Re: [Vo]:This could relate to the Mills/Holmlid effect

2023-05-29 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Axil Axil, When a free electron falls into a deep atomic orbit, it gains kinetic energy and a photon of the same amount is emitted. Both energies are provided from decay of the nuclear mass. Is this what you call, or equivalent to, vacuum decay? Andrew On 5/29/23, Axil Axil wrote: > https://ww

Re: [Vo]:Electricity "fromthin air"

2023-05-30 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
depending on its degree and spectrum of "blackness" (and cost?), it could have many applications. Did it retain its properties as the oxide grew? On 5/29/23, MSF wrote: > Thanks. That's an informative analysis > > The nanoporous aluminum layer I made was approx. 400 nm thick. It could be > made

Re: [Vo]:Electricity "fromthin air"

2023-05-30 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
ation would > cost about 6 million dollars US. > > I would like to be more specific, but this material was made under an NDA > with a large semiconductor company and I'm not sure if this application > would be covered under it. > > --- Original Message

Re: [Vo]:Electricity "fromthin air"

2023-05-30 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
ube if you are careful. Since I knew no one would be taking these > gadgets apart but me, I had no worries about the surface being disturbed. > There now. More than you wanted to know. > > > > --- Original Message --- > On Tuesday, May 30th, 2023 at 6:27 PM, Andrew Meule

Re: [Vo]:EVOs, Hutchison, and ancient megalithic tech

2023-07-14 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
When the vertical component of the centrifugal force of the rotating eccentric load exceeds the weight of the brick, the brick will move off the ground. Non-vertical components will drive the brick horizontally every time the net force exceeds the weight of the brick. Two small synchronous motors,

Re: [Vo]:EVOs, Hutchison, and ancient megalithic tech

2023-07-14 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Interference between synchronous laser beams provides the basis for an optical lattice. The eccentric weights gives this on a macroscale. On Fri, Jul 14, 2023 at 2:58 PM Robin wrote: > >Hi, > > PS - the dimensions of the solid should be such that it is resonant for > the frequency of the sound.

Re: [Vo]:The First Room-Temperature Ambient-Pressure Superconductor

2023-08-05 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Robin, Your strained lattices might also be the answer to useful CF. _ _ _ On Wed, Jul 26, 2023 at 3:38 PM Robin wrote: > In reply to Jones Beene's message of Wed, 26 Jul 2023 19:32:07 + > (UTC): > Hi, > > You may recall that years ago, I suggested on this list that strained > lattices migh

Re: [Vo]:The First Room-Temperature Ambient-Pressure Superconductor

2023-08-07 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Robin, Good suggestion in your BTW. On Sat, Aug 5, 2023 at 2:57 PM Robin wrote: > In reply to Andrew Meulenberg's message of Sat, 5 Aug 2023 14:41:18 -0500: > Hi Andrew, > [snip] > >Robin, Your strained lattices might also be the answer to useful CF. > > Please feel free to pursue it. It's way

Re: [Vo]:The First Room-Temperature Ambient-Pressure Superconductor

2023-08-07 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
ite. > > On Mon, Aug 7, 2023, 10:57 AM Andrew Meulenberg > wrote: > >> Robin, Good suggestion in your BTW. >> >> On Sat, Aug 5, 2023 at 2:57 PM Robin >> wrote: >> >>> In reply to Andrew Meulenberg's message of Sat, 5 Aug 2023 14:41:18 >

Re: [Vo]:Repeatable COP of ~1.5 seems to be reported by many

2024-07-20 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
At low external temperatures, many heat pump systems switch over to ohmic heating. Do they turn off the heat pump or do they heat the input to the pump? Either way, using a CF source (w COP of 1.5) *and* its output could be useful, if it were both cheap and reliable enough. On Fri, Jul 19, 2024 a

Re: [Vo]:Hopping, low-mo, and variable decay neutrons - more than one type

2018-10-18 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Robin, I'm sorry that I don't have time to monitor this site regularly, so I may have missed the earlier references. However, when you mention shrunken molecules, do you mean those with deep-orbit electrons, such as modeled in A. Meulenberg and J. L. Paillet, “Basis for femto-molecules and -ions

