W11 photos received from LENRIA- thanks, dear friends!
If 2 years younger, I could have been there; if 20 years younger I could have been one Star of the Workshop. However, so as it is, it is also excellent I have the privilege to serenely think about the significance of this great Workshop.
Building where the meeting was held.
Jean-Francois Geneste in discussions
DAILY NOTES
a) Toulouse Workshop- what it teaches us? The LENR World War is taking place at many levels and heights and intensities and forms, however decisive victories can be won only by down-to-earth technologies and definitely NOT in the theoretical stratosphere. But from the height it is a perfect broad vision of the field and details of critical importance on the battlefield can be detected and used for the Victory.
Terrestrial and and aerial forces must cooperate wisely and pragmatically.
Explaining this, even by a sentence more would be unfriendly toward my dear readers
who understand perfectly what I say and are free to agree and disagree.
b) There was some strong (Urutskoev-Geneste) and some more subtle convergence between the theories presented at the Toulouse Workshop. A reader has informed us
"Please note that Vladimir Dubinko's paper was 'speed' presented during the workshop, worked in on the fly, regarding nano-breathers. It was not in the initial electronic files attendees received but shall be included in a distribution of final proceedings. His same or similar paper was presented in Padua, but at the workshop, with fewer attendees and less quantity of activity going on, seemed to get more attention. Dubinko communicates his ideas very well."
DAILY NEWS
1) Airbus & LENR : "The Challenge"
http://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/index.php/Thread/2173-Airbus-LENR-The-Challenge/
http://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/index.php/Thread/2173-Airbus-LENR-The-Challenge/
2) ISCMNS Workshop in Airbus Toulouse - Feedback
http://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/index.php/Thread/2172-ISCMNS-Workshop-in-Airbus-Toulouse-Feedback/?postID=8603#post8603
3) Neutron Detection and the E-Cat
4) From Vessy's Blog, finalmente!
Here’s the full interview with Andrea… Ciak!
http://www.e-catworld.com/2015/10/17/neutron-detection-and-the-e-cat/
4) From Vessy's Blog, finalmente!
Here’s the full interview with Andrea… Ciak!
http://www.ecat-thenewfire.com/blog/full-interview-with-rossi/
Rossi- consolidated 1MWE-Cat plant to have volume of 4 cubic meters:
http://www.e-catworld.com/2015/10/18/rossi-consolidated-1-mw-e-cat-plant-to-have-volume-of-4-cubic-meters/
Rossi- consolidated 1MWE-Cat plant to have volume of 4 cubic meters:
http://www.e-catworld.com/2015/10/18/rossi-consolidated-1-mw-e-cat-plant-to-have-volume-of-4-cubic-meters/
Sylvie Coyaud's negative report about the Toulouse event
A Toulouse, entre temps
http://ocasapiens-dweb.blogautore.repubblica.it/2015/10/17/a-toulouse-entre-temps/
Very similar by Pathoskeptic
5) Cold fusion theories and the return of the nutty professor
http://pathoskeptic.com/2015/10/17/cold-fusion-theories-and-the-return-of-the-nutty-professor/
October 18th, 2015 at 7:26 AM
Arthur Lindon:
Replications in laboratory do not violate the intellectual property. If all the tests on course and the R&D will confirm the validity of the product, we will manufacture it in such a way and with such a competitivity that the reverse engineering will be extremely difficult, if aimed to compete with us. This said, some competition sooner or later will arrive ( by the way, the patent will expire 20 years after the priority date also in all the Countries of the world where we are extending the patent). But in the meantime we will have reached further competitivity. The whole to the advantage of the Customers. F9.
Warm Regards,
A.R.
OTHER
NikolaTesla living now could change a lot...and more
Se Tesla fosse nato un secolo dopo oggi la scienza sarebbe un secolo avanti
6) As always the most complete list of news is by Sam Hansson
http://www.drboblog.com/news/
7) Excellent diversified comments here:
http://www.e-catworld.com/2015/10/17/all-the-papers-from-airbus-conference/
8) Andrea Rossi about his strategy7) Excellent diversified comments here:
http://www.e-catworld.com/2015/10/17/all-the-papers-from-airbus-conference/
October 18th, 2015 at 7:26 AM
Arthur Lindon:
Replications in laboratory do not violate the intellectual property. If all the tests on course and the R&D will confirm the validity of the product, we will manufacture it in such a way and with such a competitivity that the reverse engineering will be extremely difficult, if aimed to compete with us. This said, some competition sooner or later will arrive ( by the way, the patent will expire 20 years after the priority date also in all the Countries of the world where we are extending the patent). But in the meantime we will have reached further competitivity. The whole to the advantage of the Customers. F9.
