http://blog.newenergytimes.com/2011/12/ ... -collapse/
good summary of why Rossi's isotopical claims simply 'cannot be'.
happy new year to you all

No metal lattice in stars. Does not address condensed matter physics most CF theories seem to require. Maybe the author felt it too ridiculous to even mention, eh?rcain wrote:don't know whether anyone caught this before:
http://blog.newenergytimes.com/2011/12/ ... -collapse/
good summary of why Rossi's isotopical claims simply 'cannot be'.
happy new year to you all
- does not affect his arguments.JoeP wrote:No metal lattice in stars.rcain wrote:don't know whether anyone caught this before:
http://blog.newenergytimes.com/2011/12/ ... -collapse/
good summary of why Rossi's isotopical claims simply 'cannot be'.
happy new year to you all
- does not mention 'green goblins' either - perhaps they are responsible for Rossi's claimJoeP wrote: ...Does not address condensed matter physics most CF theories seem to require. Maybe the author felt it too ridiculous to even mention, eh?
So condensed matter conditions are irrelevant, and this is a fact?rcain wrote:- does not affect his arguments.JoeP wrote:No metal lattice in stars.rcain wrote:don't know whether anyone caught this before:
http://blog.newenergytimes.com/2011/12/ ... -collapse/
good summary of why Rossi's isotopical claims simply 'cannot be'.
happy new year to you all
- does not mention 'green goblins' either - perhaps they are responsible for Rossi's claimJoeP wrote: ...Does not address condensed matter physics most CF theories seem to require. Maybe the author felt it too ridiculous to even mention, eh?
I had seen that before. I don't give any weight to any of Rossi's claims, but it seemed to my untrained eye that the article was based on the assumption that the eCat supposedly produces energy through standard, well understood processes (hot fusion).rcain wrote:don't know whether anyone caught this before:
http://blog.newenergytimes.com/2011/12/ ... -collapse/
good summary of why Rossi's isotopical claims simply 'cannot be'.
The answer depends on whom you ask ;o) 1+1=2 or 1+1=10 it really depends on some defaults. There is no an established condense matter mechanism behind CF just some ideas are considered by someone as viable. It likely involves an assembly quantum effects and it is really a messy domain... no surprise that "CF" experiments are ahead of theory....JoeP wrote:So condensed matter conditions are irrelevant, and this is a fact?rcain wrote:- does not affect his arguments.JoeP wrote: No metal lattice in stars.
- does not mention 'green goblins' either - perhaps they are responsible for Rossi's claimJoeP wrote: ...Does not address condensed matter physics most CF theories seem to require. Maybe the author felt it too ridiculous to even mention, eh?
Right, my question was rhetoricalstefanbanev wrote:The answer depends on whom you ask ;o) 1+1=2 or 1+1=10 it really depends on some defaults. There is no an established condense matter mechanism behind CF just some ideas are considered by someone as viable. It likely involves an assembly quantum effects and it is really a messy domain... no surprise that "CF" experiments are ahead of theory....JoeP wrote:So condensed matter conditions are irrelevant, and this is a fact?rcain wrote: - does not affect his arguments.
- does not mention 'green goblins' either - perhaps they are responsible for Rossi's claim
Different subject?KitemanSA wrote:Yet again a baseless strawman. AFAICT, Rossi never claimed "cold fusion". LENR is plausibly a totally different subject.rcain wrote: good summary of why Rossi's isotopical claims simply 'cannot be'.
LENR is CF re-branded and is likely the same reaction (whatever that is, assuming there is anything actually happening that is non-chemical and nuclear).ScottL wrote:LENR and Cold Fusion aren't really the same thing at all. LENR requires no fusion process while cold fusion most certainly does.
http://blog.newenergytimes.com/2011/12/ ... rsus-lenr/
For a brief explanation.
LENR is all about neutron capture, fusion is not. The term cold fusion was a misnomer because they didn't have an adequate way to define it. We really should get our terms straight, this is not cold fusion. There is no overcoming of the CB nor any form of additional charge.JoeP wrote:LENR is CF re-branded and is likely the same reaction (whatever that is, assuming there is anything actually happening that is non-chemical and nuclear).ScottL wrote:LENR and Cold Fusion aren't really the same thing at all. LENR requires no fusion process while cold fusion most certainly does.
http://blog.newenergytimes.com/2011/12/ ... rsus-lenr/
For a brief explanation.
I'll grant you the misnomer. However, the certainty of your last statement is interesting. I did not know all doubt has been resolved regarding the lack of fusion in these experiments.LENR is all about neutron capture, fusion is not. The term cold fusion was a misnomer because they didn't have an adequate way to define it. We really should get our terms straight, this is not cold fusion. There is no overcoming of the CB nor any form of additional charge.
Depends on how you define "fusion". The way YOU seem to define it, then LENR is NOT fusion. Others allow for a broader definition and so to them it may still be.D Tibbets wrote:Different subject?KitemanSA wrote:Yet again a baseless strawman. AFAICT, Rossi never claimed "cold fusion". LENR is plausibly a totally different subject.rcain wrote: good summary of why Rossi's isotopical claims simply 'cannot be'.
Um, LENR is cold fusion, or cold fusion is LENR if you prefer. It was a decision to use LENR as a title.