Re: [Vo]:Reorganized ICCF indexes

2019-01-02 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Thank you Jed for a major effort. I wonder if Jean-Paul could comment if it is appropriate to put these links into our JCMNS papers' reference lists? Andrew On Mon, Dec 31, 2018 at 1:44 PM Jed Rothwell wrote: > All of the indexes on one page, organized: > > https://lenr-canr.org/wordpress/?pag

Re: [Vo]:Off Topic: climatologist Judith Curry testified this month

2019-02-25 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
AMEN On Sun, Feb 24, 2019 at 9:06 AM H LV wrote: > This month before congress climatologist Judith Curry argued for a > pragmatic approach to climate change based on her assesment of the actual > uncertainties and confidence levels contained in the IPCC reports. (Video > is about 5 minutes) > >

Re: [Vo]:D. Alexandrov, Proposal for the development of an LENR reactor

2019-02-26 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
I have rejected the common concept of "heavy" electrons as applicable to LENR by simple reasoning. The definition of electron and hole effective mass in a semiconductor refers to the acceleration in that material from a force applied, m =* F/a*). This mass increase does not apply *within* a confine

Re: [Vo]:D. Alexandrov, Proposal for the development of an LENR reactor

2019-03-01 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Dear Jones, Thanks for asking about our work. We have published this since JCMNS -Vol 24. J-L Paillet, Andrew Meulenberg, "Deepening Questions about Electron Deep Orbits of the Hydrogen Atom," J. Condensed Matter Nucl. Sci. *26* (2017) 54–68, http://coldfusioncommunity.net/pdf/jcmns/v2

Re: [Vo]:D. Alexandrov, Proposal for the development of an LENR reactor

2019-03-02 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
and, otherwise, clarify the question of “point > charge” assumptions. > > > > Bob Cook > > > > > > > > Sent from Mail <https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for > Windows 10 > > > ------ > *From:* Andrew

Re: [Vo]:The Casimir force can be tuned and even reversed

2019-03-22 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Dear Axil, In pursuing an enhanced thermo-photovoltaic device at Draper Labs at the turn of the century, our group developed and utilized a computer code for optical coupling between surfaces. I noticed at the time that the code output included the force between the plates and that, when the opti

Re: [Vo]:superluminal wave propagation

2019-04-14 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Thank you Axil.. Good references! On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 2:04 PM Axil Axil wrote: > Revised with references added > > Quote > > https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-08735-8 > > Optical space-time wave packets having arbitrary group velocities in free > space > > This article has shown exp

Re: [Vo]:Planckian dissipation phenomenon

2019-05-05 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Jones, In answer to your question about the "known binding energy for spin-paired electrons," KP Sinha and I have some theoretical papers that provide some information that would support the application of spin-paired electrons to CF. KP's early work on the pair includes published references to th

Re: [Vo]:Planckian dissipation phenomenon

2019-05-06 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
olmlid's work (and spintronics) can contribute to new (or, at least, modified) models of nuclear and atomic physics. Andrew _ _ _ On Mon, May 6, 2019 at 9:20 AM JonesBeene wrote: > > > > > *From: *Andrew Meulenberg > > >- A possible weakness in the ICCF-14 model

Re: [Vo]:This could be an indication of "dense hydrogen" from solar origin

2019-06-10 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Jean-Luc Paillet and I are interested in this 2nd link “A simple argument that small hydrogen may exist” https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0370269319303624, because we think that 5 (out of 6) sections support ou

Re: [Vo]:This could be an indication of "dense hydrogen" from solarorigin

2019-06-12 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
e researchers have provided far > more effort and insight than others, not to mention many more publications. > > > > But this is not a contest, yet it is intriguing to me that most of this is > high quality work – yet still snubbed by the mainstream. > > > > > > Rande

