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001=Usr:0 Null User 06/30/87 20:34 Msg:0 Call:0 Lines:19
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1$If you are in need of help, you need but ask...
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002=Usr:1 CISTOP MIKEY 04/20/89 16:36 Msg:3644 Call:20522 Lines:2
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20 Remember: 186,000mps; It's not just a good idea, it's the law!
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21 **************************************************************************
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003=Usr:1 CISTOP MIKEY 04/20/89 17:09 Msg:3647 Call:20526 Lines:512
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22 Path: percival!littlei!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!rutgers!apple!bloom-beacon!
|
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23 ai-lab!cracraft
|
||
24 From: cracraft@wheaties.ai.mit.edu (Stuart Cracraft)
|
||
25 Newsgroups: alt.fusion
|
||
26 Subject: Pons and Fleischmann paper (at last!)
|
||
27 Message-ID: <1755@gluteus.ai.mit.edu>
|
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28 Date: 18 Apr 89 04:12:03 GMT
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29 Organization: Toshiba U.S. Research & Development (714-583-xxxx)
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30 Lines: 542
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31
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32 Electrochemically Induced Nuclear Fusion of Deuterium
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33
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34 Martin Fleischmann
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35 Department of Chemistry
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36 The University
|
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37 Southhampton, Hants. S09 5NH
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38 ENGLAND
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39
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||
40 Stanley Pons*
|
||
41 Department of Chemistry
|
||
42 University of Utah
|
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43 Salt Lake city, UT 84112 USA
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44
|
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45 Submitted to Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry March 11,
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46 1989; in final form March 20, 1989
|
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47
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48 * To whom correspondence should be addressed.
|
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49
|
||
50 INTRODUCTION
|
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51
|
||
52 The strange behavior of electrogenerated hydrogen dissolved in
|
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53 palladium has been studied for well over 100 years and, latterly
|
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54 these studies have been extended to deuterium and tritium [1].
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55 For discharge of deuterium from alkaline solutions of heavy water
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56 we have to consider the reaction steps:
|
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57
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||
58 - -
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59 D O + e -> D + OD (i)
|
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60 2 ads
|
||
61
|
||
62 - -
|
||
63 D + D O + e -> D + OD (ii)
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||
64 ads 2 2
|
||
65
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66 .
|
||
67 .
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||
68 D -> D (iii)
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||
69 ads lattice
|
||
70 .
|
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71 .
|
||
72 .
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73 D + D -> D (iv)
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74 ads ads 2
|
||
75
|
||
76 It is known that at potentials negative to +50 mV on the
|
||
77 reversible hydrogen scale the lattice is in the beta-phase,
|
||
78 hydrogen is in the form of protons (as shown by the migration in
|
||
79 an electric field) and is highly mobile (D = 10E-7 cm*cm/s for
|
||
80 the alpha-phase at 300K).
|
||
81
|
||
82 The overall reaction path of D2 evolution consists of steps (i)
|
||
83 and (ii) [2] so that the chemical potential of dissolved D+ is
|
||
84 normally determined by the relative rates of these two steps.
|
||
85 The establishment of negative overpotentials on the outgoing
|
||
86 interface of palladium membrane electrodes for hydrogen discharge
|
||
87 at the ingoing interface [3] (determined by the balance of all the
|
||
88 steps i) to (iv)) demonstrates that the chemical potential can be
|
||
89 raised to high values. Our own experiments with palladium
|
||
90 diffusion tubes indicate that values as high as 0.8 eV can
|
||
91 readily be achieved [4] (values as high as 2eV may be achievable).
|
||
92 The astronomical magnitude of this value can readily be
|
||
93 appreciated; attempts to attain this level via the compression of
|
||
94 D2 (step (iv)) would require pressures in excess of 10E24
|
||
95 atmospheres. In spite of this high compression, D2 is not
|
||
96 formed; i.e. the s-character of the electron density around the
|
||
97 nuclei is very low and the electrons form part of the band
|
||
98 structure of the overall system. A feature which is of special
|
||
99 interest and which prompted the present investigation is the very
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||
100 high H/D separation factor for absorbed hydrogen and deuterium
|
||
101 (see Figs. 4 and 6 of Ref [2]). This can only be explained if
|
||
102 the H+ and D+ in the lattice behave as classical oscillators
|
||
103 (possibly as delocalised species) i.e. they must be in very
|
||
104 shallow potential wells. In view of the very high compression
|
||
105 and mobility of the dissolved species there must therefore be a
|
||
106 significant number of close collisions and one can pose the
|
||
107 question: would nuclear fusion of D+ such as
|
||
108
|
||
109 2 2 3 1
|
||
110 D + D -> T(1.01 MeV) + H(3.02 MeV) (v)
|
||
111 or
|
||
112 2 2 3
|
||
113 D + D -> He(0.82 MeV) + n(2.45 MeV) (vi)
|
||
114
|
||
115 be feasible under these conditions?
