Re: [Vo]: Why did the engineer Rossi beat all the scientists? WAS: Rossi bets the farm on Ni62?

2011-05-19 Thread mixent
In reply to Charles Hope's message of Fri, 20 May 2011 01:01:11 -0400: Hi, [snip] >Is there anyone who believes Mills' hydrino theory who also understands >quantum mechanics? Yes, Mills. :) (Actually he's not the only one, there are probably quite a few, but far less that would go out on a limb

Re: [Vo]: Why did the engineer Rossi beat all the scientists? WAS: Rossi bets the farm on Ni62?

2011-05-19 Thread Charles Hope
Is there anyone who believes Mills' hydrino theory who also understands quantum mechanics? Sent from my iPhone. On May 15, 2011, at 16:08, "Mark Iverson" wrote: > I renamed this thread cuz I'd like to hear opinions as to WHY an engineer > succeeded where ALL the scientists failed in optimizi

Re: [Vo]:Revised and extended Rydburg ion conjecture

2011-05-19 Thread Axil Axil
Nano-defects are very tough. This toughness and associated resistance to melting and stress is conducive to the production of high pressure inside defect. The smaller the dimensions of the lattice surface defect, the greater is the multiplier on the hardness and the resistance to stress compared

Re: [Vo]:Revised and extended Rydburg ion conjecture

2011-05-19 Thread mixent
In reply to Axil Axil's message of Thu, 19 May 2011 18:13:48 -0400: Hi, [snip] >These atomic CN imperfections induce bond contraction and the associated >bond-strength gain deepens the potential well of the trapping in the surface >skin. By how much? >This CN reduction also produces an increase

Re: [Vo]:Revised and extended Rydberg ion conjecture

2011-05-19 Thread Axil Axil
A much denser state exists for deuterium, named D(-1). It is called ultra-dense deuterium. This is the inverse of D(1), and the bond distance is very small, equal to 2.3 pm (0.023 angstroms). Its density is extremely large, >130 kg / cm3 (130,000 times as dense as water), if it can exist as a dense

Re: [Vo]:Revised and extended Rydburg ion conjecture

2011-05-19 Thread Axil Axil
When a metal lattice is hot, three dimensional quantized vibrations travel through its volume. These vibrations are called Phonons. The distances between the atoms in the lattice increase and decrease in proportion to the heat applied to the Lattice. When there is a lattice defect on the surface

Re: [Vo]:Rossi: NO MORE TESTS and other stuff

2011-05-19 Thread Alan J Fletcher
Markku Pöysti May 19th, 2011 at 6:52 AM Does the reaction stop if temperature rises to Ni melting temp? This is rather important safety point, ie. is china syndrome possible? Andrea Rossi May 19th, 2011 at 1:30 PM Dear Mr Markku Poysti: If Ni melts the E-Cat stops. It works only with powder

[Vo]:A couple of interesting items from Science Daily

2011-05-19 Thread Ron Wormus

Re: [Vo]:Invitation to connect on LinkedIn

2011-05-19 Thread Craig Haynie
This is a mistake. I apologize for the interruption. Craig

[Vo]:Invitation to connect on LinkedIn

2011-05-19 Thread Carlton Haynie via LinkedIn
LinkedIn Carlton Haynie requested to add you as a connection on LinkedIn: -- michael, I'd like to add you to my professional network on LinkedIn. - Carlton Accept invitation from Carlton Haynie http://www.linkedin.com/e/-iyihpo-gnvsxdvw-4n/A-Q

[Vo]:Parahydrogen & Nuclear Magnetic Resonance With No Magnets

2011-05-19 Thread Roarty, Francis X
A related field? http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/05/110518131431.htm Parahydrogen can be enhanced to 50 percent or even 100 percent using very low temperatures, although the right catalyst must be added or the conversion could take days if not weeks. Then, by chemically reacting spin

RE: [Vo]:Revised and extended Rydberg ion conjecture

2011-05-19 Thread Jones Beene
Holmlid's Inverted Rydberg hydrogen in not an ion, per se. But to answer Robin's question, the "decrease in volume" would be the end-game event which destroys the 2D form, allowing ZPE coherence. BTW - Out of respect to a famous scientist, Rydberg's name should be spelled correctly (and as a notor

[Vo]:Temperature regulation mechanism.

2011-05-19 Thread Roarty, Francis X
On Wed, 18 May 2011 09:27:19 Axil wrote High temperature is required to provide a vibrative movement in the walls of the erosive cavities formed on the surface of the nickel oxide nano-powder that are the epicenter of nuclear activity. Reply- I would suggest vibration movement is actually chan