I think there is a link. I think that one of the simplest interpretations of Jerry Pollacks work is that in certain circumstances water holds lightly to its protons, and will loose them leaving a region of negatively charged (but not alkalie) water. This can happen with water adsorbed on a surface, and you get static electricity. It can happen with suspended water droplets, and can result in negatively charged water droplets leaving charged protons behind, resulting in large potential differences in clouds. No reason to expect excess heat in any of this, just different ways of using work energy to create charge separation.

Nigel

On 10/03/2014 03:02, MarkI-ZeroPoint wrote:

Did my master's thesis under Dr. James Telford, atmospheric physicist, and expert in cloud microphysics. One of Telford's areas of interest was cloud electrification, which, at the time, was still not clearly explained. My thesis redesigned a novel airborne electric field measuring device which he and Dr. Peter Wagner had developed. One hypothesis about cloud electrification had to do with the collision of droplets inside the cloud causing a transfer of electrical charge, but that was only one of several hypotheses. When I read the article on the electrification of the powder, I immediately thought that the mechanism could be related...

-Mark Iverson

*From:*Blaze Spinnaker [mailto:blazespinna...@gmail.com]
*Sent:* Sunday, March 09, 2014 7:53 PM
*To:* vortex-l@eskimo.com
*Subject:* Re: [Vo]:unknown mechanism generates voltage in the powder cracks


Axil, I don't get it. Why not optimize this for power generation? Find a way to generate cracks in a nano material with a small amount of electricity. Presumably there is an optimal material, shape, context in terms of gases present that causes this, and a better method than just 'shifting a Tupperware container'

This sounds like a revolutionary news article where the main stream press and a good university (Rutgers) is coming to terms with the reality something is happening there.

My only question, is that is voltage being reported. What was the excess thermal heat? Going to email them.


On Saturday, March 8, 2014, Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com <mailto:janap...@gmail.com>> wrote:

http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-26462348

LENR has been talking about this for some time now.


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