Jones, please do not confuse hot fusion with cold fusion. The difference is in the products. Cold fusion does not produce neutrons and energetic radiation. Hot fusion produce neutrons and radiation because the conditions require the nuclear product to fragment. This fragmentation does not take place during cold fusion. In addition, cold fusion takes places only in a lattice without any additional energy being applied. Hot fusion occurs in plasma where high energy is available, as is the case with the Farnsworth Fusor.

The Farnsworth Fusor produces hot fusion, but at a low level. It works at an apparently low energy because the process is efficient and the real energy of the deutrons is not properly calculated. There is no threshold level. The rate is simply roughly related to the log of the energy and becomes undetectable at low energy.

Causing hot fusion is trivial. Anyone can do this with high voltage and some D2 gas. The challenge is to produce more energy than is applied. This has not been done using hot fusion using any of the methods. In contrast, cold fusion has accomplished this on many occasions, although with difficulty and at low level. These are facts and not a matter of opinion. Please try to understand the difference between these two phenomenon. Your opinion is important and needs to be correct.

Ed Storms
On Jun 1, 2013, at 9:10 AM, Jones Beene wrote:

In the category of "truth is stranger than fiction" here is an amazing story
of "impersonation" on several levels

http://trib.com/news/state-and-regional/wyoming-teen-who-built-fusion-reacto
r-disqualified-from-science-fair/article_15dda5ab-b68e-5fa7- a13f-7b30d22f850
f.html

A Wyoming high school student builds a nuclear reactor in his dad's garage - and then is disqualified from the International Science and Engineering Fair on a technicality. The beginning of a conspiracy theory? LENR suppression?

His problem could have been: impersonating Philo - :-)

Anyway the Farnsworth Fusor is a fusion reactor that many high school level
students have built, including Conrad.

It involves adding electrical energy in order to achieve LENR reactions. Sound familiar, Joshua? The "mainstream" wants to call it "hot" fusion but it is not. The gainful reactions are fusion but technically not hot or cold,
and yes they are definitely low energy - warm not hot.

The published threshold level for D+D fusion is variously listed at around 1.4 MeV up to 2.2 MeV and yet the Fusor average plasma energy level is less than 1 eV - so it truly is LENR on the input side. It is definitely NOT in
any way hot fusion. Since it is orders of magnitude lower input.

Since there are neutrons emitted, no one doubts the reaction is nuclear.
Plasma LENR reaction produce neutrons but the same does not happen in
condensed matter LENR.

BTW Conrad is also a YT! Jockey. His channel is replete with his experiments

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4Sjg2aNw6w

Jones


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