Well, the professor should be questioned, if not chided - about what is not 
seen and not reported, instead of what is seen and glossed over. This is 
substandard, at best.

 

It is an interesting experiment BUT it is one that looks more like the Rossi 
effect than Mills.

 

Heat is added to trigger thermal gain in experiment in which a ferromagnetic 
material is used - and the added gain is seen. That fits Rossi whereas the 
hallmark of Mills experiments is UV emission. No mention of UV. 

 

The most reasonable conclusion for UV not being mentioned is that Mills knew 
ahead of time, when he provided the experimental details, that UV was absent.

 

There is no indication that this relates to “hydrinos”…

 

From: Carl High 

 

Leaving aside for the moment that he was working with the controversial Randall 
Mills, a professor from University of Illinois has affixed his good name to 
evidence that non-chemistry-based heat is produced when a copper 
hydroxide/copper bromide mixture is heated to 300C in a differential scanning 
calorimeter.

 

http://www.blacklightpower.com/wp-content/uploads/papers/GlumacReportwithGraphics2014.pdf

 

Acknowledging that I am not an expert in technology such as this, this evidence 
does appear as credit-worthy as any of the material I saw presented at the 
recent MIT colloquium. A well-documented fairly straight-forward replication of 
an experiment showing an anomalous heat signature. As such his work deserves to 
be added to the diverse gallery of anomalies that we so avidly track and 
discuss, and is ultimately deserving of an explanation why and how. An added 
benefit:if you google the image of Nick Glumac you will quickly notice that he 
is not a septuagenarian shuffling around a lab long after he has earned his 
pension. So let's give him credit for being a young man who is willing to put 
his career in jeopardy by demonstrating and affirming an effect that most of 
his peers would deride as junk science. May there be many more like him.

 

Steve High

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