Re: [Vo]:FW: coherent system energy states

2019-08-03 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Bob, You have raised some important points in your answers to Robin. Can you provide some references to support them? In particular, I am interested in the non-photonic transfer of angular momentum from the nucleus to a bound electron. I think that it is well accepted that the nucleus can transfe

Re: [Vo]:FW: coherent system energy states

2019-08-06 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
> *https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutrino > <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutrino>* > > > > W. Stubbs’ book on nuclear structure, P. Hatt’s papers and Jurg > Wyttenbach’s papers address the nucleon structure which seems to involve > neutrinos. IMHO the coupling is

Re: [Vo]:FW: coherent system energy states

2019-08-07 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
> > > Jürg > > > > Am 07.08.19 um 05:09 schrieb Andrew Meulenberg: > > Dear Bob C. > > I can picture the neutrino as being involved in the interaction between > electron and nucleus. However, my picture is definitely non-standard. At > the short distance of de

Re: [Vo]:FW: coherent system energy states

2019-08-10 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
is out of print as >> far as I know. >> >> >> >> *https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutrino >> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutrino>* >> >> >> >> W. Stubbs’ book on nuclear structure, P. Hatt’s papers and Jurg >> Wyttenbach’s papers ad

Re: [Vo]:Dense hydrogen may facilitate water splitting

2019-12-23 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Bob, Since I have been working on the deep-electron orbit model and its consequences (e.g., femto-H and femto-molecules) for the last decade, most of your questions have already been answered (see the links below - from ICCF-21- and the references therein). http://coldfusioncommunity.net/pdf/jcmn

Re: [Vo]:Dense hydrogen may facilitate water splitting

2019-12-23 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
m for both species to exist and to "hide" in the terrestrial environment. Andrew On Mon, Dec 23, 2019 at 9:32 AM JonesBeene wrote: > > > > > Sent from Mail <https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for > Windows 10 > > > > *From: *Andrew Meulen

Re: [Vo]:X17, UDH and a fifth force (or dark matter)

2019-12-24 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
While the presence of a ~17 MeV decay path, from excited 4He could explain aspects of the D+D => 4He of CF by avoiding both the fragmentation and lack of >20 MeV photons from this fusion, there are other problems with this solution. The main problem is the lack of 511 keV annihilation radiation fro

Re: [Vo]:Looking for feedback on gravity control experiment

2020-01-03 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Jurg, I'm sorry that I do not have the time to look at your model (nor perhaps do I even have the math capability). However, your mention of the "electron perturbative mass" rang a bell. I look at the situation from a physical view-point. Every s-orbital atomic electron transits its nuclear regio

Re: [Vo]:Looking for feedback on gravity control experiment

2020-01-12 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
I suspect that, like me few have bothered with Kindle readers. On Fri, Jan 10, 2020 at 12:16 PM Frank Znidarsic wrote: > Only 10 free Kindle books were downloaded. In the past a free sale would > have generated a download of at least 20 or more Kindle books. No relevant > comments came from th

Re: [Vo]:Looking for feedback on gravity control experiment

2020-01-12 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Thx Jed. I did look closer and found I could read the book. On Sun, Jan 12, 2020 at 3:14 PM Jed Rothwell wrote: > Andrew Meulenberg wrote: > > I suspect that, like me few have bothered with Kindle readers. >> > > Kindle readers are great! But you don't need one to

Re: [Vo]:cannon balls and curling stones

2020-01-23 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Harry, For your ice covered planet, you may need to indicate if it is rotating or not and then, depending on your frame of reference, address Coriolis forces. This link addresses the weight at poles vs that at the equator. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrifugal_force#Weight_of_an_object_at_th

Re: [Vo]:cannon balls and curling stones

2020-01-24 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
n unloaded spring be affected by > the rotation? If so they could give the impression of weight change when > the spring is loaded. > > Harry > > > On Thu, Jan 23, 2020 at 8:19 AM Andrew Meulenberg > wrote: > >> >> Harry, >> >> For your ice cover

