Check this out - Nature 1999FYI:

Just in passing, I would like to note (to others, at least) that this Nature 
Paper is Reference [4] in Holmlid’s 2014 Paper:

Ultra-Dense Hydrogen H(−1) as the Cause of Instabilities in Laser 
Compression-Based Nuclear Fusion
http://fuelrfuture.com/science/holm2.pdf

and that I don’t believe the term “Ultra-dense Hydrogen” or the material itself 
(as Holmlid characterizes it) was 
understood/identified back in 1999 when the Nature Paper came out.

Mark Jurich


From: Jones Beene
Sent: Monday, November 09, 2015 7:07 PM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: [Vo]:Check this out - Nature 1999

This is from the journal Nature in 1999 – and it reads like “déjà vu all over 
again”… since it was done with a table top laser and 
clusters of deuterium - but is hot fusion on a small scale – ICF … and way 
ahead of its time … since it is also very much like 
Holmlid’s claims, with one notable difference …

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v398/n6727/abs/398489a0.html

… one of the authors, Ken Wharton was present at the Ólafsson SRI colloquium 
and indicated that he had not been successful making 
the dense deuterium, but it is really only that one “detail” which ties 
everything together into a game changer technology.

Which is to say that LENR and ICF hot fusion are so very close to becoming a 
hybrid, and now we see that they have been close since 
1999 – such that a hybrid with LENR, using even lower energy - will be readily 
accepted by the mainstream (after all this is 
Nature) … if and when … the dense deuterium for ICF targets is replicated.

Everything else is in place… essentially.

It is mind boggling, in a way that the wording of the 1999 Letter is so similar…

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