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| Anyone working with (bio)physics? I got to share something I wished I never would. | 31 Mar 2005 08:27 GMT | 6 |
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 NUCLEAR PHYSICS OR CHEMISTRY DO NOT EXPLAIN EVERYTHING By far, related to the experiences of those people claiming of having
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| The gauntlet has been dropped | 28 Mar 2005 20:49 GMT | 53 |
Szpak, Mosier-Boss, Miles, and Fleishmann have published a new CF paper in Thermochim. Acta 410 (2004) 101, that drops the gauntlet. In it they say that my interpretation of the CF effect is "difficult to understand and therefore accept".
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| In from the cold (fusion) | 28 Mar 2005 02:42 GMT | 5 |
In from the cold Sixteen years after the hope, hype and recriminations, cold fusion is news again. David Adam investigates a scientific controversy that won't go away
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| (",) Do You Want To Know For Sure You Are Going To Heaven? | 24 Mar 2005 03:41 GMT | 1 |
http://www.want-to-be-sure.blogspot.com << Click On Link
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| Question | 24 Mar 2005 00:41 GMT | 10 |
What is the energy required to overcome the coloumb repulsion between protons to make a fusion reaction happen and what is its probability. I would think that the reaction between four protons to create helium (2p2n) would emit gammas only of the positron - electron anhiliation ...
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| Plasma formation and temperature measurement during single-bubble cavitation | 20 Mar 2005 17:08 GMT | 22 |
Experimental Evidence Points to Genuine Nano Fireball Star in a Jar Update Monday, March 07, 2005 Well folks a verdict of vindication is in from University of Illinois
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| Hydrinos Study Group | 20 Mar 2005 01:16 GMT | 1 |
There is an active Yahoo group that is discussing the work of Dr. Mills, Black Light Power and hydrinos and such: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hydrino/messages/8955 I've waited a long long time to see anything substantial come from the
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| cold fusion | 17 Mar 2005 21:14 GMT | 2 |
can i know why cold fusion works better with heavy water than normal water?
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| Tiny Bubbles Implode With the Heat of a Star | 16 Mar 2005 20:48 GMT | 7 |
Tiny Bubbles Implode With the Heat of a Star by KENNETH CHANG Published: March 15, 2005 When the force of sound waves implode tiny bubbles within a liquid at
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| Steve Lajoie - What Happened to the Website? | 13 Mar 2005 11:54 GMT | 10 |
Steve, Welcome back! I used to visit your free energy website in the late 1990s, and enjoyed reading it. Whatever happened to it? A lot of exciting things have happened since then. Bubble fusion being one of
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| Another Sono Fusion Convert | 12 Mar 2005 04:17 GMT | 2 |
Note that this is the same Kenneth Suslick that has in the recent past vigorously denied the possibility of such hight temperatures in a SL bubble. He went on and on in peer reviewed (and peer accepted) papers about a
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| circuit simulator | 12 Mar 2005 03:52 GMT | 1 |
I've been playing around with an excellent circuit simulator applet. I had 2-3 small voltage doubler circuit prototypes from a few years back. I duplicated the circuits in the java applet and did a bunch of modifications, testing all the way to see if the applet actually
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| transforming energy infinite | 10 Mar 2005 23:00 GMT | 2 |
Mankind transforms energy from it's various forms to kinetic for the work. I ultimately believe that we just havn't found the correct method of transformation to be fully effective at producing renewable energy. This is mostly because mankind has through the years taught our ...
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| Tiny bubbles get hotter than sun | 10 Mar 2005 20:56 GMT | 2 |
Just as blowing up a bubble leads to a pop, so can shrinking it. Rapidly collapsing bubbles have long been known to reach astonishing temperatures. advertisement
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| Pebble Bed Nuclear Reactor? | 10 Mar 2005 20:51 GMT | 6 |
What do the sci.physics.fusion aficionados think about the prospects of a new type of nuclear reactor technology called pebble bed reactor technology? I know it's not particularly "new", as the concept was first proposed when light water reactors were designed in the 1940s.
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