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- Newsgroups: sci.physics.fusion
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!ames!pacbell.com!tandem!zorch!fusion
- From: logajan@sleepy.network.com
- Subject: Weighty subjects
- Message-ID: <9211070814.AA05667@sleepy.network.com>
- Sender: scott@zorch.SF-Bay.ORG (Scott Hazen Mueller)
- Reply-To: logajan@sleepy.network.com
- Organization: Sci.physics.fusion/Mail Gateway
- Date: Sat, 7 Nov 1992 16:18:58 GMT
- Lines: 20
-
- ames!FNALD.FNAL.GOV!DROEGE writes:
-
- >I cannot imagine how to weigh the cathode while it is under electrolysis.
-
- The astronauts "weigh" themselves by sitting in a bucket that oscillates
- up and down. That acceleration gives rise to a number of measurable
- quantities.
-
- Maybe you could fasten the cathode to a piezo element which itself is
- fastened to the tube. The frequency of resonant oscillation ought to have
- some relationship to the mass of the cathode.
-
-
- tarl@sw.stratus.com (Tarl Neustaedter) writes:
- >>Yamaguchi claims it absorbs 760 times its own weight of deuterium.
- >
- >I presume that's a typo of some kind. That would be 9 kg/cc, which could
- >only be some variant of degenerate matter.
-
- Yeah, but it'd probably account for the cold fusion effects. heh heh
-