Re: [Vo]:cannon balls and curling stones

2020-01-25 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
natively if the surface is perfectly rigid but does have friction this > could generate some non-circle paths as well before the disk comes to rest. > > Harry > > On Fri, Jan 24, 2020 at 2:06 PM Andrew Meulenberg > wrote: > >> Harry, >> >> You are touching o

Re: [Vo]:Superconducting Metal Hydride

2020-02-05 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
BOB, Your 3 questions below can all be answered in the context of a "nuclear electron". On Wed, Feb 5, 2020 at 1:38 PM bobcook39...@hotmail.com < bobcook39...@hotmail.com> wrote: > Is a free neutrino a magnetic resonance or magnetic flux rotation? > > > > And why do neutrinos seem to emanate fro

Re: [Vo]:Aetheric Science - Invitation to take part

2020-02-27 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
The experiment is inadequately specified (unless the goal is to see the number of people who will respond). AM On Mon, Feb 24, 2020 at 5:53 PM Jonathan Berry wrote: > TLDR: Keep an open mind, open this image: https://ibb.co/S75gccz place > tour hand to face the image for a minute as you move

Re: [Vo]:Aetheric Science - Invitation to take part

2020-02-27 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
ied. > > Do you mean my failing to mention that the energy could remain for some > time after removal from the screen? > > Well, in that event, it has been remedied now, if the inadequacy is > anything else I'm not sure what it might be, please clarify. > > Thanks. &

Re: [Vo]:Electron Transition Atomic Mass Change Quantified

2020-05-10 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Terry, Thank you for the link. It is obvious that, if an excited atom emits a photon, it will become lighter. The ground state is lighter than an excited state. This new technique might somehow be able to distinguish the mass-loss to the nucleus alone rather than to the atom (ion) as a whole. Suc

Re: [Vo]:OT: Why Chernobyl ?

2022-02-25 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Excellent talk and pertains to the present as well. On Fri, Feb 25, 2022 at 7:34 AM wrote: > Jurg, > > > > You might watch this professor of international affairs who is very > learned about the Ukraine. https://youtu.be/JrMiSQAGOS4 > > > > Russ > > > > *From:* Jürg Wyttenbach > *Sent:* Thursda

[Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]: ​small hydrogen

2022-04-25 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Jurg, I would be interested in what physical laws you think are violated by the deep-orbit electrons. Without the Dirac equation's "anomalous orbit" results, I don't think that we would have looked for the relativistic effects that make the deep orbits (and nuclear forces?) possible. Andrew _ _ _

[Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]: ​small hydrogen

2022-04-25 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
appreciative of your ability to do the math and of finding important connections. I don't presently understand your statement about not basing a solution on the magnetic "mass". I assume that, if I had the time and capability of properly understanding your model I would see your reason

[Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]: ​small hydrogen

2022-04-28 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
had the time and > capability of properly understanding your model I would see your > reasoning. > > As said: The whole Dirac formalism is based on the idea of plane wave > solutions with complex wave symmetry. This only works for radiation fields > or simple spherical surfaces. But

[Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Re: [Vo]: ​small hydrogen

2022-05-02 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
he proper situation. It took me at least a > year to understand it or even 3 years from the beginning - but I had to > find everything. You can take the solution and start to reason about it. > There is no doubt that the core of SOP will define the next level of basic > physics. > >

Re: [Vo]:Reversing global warming and removing carbon from the atmosphere with cold fusion

2022-06-09 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Dear Jed, You included this link, which I thought might have been referring to my papers since some of the numbers agreed with mine. https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20160425-how-a-giant-space-umbrella-could-stop-global-warming * On closer look, I saw that the author did not suggest some of

Re: [Vo]:Reversing global warming and removing carbon from the atmosphere with cold fusion

2022-06-15 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
head. I think the experts (including you) can work out > something. > > I regard this as a stopgap solution. It should be done if needed, but if > we are going to keep emitting CO2 it will eventually stop working. I think > it would buy time for a more permanent solution. >

Re: [Vo]:It's Time We Talked About the Box-Orbs..

