He did not propose a definitive answer to what happens exactly
Thanks Max
I might forego that 600 p book.
My security wouldn't let me open the link anyway.
He did not propose a definitive answer to what happens exactly
Thanks Max
I might forego that 600 p book.
My security wouldn't let me open the link anyway.
Read this from Sergei, more evidence of a critical mass effect in cold fusion:
According to calculations, an excess heat of 360 W per 7 g of titanium was obtained. If you count it on a 100-gram sample, you get an excess heat source of about 7 kW. The energy intensity of such a heat source will be 52.2 W / g of titanium, which is higher than the energy release of the WWR-1000 reactor, for which it is 45.5 W / g of uranium. That is, this is a significant heat release that can be converted and used as heat or as electricity.
* * *
In the summer of 2018 in Estonia, I managed to create a new installation (Fig. 34), at which at the maximum an excess heat emission of 500 watts from a titanium sample weighing 35.7 grams was obtained. I started scaling the effect. The result was 12.26 W / g of titanium - this is 4.7 times higher than in the first experiments. It turns out that the amount of heat generated by increasing the mass of the working sample also increases. At this facility, I achieved a process in which there is a constant heat release, while the heat release increases over time. Without adding anything, without touching anything, the system itself enters the self-oscillatory mode when it starts to generate heat.
So if one increases the mass up to that comparable to U235 in a fission reactor (say 25 Kg) of titanium + deuterium, do we have the unstoppable cold fusion energy source of the future everybody is looking for?
That "Estonia installation" Tsevkov is speaking of, must be the Deneum facility. Anyone successful in accessing their website?
must be
must have been?
I looked for this a long time ago.. there must have been an NDA agreement.
No trouble finding http://www.deneum.com.
This is their patented Ti-D reactor from their website:
Still probably under critical mass but their patenting has probably prevented others working with Ti D, unfortunately. Wonder why Sergei left?
their patenting
Not theirs
Whose, then? Rossi's, Celani's, Piantelli's, Patterson's, even IH's blanket transition metal patents? The downside of patenting preventing basic research.
I don't think Deneum patented anything. If they refer to the patent it most likely would be Tsvetkov's
Не думаю, что Deneum что-то запатентовал. Если они ссылаются на патент, то, скорее всего, это будет патент Цветкова
Yes.
I wrote this piece a couple of years back- (in part) a google translate from Russian to English, some of the other material was edited from an English original document. it does describe a precursor to Deneum's work by Hrisanovitch and colleagues in Kiev, Ukraine and Moscow Russia. This is part 1 of 3 - I can post the rest if anyone is interested.
Hrisanovitch seems to have been quiet since 2016
I wrote this piece a couple of years back- (in part) a google translate from Russian to English, some of the other material was edited from an English original document. it does describe a precursor to Deneum's work by Hrisanovitch and colleagues in Kiev, Ukraine and Moscow Russia. This is part 1 of 3 - I can post the rest if anyone is interested.
Alan : Andrew Hrischanovich! He's in Turkey now.
Message from Alexander Parkhomove of general interest posted here with his permission
Hi !
We attach great importance to the study of "strange radiation" (microplasmoids) in view of the possible harmful effects on organisms. We have a special research program. In addition to us, in Russia the effects caused by strange radiation are investigated in Dubna.
Sources of strange radiation in our researches are nickel-hydrogen reactors, similar to those of Rossi, and electric plasma in water.
For microplasmoids registration, we use not only photographic film, but also mica, glass, and plastic, which have a smooth surface. We observe and count tracks formed on the surface.
We found that the tracks are formed at a distance of no more than 30 cm from the reactors.
We found that with the same operating mode of the reactors, the number of formed tracks is very variable, both in time and in space.
Tracks are appearing near the reactor and when the reactor is turned off after its working.
There is a “natural background” of strange radiation: tracks are formed with low intensity at a great distance from the reactors.
I think that if you do not come into close contact with the reactors, their radiation does not pose a great danger. I have been working with powerful devices for many years and regularly examined by doctors. There are no critical changes in my body, except for the ailments characteristic of older age (I am 74 years old).
I recommend two articles (unfortunately, only in Russian)
http://www.unconv-science.org/pdf/21/zhigalov1.pdf
bump.
I thought Alexander Parkhomov's email would attract a little more attention.
attract a little more attention
The members on the forum may not be very risk averse
or may be around 74 year old too,,
This SJByrnes rehash might get more attention
same tired old arguments and obsessions though.
More from Russia - a couple of years old now...
TALES FROM THE LABORATORY OF EXPERIMENTAL PHYSICS Part 2.pdf
Тёмный водород или как Зателепин и Баранов поправили Ньютона - ИНЛИС - Глобальная волна
Прорывные технологии и экономика изобилия для всей планеты! ГЛОБАЛЬНАЯ ВОЛНА (GLOBAL WAVE: Breakthrough technologies and wealth for the entire planet!)
More from Russia - a couple of years old now...
TALES FROM THE LABORATORY OF EXPERIMENTAL PHYSICS Part 2.pdf
What happened to this? or them? this looks good..
Who knows what goes on with these guys- Actually Alexander Parkhomov is still working, we are in touch. Hrisamovitch is apparently working somewhere in Turkey. The big trouble tends to be money related- somebody pays for a lab to get set up - and it runs for a while until the cash is gone and the shutters come down. It's very hard to get sustained investments from serious investors.