|
||
116
|
||
117 EXPERIMENTAL
|
||
118
|
||
119 In the work reported here D+ was compressed galvanostatically
|
||
120 into sheet, rod and cube samples of Pd from 0.1 M LiOD in 99.5%
|
||
121 D2O + 0.5% H2O solutions. Electrode potentials were measured
|
||
122 with respect to a Pd-D reference electrode charged to the alpha-
|
||
123 beta-phase equilibrium. We report here experiments of several
|
||
124 kinds:
|
||
125
|
||
126 1) Calorimetric measurements of heat balances at low current
|
||
127 densities (=1.6 mA/cm*cm) were made using a 2mm x 8cm x 8cm Pd
|
||
128 sheet cathode surrounded by a large Pt sheet counter electrode.
|
||
129 Measurements were carried out in Dewar cells maintained in a
|
||
130 large constant temperature water bath (300K), the temperature
|
||
131 inside the cell and of the water bath being monitored with
|
||
132 Beckman thermometers. The Heavy Water Equivalent of the Dewar
|
||
133 and contents and the rate of Newton's law of cooling losses were
|
||
134 determined by addition of hot D2O and by following the cooling
|
||
135 curves.
|
||
136
|
||
137 2) Calorimetric measurements at higher current densities
|
||
138 were carried out using 1, 2 and 4mm diameter x 10 cm long Pd rods
|
||
139 surrounded by a Pt wire anode wound on a cage of glass rods. The
|
||
140 Dewars were fitted with resistance heaters for the determination
|
||
141 of Newton's law of cooling losses; temperatures were measured
|
||
142 using calibrated thermistors. Experiments with rods up to 2 cm
|
||
143 in diameter will be reported elsewhere [5]. Stirring in these
|
||
144 experiments (and in those listed under 1)) was achieved, where
|
||
145 necessary, by gas sparging using electrolytically generated D2.
|
||
146 Measurements at the highest current density reported here
|
||
147 (512 mA/cm*cm) were carried out using rods of 1.25 cm length; the
|
||
148 results given in Table 1 have been rescaled to those for rods of
|
||
149 10 cm length.
|
||
150
|
||
151 3) The spectrum of gamma-rays emitted from the water bath due to
|
||
152 the (n,gamma) reaction
|
||
153
|
||
154 1 2
|
||
155 H + n(2.45 MeV) -> D + gamma(2.5 MeV) (vii)
|
||
156
|
||
157 was determined using a sodium iodide crystal scintillation
|
||
158 detector and a Nuclear Data ND-6 High Energy Spectrum analyzer.
|
||
159 The spectrum was taken above the water immediately surrounding an
|
||
160 0.8 x 10 cm Pd-rod cathode charged to equilibrium; it was
|
||
161 corrected for background by subtracting the spectrum over a sink
|
||
162 (containing identical shielding materials) 10 m from the water
|
||
163 bath.
|
||
164
|
||
165 The neutron flux from a cell containing a 0.4 x 10 cm Pd-rod
|
||
166 electrode was measured using an Harwell Neutron Dose Equivalent
|
||
167 Rate Monitor, Type 95/0945-5. The counting efficiency of this
|
||
168 Bonner-sphere type instrument for 2.5 MeV neutrons was estimated
|
||
169 to be 2.4 x 10E-4 and was further reduced by a factor of 100 due
|
||
170 to the unfavorable configuration (the rod opposite the BF filled
|
||
171 3
|
||
172 detector). The background count was determined by making
|
||
173 measurements 50m from the laboratory containing the experiments;
|
||
174 both locations were in the basement of a new building which is
|
||
175 overlain by 5 floors of concrete. In view of the low counting
|
||
176 efficiency, counting was carried out for 50 hours. Measurements
|
||
177 on a 0.4 x 10 cm rod electrode run at 64 mA/(cm*cm) gave a
|
||
178 neutron count 3 times above that of the background.