2022-07-16 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Dear Sean, I like your derivation. It appears to be another indication of the resonance giving stability to the electron at a specific "size". A similar exercise gives its angular momentum to be 1/2 that of the photon simultaneously forming it and the positron. I think of a sphere of the classica

Re: [Vo]:It's Time We Talked About the Box-Orbs..

2022-07-16 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Did you check out https://www.academia.edu/s/18395c2bc3?source=ai_email ? On Mon, Jul 4, 2022 at 7:04 PM Vibrator ! wrote: > I didn't put any on tick tok. > > I didn't 'put' any anywhere. > > Again, every day for the last few weeks i've come home from work and > checked YouTube for the last 24 h

Re: [Vo]:It's Time We Talked About the Box-Orbs..

2022-07-16 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
just an interested bystander On Sat, Jul 16, 2022 at 10:00 PM Sean Logan wrote: > > Are you on the welcoming committee? > > Perhaps it's time you made liaison with the box orb pilots. > >

Re: [Vo]:It's Time We Talked About the Box-Orbs..

2022-07-17 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
t; a macroscopic electron? I mean, one that's a couple feet across? > > > On Sat, Jul 16, 2022 at 9:10 PM Andrew Meulenberg > wrote: > >> just an interested bystander >> >

Re: [Vo]:It's Time We Talked About the Box-Orbs..

2022-07-18 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
I don't know. On Mon, Jul 18, 2022 at 8:46 PM Sean Logan wrote: > Dear Andrew, > >Thank you for the information on Falaco Solitons. Is Cartan the one > who introduced the idea of "rotating spacetime" into the theory of > Relativity? > >>

Re: [Vo]:It's Time We Talked About the Box-Orbs..

2022-07-23 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
t; effect: That there was a particular RPM of the flywheel in an engine at > which it was "resonant". That the engine and transmission worked best and > were happiest when the flywheel was rotating around this particular RPM. > > > > On Sat, Jul 16, 2022 at 5:01 AM Andrew Meulenberg > wrote: > >> I like your derivation. It appears to be another indication of the >> resonance giving stability to the electron at a specific "size". A similar >> >

Re: [Vo]:Sun spot cycle

2022-12-12 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Robin, Do you have a link for this? I proposed something similar at MIT about 40 years ago. I looked at the direct relationships and many resonances but could not find one. I did not have time (could not rationalize taking the time) to look at the accelerations (as in tidal influences). It certain

Re: [Vo]:Solar cell lifetime in space

2022-12-18 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Robin, This thickness of coverslide stops the low-energy trapped protons of the Van Allen belts that would cut the cell efficiency by ~30% in not too many months. Andrew On Sun, Dec 18, 2022 at 6:38 PM Robin wrote: > Hi, > > ESA apparently place a 0.1 mm layer of glass before their solar cell

Re: [Vo]:Solar cell lifetime in space

2022-12-19 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Robin, The whole deal is a set of tradeoffs that depends on the environment to be encountered. At some altitudes, the Van Allen Belts have too much penetrating radiation to allow solar cells to be used for long-term missions. Addition of coverslides makes the solarcell assembly vulnerable to sola

Re: [Vo]:Solar cell lifetime in space

2022-12-20 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
surface by immersion in a molten cerium compound? --- Original Message --- On Tuesday, December 20th, 2022 at 2:26 AM, Andrew Meulenberg < mules...@gmail.com> wrote: Robin, The whole deal is a set of tradeoffs that depends on the environment to be encountered. At some altitudes, the

Re: [Vo]:Solar cell lifetime in space

2022-12-20 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
e - > > > I guess this is getting off into the weeds a bit, but is the quartz layer > doped with cerium in the mass? Or is the cerium diffused into the surface > by immersion in a molten cerium compound? > > -- > On Tuesday, December 20th, 2022 at 2:26 AM, Andrew Meulenberg < > mules...@gmail.com> wrote: > > >> > >> >> > >

Re: [Vo]:ARPA-E announces funding for 8 cold fusion projects

2023-02-19 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Jed, Do we get a chance to see what other projects were proposed (at least titles)? It may be that these eight were the best of a poor selection. On Sun, Feb 19, 2023 at 10:04 AM Jed Rothwell wrote: > I put this DoE announcement in the LENR-CANR.org News section. Today I > added this somewhat p