Warm Regards,
A.R.
AXIL DIXIT
One more indicator that these micro balls of lightning are black holes is their very long lifetimes. This lifetime is longer than the time it takes to dry the residue from the exploding foil experiment and expose the dusty residue on a photographic film for 24 hours.
The lifetime of these solitons is at least a few days. As a rule of thumb, the time it takes a black hole to evaporate is proportional to the cube of its energy/mass. For example, a black hole that contains 10 times the energy as a smaller one would live 1000 times longer than the smaller one. A soliton containing high energy would last a very long time indeed. These solitons could be dangorous since they can pass though a reactor containment as if it was not there.
It is possible to calculate the lifetime of these solitons if they are black holes. We might be able to see some light coming from the soliton as it gets to the end of its evaporation phase and explodes.
If they do live for a long time, they can be magnetically extracted in a fuel preprocessing operation and used as LENR fuel.
There is a good chance that the exploding foil experiment is a form of cavitation. What was observed on the photographic plate might have been what LeClair produces in his cavitation experiments.
The lifetime of these solitons is at least a few days. As a rule of thumb, the time it takes a black hole to evaporate is proportional to the cube of its energy/mass. For example, a black hole that contains 10 times the energy as a smaller one would live 1000 times longer than the smaller one. A soliton containing high energy would last a very long time indeed. These solitons could be dangorous since they can pass though a reactor containment as if it was not there.
It is possible to calculate the lifetime of these solitons if they are black holes. We might be able to see some light coming from the soliton as it gets to the end of its evaporation phase and explodes.
If they do live for a long time, they can be magnetically extracted in a fuel preprocessing operation and used as LENR fuel.
There is a good chance that the exploding foil experiment is a form of cavitation. What was observed on the photographic plate might have been what LeClair produces in his cavitation experiments.
In Leonid Urutskoev’s experiments, one more indicator that these micro balls of lightning are black holes seen there are their very long lifetimes. This lifetime is longer than the time it takes to dry the residue from the exploding foil experiment and expose the dusty residue on a photographic film for 24 hours.
The lifetime of these solitons is at least a few days. As a rule of thumb, the time it takes a black hole to evaporate is proportional to the cube of its energy/mass. For example, a black hole that contains 10 times more energy then a smaller one would live 1000 times longer than that smaller one. A soliton containing high energy would last a very long time indeed. These solitons could be dangorous since they can pass though a reactor containment as if it was not there.
It is possible to calculate the lifetime of these solitons if they are black holes. We might be able to see some light coming from the soliton as it gets to the end of its evaporation phase and explodes.
If they do live for a long time, they can be magnetically extracted in a fuel preprocessing operation and used as LENR fuel.
There is a good chance that the exploding foil experiment is a form of cavitation. What was observed on the photographic plate might have been what LeClair produces in his
The lifetime of these solitons is at least a few days. As a rule of thumb, the time it takes a black hole to evaporate is proportional to the cube of its energy/mass. For example, a black hole that contains 10 times more energy then a smaller one would live 1000 times longer than that smaller one. A soliton containing high energy would last a very long time indeed. These solitons could be dangorous since they can pass though a reactor containment as if it was not there.
It is possible to calculate the lifetime of these solitons if they are black holes. We might be able to see some light coming from the soliton as it gets to the end of its evaporation phase and explodes.
If they do live for a long time, they can be magnetically extracted in a fuel preprocessing operation and used as LENR fuel.
There is a good chance that the exploding foil experiment is a form of cavitation. What was observed on the photographic plate might have been what LeClair produces in his
NikolaTesla living now could change a lot...and more
Se Tesla fosse nato un secolo dopo oggi la scienza sarebbe un secolo avanti
http://22passi.blogspot.ro/2015/10/se-tesla-fosse-nato-un-secolo-dopo-oggi.html
Possibly true but undemonstrable.
Possibly true but undemonstrable.
No comments:
Post a Comment