transmutations via 35 Kev electric arcs in H2 gas in 1951 by Ernest J. Sternglass, 1997 book: Lewis Larsen: Rich Murray 2013.07.28
"...old brass X-Ray tube..." [Vo]:Einstein and Bethe were involved in Lenr experiment !!! David Ledin [hidden email] via eskimo.com
2:07 PM (6 hours ago) 2013.07.28 to vortex-l Written by Lewis Larsen Lewis Larsen President and CEO Lattice Energy LLC
Chicago, IL USA 1-312-861-0115 November 25, 2011 Copyright 2011 Lattice Energy LLC All rights reserved Page 1 Subject: were LENRs observed in the early 1950s? Einstein and Bethe got involved in this saga
Dear Readers: You may really enjoy reading this amazing tale of a brilliant
LENR-related experimental discovery back in 1951 --- followed by its descent into total obscurity. Simply lost and forgotten by mainstream physics. In the history of science, it seems that experimental results that
don't somehow fit within some sort of contemporary conceptual paradigm often tend to get ignored. Sadly, in many cases such results are never reported anywhere in peer-reviewed journals for posterity. In
that regard, this cover note is combined with scanned page images from Chapter 6 in Dr. Ernest Sternglass' little 1997 book, “Before the Big Bang - the Origin of the Universe.”
The excerpted page scans from the above book chapter are those in which Dr. Sternglass describes some enigmatic experiments that he conducted in the Cornell University physics department back in the
early 1950s.It recounts his work with an old hydrogen-filled X-ray tube, as well as a subsequent dialogue with Albert Einstein in attempting to understand the (then) utterly inexplicable experimental results.
Seven years ago, Sternglass, then in his late 80s, told me over the telephone that (before he had communicated with Einstein about his strange results) the legendary Hans Bethe had looked over his
experimental data and was totally baffled too. Nobody at Cornell understood what was happening in the experimental setup that could possibly produce the observed fluxes of neutrons (obviously, ultra low
momentum neutrons were not produced in his experiments --- they were more akin to what happens in high-current exploding wires as opposed to what happens in typical P&F aqueous electrolytic cells). So, a
baffled Bethe called Einstein on the telephone and asked him to help PhD candidate Sternglass evaluate his unexpected experimental results. The attached chapter taken from Sternglass' book relates that story.
What is truly mind boggling about this tale is that Einstein simply looked at Sternglass' data and then immediately realized that the observed neutron production must involve
some sort of many-body collective effects with electrons (which we utilize with great explanatory power in our theory of LENRs). Can you believe it --- what a mind Einstein had ---- even at that late
stage in his life! At that point (1951), very few physicists really had any idea of what collective effects were about. Well, Einstein surely did. Unfortunately, Ernest's bizarre experimental discovery was simply not
pursued any further. In the end, Sternglass didn't heed Einstein's (and Bethe's) strong advice to "be stubborn" and publish the deeply anomalous results. Sternglass' experiments were subsequently lost and
largely forgotten by other physicists in the ensuing years, just like the work of chemists Wendt and Irion at the University of Chicago back in 1922 and other related transmutation work published in
refereed journals circa 1900 - 1927. Einstein, the only contemporary scientist who had any real inkling of what might be happening in Sternglass' puzzling experiments, died just four years after his
interaction with Sternglass on the unexplained neutron fluxes. The only surviving document wherein these intriguing experimental results were ever mentioned was
Sternglass' little book published many years later in 1997. In 2006, I stumbled across a copy of it in the $2.99 discount section at Border's bookstore and, curious, just for kicks picked it up to read over the
weekend. After reading an amazing chapter (see scanned pages), I immediately called my theoretical collaborators and said, "You guys won't believe what I just found." They were equally amazed.
We plan to specifically discuss and explain the 1951 Sternglass/Bethe/Einstein saga in an upcoming paper; it appears that this experimental anomaly is just another aspect of LENRs. Perhaps now, after
remaining in obscurity for 60 years, there can finally be some conceptual closure on Sternglass’ long-lost, unpublished experimental results. Full article [ original page images from the book ]
Jones Beene 5:55 PM (2 hours ago) 2013.07.28 to vortex-l "A first series of measurements were initiated with Klystron I on July 28, 2006, at 2 p.m." "The test was repeated the afternoon of August 4, 2006,,,,"
"A second series of measurements were initiated with Klystron II on August 8, 2006. Repeated tests produced no neutron detection. To simulate the ”trigger” needed for the neutron synthesis [3p,3s], the test was repeated the following morning with an implosion due to the contamination of the chamber with air and the resulting H −O combustion triggered by the arc.
Despite the rudimentary nature of the equipment, this implosion caused, by far, the biggest neutron alarms in detector PM1703GN due to off-scale cps without any appreciable photon detection, as confirmed and documented by the print-outs [3t].
The laboratory was evacuated again for the rest of the day, residual counts persisted for days, and the test was not repeated for safety. A third series of tests was initiated on December 20, 2006, with Klystron III filled up with commercial grade hydrogen at 100 psi, but the tests were quickly terminated for safety due to n excessive number of counts by the various detectors as well as the virtually instantaneous disintegration of the tips of the thoriated tungsten electrodes."
On the laboratory synthesis of neutrons from protons and electrons Ruggero Maria Santilli Institute for Basic Research - Box 1577, Palm Harbor, FL 34682, U.S.A.
pacs 28.20.Fc; 29.25.Dz; 24.10.-i
Abstract Following Rutherford’s 1920 historical hypothesis of the neutron as a compressed hydrogen atom in the core of stars, the laboratory synthesis of the neutron from protons
and electrons was claimed in the late 1960s by the Italian priest-physicist Don Carlo Borghi and his associates via a metal chamber containing a partially ionized hydrogen gas at a fraction of 1 bar pressure traversed by an electric arc with 5 J energy and
microwaves with 1010 s−1 frequency. In this note we report various measurements showing that, under certain conditions, electric arcs within a hydrogen gas produce neutral, hadron-size entities, here tentatively called pseudoneutrons, that are absorbed by nuclei thus causing nuclear transmutations that seemingly confirm Don Borghi’s experiment.
Since the detected nuclear reactions are esoenergetic, a primary aim for the study is the possibility of achieving, in due time, basically new, environmentally acceptable energies so much needed by mankind in view of the increasingly cataclysmic
climactic changes. References [1] Rutherford H., Proc. Roy. Soc. A, 97 (1920) 374 [1a]. [2] Chadwick J., Proc. Roy. Soc. A, 136 (1932) 692. [3] Borghi C., Giorio C. and Dall’Olio A., Communications of CENUFPE, Number 8
(1969) and 25 (1971), reprinted in the (Russian) Phys. Atomic Nuclei, 56 (1993) 205 [2a]; Santilli R. M. (Editor), Collected Papers on Don Borghi’s Experiment (International Academic Press), in press.
[4] Santilli R. M., The Synthesis of the Neutron,
[5] , Santilli R. M., ”Etherino and/or neutrino?”, Foundations of Physics, in press [6a]; and Elements of Hadronic Mechanics, Vols. I and II, 2-nd ed., 1995, Vol. III, in press, Ukraine Academy of Sciences, Kiev
(see also http://www.i-b-r.org/Hadronic-Mechanics.htm) [6b]. [6] sc Phillips J. and Mils R., J. Applied Physics, 96 (2004) 3095.
[7] Mileto G., Grandezze Operative Neutroniche degli Urti Ionici Quasirelativistici, international Academic Press, in press (2006). ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
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