Re: [Vo]:Quantized inertia Ted talk removes need for dark matterandexplains the EM drive

2018-02-08 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Thank you for the reference (below). I see this as a possible explanation of the coherent optical (and x-ray?) emission and even the rf emissions that have been detected in active CF reactions. The intense EM fields (direct and as photons) associated with nuclear decay via the deep-orbit electrons

Re: [Vo]:Metallic hydrogen does not exist

2018-02-24 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
If we define metals as materials with electrons that are bound to a lattice, but not to an individual atoms, then there is another (proposed) option for producing metallic H (at least on the sub-lattice level). K.P. Sinha, Ed Storms, and I have all proposed linear defects as a potential source for

Re: CMNS: Re: [Vo]:Metallic hydrogen does not exist

2018-02-25 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
ty that no theory has yet acknowledged. > > I look forwarded to exploring these ideas with you. > > Ed > > > On Feb 24, 2018, at 4:13 AM, Andrew Meulenberg wrote: > > If we define metals as materials with electrons that are bound to a > lattice, but not to an individual a

Re: [Vo]:Amazing and overlooked: the big picture of Grid Energy in the USA

2018-03-02 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Has anyone looked at the impact of fracking on the data? Heating is a major energy sink and the difference in gas vs electric heating costs (even with heat pumps) could be a major driver in new builds. Andrew _ _ _ _ _ On Fri, Mar 2, 2018 at 6:31 PM, Jed Rothwell wrote: > JonesBeene wrote: > >

Re: [Vo]:The Purcell Effect

2018-03-25 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
About 20 years ago, I read an article in Physics Today that could have referred to the Purcell effect (I don't remember). It talked of suppression of atomic decay in a waveguide too small to support the photon that would normally be emitted. Decay did not occur until the excited atom exited the wav

Re: [Vo]:Cold Fusion Catalyzed Hot Fission - A promising hybrid orjust hand-waving?

2018-04-23 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Bob, The experimentally-determined charge distribution of a neutron shows an outer "shell" of negative charge and thus the neutron should be polarizable. Had this been known early on, when the neutron was considered to be a proton + electron, I think the battle for that view would never have been

Re: [Vo]:The PP fusion reaction in LENR

2018-05-22 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
I am glad to see a discussion of changes in mass depending on environment. I feel that this is fundamental to the CF story of D-D => 4He and many other observables. Rest mass (stationary, isolated in space, and with zero potentials) is constant. Add velocity and the effective mass increases. Add f

Re: [Vo]:The PP fusion reaction in LENR

2018-05-23 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Dear Robin, I believe that quarks and their constituent parts move rapidly within the nucleus. The parts (I would hold to be leptons) are definitely highly relativistic. If they slow down in the presence of external fields, then their effective mass would definitely decrease. I also agree with yo

Re: [Vo]:The PPusion reaction in LENR

2018-07-26 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
Me too, If a number of us think the paper is useful, then we could give a supporting letter to the journal of choice. Andrew M. _ _ _ _ On Thu, Jul 26, 2018 at 4:50 PM, wrote: > In reply to bobcook39...@hotmail.com's message of Thu, 26 Jul 2018 > 04:52:38 > +: > Hi, > [snip] > >Nygel--- >

Re: [Vo]:push me, pull you

2018-08-12 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
The C-O-M motion is monotonic, not constant. On Sun, Aug 12, 2018 at 11:34 AM, H LV wrote: > Nifty physics demo: > > Two carts are connected together on an air track with a spring. Under > bright lights you can see the coupled oscillation of the carts back and > forth, but under black lights you

Re: [Vo]:Indian Summer

2024-09-20 Thread Andrew Meulenberg
The term "Indian Summer" may come from the American Indians apparent indifference to cold weather. In historical novels, one can find reference to this, where the Indians would wonder why the white men would bundle up, just because there was snow on the ground. In graduate school, I had a girlfrie