|
||
179
|
||
180 4) The rate of generation/accumulation of tritium was
|
||
181 measured using similar cells (test tubes sealed with Parafilm)
|
||
182 containing 1 mm diameter x 10 cm Pd rod electrodes. Measurements
|
||
183 on the D/T separation factor alone were made using an identical
|
||
184 cell containing a 1 mm diameter x 10 cm Pt electrode (this
|
||
185 measurement served as a blank as the H/D separation factors on Pd
|
||
186 and Pt are known to be closely similar). 1 ml samples of the
|
||
187 electrolyte were withdrawn at 2 day intervals, neutralised with
|
||
188 potassium hydrogen phthalate and the T-content was determined
|
||
189 using Ready Gel liquid scintillation "cocktail" and a Beckman LS
|
||
190 5000 TD counting system. The counting efficiency was determined
|
||
191 to be about 45% using standard samples of T-containing solutions.
|
||
192 The beta-decay scintillation spectrum was determined using the
|
||
193 counting system.
|
||
194
|
||
195 In these experiments standard additions of 1 ml of the electrolyte
|
||
196 were made following sampling. Losses of D2O due to electrolysis
|
||
197 in these and all the other experiments recorded here were made up
|
||
198 using D2O alone. A record of the volume of D2O additions was
|
||
199 made for all the experiments.
|
||
200
|
||
201 In all of the experiments reported here all connections were
|
||
202 fitted into Kel-F caps and the caps were sealed to the glass
|
||
203 cells using Parafilm.
|
||
204
|
||
205 Results for the mass spectroscopy of the evolved gases and full
|
||
206 experimental details for all the measurements will be given
|
||
207 elsewhere [5].
|
||
208
|
||
209 RESULTS
|
||
210
|
||
211 1) and 2)
|
||
212
|
||
213 In the calorimetric experiments we can set lower and upper bounds
|
||
214 on the rates of Joule heating depending on whether reactions (i),
|
||
215 (ii) , and (iv) are balanced by
|
||
216
|
||
217 - -
|
||
218 4OD -> D O + O + 4e (viii)
|
||
219 2 2
|
||
220
|
||
221 at the anode or by the reverse of reactions (i), (ii), and (iv).
|
||
222 In the former case the Joule heating is simply the cell current
|
||
223 multiplied by (cell voltage - 1.54 V) where 1.54 V is the cell
|
||
224 voltage at which reactions (i), (ii), and (iv) balanced by (viii)
|
||
225 are thermoneutral: irreversibilities in the electrode reactions
|
||
226 and ohmic resistance losses have identical effects on the Joule
|
||
227 heating. However, if reactions (i), (ii), and (iv) are reversed
|
||
228 at the anode and, equally, if the reverse of reactions (viii)
|
||
229 contributes to the cathode processes, then we get an upper bound
|
||
230 to the Joule heating which is simply the cell current multiplied
|
||
231 by the cell voltage.
|
||
232
|
||
233 We have confirmed in long duration experiments that the rates of
|
||
234 addition of D2O to the cells required to maintain constant
|
||
235 volumes are those for reactions (i), (ii), and (iv) balanced by
|
||
236 reaction (viii). Furthermore, subtraction of the ohmic potential
|
||
237 losses in solution for the cell containing the large Pt-anode
|
||
238 shows that the electrolysis of D2O is the dominant process, i.e.
|
||
239 we have to assume that the Joule heating is close to the lower
|
||
240 bound.
|
||
241
|
||
242 Table 1 gives the results for experiments designed to cover the
|
||
243 effects of electrolyte geometry, electrode size, current density
|
||
244 (or overpotential) method of operation, etc. The nature and
|
||
245 large magnitude of the effects can be appreciated from the
|
||
246 following observations:
|
||
247
|
||
248 a) excess enthalpy generation is markedly dependent on the
|
||
249 applied current density (i.e. magnitude of the shift in the
|
||
250 chemical potential) and is proportional to the volume of the
|
||
251 electrodes; i.e. we are dealing with a phenomenon in the bulk of
|
||
252 the Pd-electrodes.
|
||
253
|
||
254 b) enthalpy generation can exceed 10 watts/(cm*cm*cm) of the
|
||
255 palladium electrode; this is maintained for experimental times in
|
||
256 excess of 120 hours during which typically heat in excess of
|
||
257 4MJ/(cm*cm*cm) of electrode volume was liberated. It is
|
||
258 inconceivable that this could be due to anything but nuclear
|
||
259 processes.
