And the power of that incandescent spectrum could be anomalous and could be from the creation of Mills' hydrinos. I wanted to investigate hydrogen gas + calcium oxide "limelight" but ran out of time and money 2 years ago. I got one data point from my calorimeter that didn't show any excess heat at around 200 watts input. I don't show that data point in the following link but just verbally describe it as not showing excess heat. See here:
http://zhydrogen.com/?page_id=2120 On Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 4:18 PM Michael Foster <mf...@yahoo.com> wrote: > Sorry Bob, I shouldn't have referred to my little ad hoc experiment as an > "investigation". It was more like, "What if I look at a lime light with a > hand held spectroscope to see what's there?" What I saw was what you'd > expect to see: Dim calcium and hydrogen lines along with the ever-present > sodium double D lines due to contamination. All this was nearly obscured > by the bright continuous incandescent spectrum. > > > > > > > > > On Wednesday, July 29, 2020, 03:03:51 PM UTC, bobcook39...@hotmail.com < > bobcook39...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > > Michael— > > > > > > Is your investigation of limelight written up? > > > > > > If so, it would be good to identify an accessible reference. > > > > > > > Two questions that I had relative to the investigation you note: What > instrument did you use to determine the spectrum and what was the range of > frequency you were able to investigate/determine wit > the instrument? > > > > > > Bob Cook > >