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- From: logajan@ns.network.com (John Logajan)
- Subject: Re: Hydrinos, harmful or not?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan11.194502.115@ns.network.com>
- Sender: news@ns.network.com
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- Organization: Network Systems Corporation
- References: <99734D0D589FA0D268@vms2.uni-c.dk>
- Date: Mon, 11 Jan 93 19:45:02 GMT
- Lines: 14
-
- Dieter Britz <BRITZ@kemi.aau.dk> writes:
- >The Mills theory explains the excess heat as coming mainly from hydrogen atoms
- >falling to a lower energy state, one of the 1/N states. For this to work, the
- >resulting hydrinos would have to remain as such indefinitely, otherwise you'd
- >reabsorb the heat, and no excess. This would explain why Mills does not
- >believe in a biological hazard. For the hydrino to do something chemical, it
- >would have to get back up to a normal state, or be ionised.
-
- In the general case, do atoms with valence electrons in non-ground states
- cease to react chemically or do the chemical properties change radically?
-
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- - John Logajan MS010, Network Systems; 7600 Boone Ave; Brooklyn Park, MN 55428
- - logajan@network.com, 612-424-4888, Fax 612-424-2853
-