
> micro-/nano-channels?
>
> Abd ul-Rahman Lomax wrote:
> > (this was also posted to the private list for CMNS researchers.)
> >
> > It's come to my attention that some researchers have frequently
> > observed a sudden drop in resistance of electrolytic cells associated
> > with the onset of XP bursts. I'm seeking to document this.
> >
> > In experiments where there is electrolytic power in constant current
> > mode, this shows up as a drop in voltage, usually shown in reports as
> > a drop in input power, if input power is plotted.
> >
> > This seems to appear after substantial periods of stability in
> resistance.
> >
> > One paper which commented on the drop attributed it to heating of the
> > electrolyte close to the cathode. If so, this signal shows up before
> > cathodic heating has had time to increase cell temperature. The drop
> > is abrupt in what I've seen.
> >
> > There is another possible explanation, though, which would be an
> > increase in conductivity in that region due to ionization induced by
> > short-range charged particle radiation. This radiation could be well
> > below the Hagelstein limit and still have this effect, if it
> > originates at or very near the cathode surface. (The "Hagelstein
> > limit" is a limit set by Peter Hagestein in a Naturwissenschaften
> > paper studying the expected behavior of charged particle radiation.
> > The absence of predicted effects from high-energy charged particle
> > radiation led him to set a limit of 20 KeV for substantial charged
> > particle radiation from cold fusion experiments.
> >
> > If radiation is the cause, the resistance drop may appear even before
> > the reaction has time to raise the temperature of the electrolyte.
> >
> > Hence I'm requesting communication from researchers regarding
> > experience with CF electrolysis, in regard to resistance reduction
> > (or the lack of same), associated with anomalous heat or other
> > signals of a nuclear reaction.
> >
> > Thanks in advance.
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>

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