
Swedish Skeptics Confirm "Nuclear Process" in Tiny 4.7 kW Reactor
Date: Thursday, May 05, 2011 @ 20:05:02 UTC Topic: Testimonials
From renewableenergyworld.com, article by Thomas Blakeslee.
I spend much of my time debunking the free energy fantasies of my less
technically competent friends. Wishful thinking makes many believe that
cars can run on water after seeing a brief youtube video. Lately,
however, I have been undergoing an exciting paradigm shift.
Remember the “cold fusion” fiasco of 1989? Well, I have come to
realize that it wasn’t what it seemed at all. Denial, groupthink, dirty
tricks and easily manipulated media combined to create an historical
injustice.
Two decades have been wasted virtually ignoring this game-changing
discovery. Today’s environmental disasters, expensive energy and oil
wars could possibly have been avoided. I’ll say more in a moment about
what really happened in 1989, but first, let me tell you what got me
started reexamining what I thought I knew about cold fusion.
You
probably think that 4700 watts of clean, radiation-free power from a
three cubic inch reactor sounds like yet another impossible hoax. But
this was a third iteration demo, designed to satisfy skeptics of two
previous demonstration at the prestigious University of Bologna.
Attending the third demo
were two Swedish scientists. One was chairman of the Swedish Skeptics
Society and the other was chairman of the Energy Committee of the
Swedish Royal Academy of Science. They were both allowed to freely
examine the entire setup except for the contents of the tiny, 50cc
reactor chamber.
Their written report ended with: “Any chemical process for producing 25 kWh from any fuel in a 50 cm3 container can be ruled out. The only alternative explanation is that there is some kind of a nuclear process that gives rise to the measured energy production.” They also noted that you would have to burn 3 liters of oil to produce 25 kWh. There has since been another confirmation...
Full article: Swedish Skeptics Confirm "Nuclear Process" in Tiny 4.7 kW Reactor
[Vlad] Read the comments to this article and also watch The Magic of Mr. Rossi video on YouTube.
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