[NewCandle] Dead batt. OU?
Jones Beene
jonesb9 at pacbell.net
Thu Mar 8 14:28:21 EST 2007
Neglected to mention that at the "cleavage site" typically you have
molecules and atoms which are roughly spherical - and the Casimir
"repulsive" force is seen to work between spherical bodies, whereas the
attractive variety is seen between plates.
The water molecule has the familiar "mickey mouse" face, not exactly
spherical, so that a proton being removed might possibly feel enough of
Casimir repulsive "bump" so that it is propelled away from the normal
electrostatic attraction, at least in a proportion of instances when
spiked waveforms are present, which result in a usable level (decent
probability) of energy extraction - due basically to an enhanced QM effect.
This is a little more palatable from a scientific POV - whether or not
it actually happens with a decent probability -- is yet to be determined ;-)
Jones Beene wrote:
> Nick
>
>> I hold to the hypothesis that magnetic moters and OU
>> transformers are mostly red herrings, but they
>> represent interesting "hairy edge" non-reversible
>> thermodynamic systems that might entice
>> (statistically) negentropy to show up - for a while. Until negentropy
>> gets bored and leaves.
>
>
> Cannot disagree wholeheartedly. Even so -- in "mixed" systems - i.e.
> magnetic combined with electrochemical, there could be something special
> about the "waveform" which is generated wrt chemical bonds. By "special"
> -- this includes getting the Casimir force involved at the cleavage site...
>
> That is pretty much where I was going... using a highly spiked waveform
> to split chemical bonds with less energy than should be required.
>
> Jones
>
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