|
||
260
|
||
261 c) in research on thermonuclear fusion, the effects are
|
||
262 expressed as a percentage of the breakeven where 100% breakeven
|
||
263 implies that the thermal output equals the input (neglecting the
|
||
264 power required to drive the equipment). In electrochemical
|
||
265 experiments we have additionally to take into account whether
|
||
266 breakeven should be based on the Joule heat or total energy
|
||
267 supplied to the cell. Furthermore, in the latter case the energy
|
||
268 supplied depends on the nature of the anode reaction. Table 2
|
||
269 lists three such figures of merit and it can be seen that we can
|
||
270 already make reasonable projections to 1000%. Some of the
|
||
271 factors important to scale-up are already apparent from Tables 1
|
||
272 and 2.
|
||
273
|
||
274 d) the effects have been determined using D2O alone.
|
||
275 Projections to the use of appropriate D2O/DTO/T2O mixtures (as is
|
||
276 commonly done in fusion research) might therefore be expected to
|
||
277 yield thermal excesses in the range 10E3 - 10E4 % (even in the
|
||
278 absence of spin polarisation) with enthalpy releases in excess of
|
||
279 10 kW/(cm*cm*cm). We have to report here that under the
|
||
280 conditions of the last experiment even using D2O alone, a
|
||
281 substantial portion of the cathode fused (melting point 1554
|
||
282 degrees C) part of it vapourised and the cell and contents and a
|
||
283 part of the fume cupboard housing the experiment were destroyed.
|
||
284
|
||
285 TABLE 1. Generation of excess enthalpy in Pd-cathodes as a
|
||
286 function of current density and electrode size.
|
||
287
|
||
288 Cube Sheet Rod Rod Rod electrode type
|
||
289
|
||
290 1x1x1 cm 0.2x8x8cm 0.4x10cm 0.2x10cm 0.1x10cm dimensions
|
||
291
|
||
292 125 0.8 8 8 8 current density (mA/cm*cm)
|
||
293
|
||
294 WARNING 0.153 .153 .036 .0075 excess rate of heating
|
||
295 (watts/cm*cm*cm)
|
||
296 IGNITION?
|
||
297 (see text) 0 .122 .115 .095 excess specific rate of
|
||
298 heating (watts/cm*cm*cm)
|
||
299
|
||
300 250 1.2 64 64 64 current density (mA/cm*cm)
|
||
301
|
||
302 .027 1.751 .493 .079 excess rate of heating
|
||
303 (watt)
|
||
304
|
||
305 .0021 1.39 1.57 1.01 excess specific rate of
|
||
306 heating (watts/cm*cm*cm)
|
||
307
|
||
308 1.6 512 512 512 current density *
|
||
309 (mA/cm*cm) *
|
||
310
|
||
311 0.79 26.8 3.02 .654 excess rate of heading
|
||
312 (watt) *
|
||
313
|
||
314 .0061 21.4 9.61 8.33 excess specific rate of
|
||
315 heating (watts/cm*cm*cm)
|
||
316
|
||
317 * Measured on electrodes of length 1.25 cm and rescaled to 10 cm.
|
||
318
|
||
319 TABLE 2. Generation of excess enthalpy in Pd rod cathodes
|
||
320 expressed as a percentage of breakeven values.
|
||
321
|
||
322 0.4x10cm 0.2x10cm 0.1x10cm dimensions
|
||
323 8 8 8 current density (mA/cm*cm)
|
||
324 111 62 23 excess heating * (% of breakeven) *
|
||
325 53 27 12 excess heating** (% of breakeven) **
|
||
326 1224 286 60 excess heating*** (% of breakeven) ***
|
||
327 64 64 64 current density (mA/cm*cm)
|
||
328 66 46 19 excess heating * (% of breakeven) *
|
||
329 45 29 11 excess heating** (% of breakeven) **
|
||
330 438 247 79 excess heating*** (% of breakeven) ***
|
||
331 512 512 512 current density (mA/cm*cm)
|
||
332 59 14 5 excess heating * (% of breakeven) *
|
||
333 48 11 5 excess heating** (% of breakeven) **
|
||
334 839 189 81 excess heating*** (% of breakeven) ***
|
||
335
|
||
336 * % of breakeven based on Joule heat supplied to
|
||
337 cell and anode reaction
|
||
338
|
||
339 - -
|
||
340 4OD -> 2D O + O + 4e
|
||
341 2 2
|
||
342
|
||
343 ** % of breakeven based on total energy supplied to
|
||
344 cell and anode reaction
|
||
345
|
||
346 - -
|
||
347 4OD -> 2D O + O + 4e
|
||
348 2 2
|
||
349
|
||
350 *** % of breakeven based on total energy supplied to
|
||
351 cell and for an electrode reaction
|
||
352
|
||
353 - -
|
||
354 D + 2OD -> 2D O + 4e
|
||
355 2 2
|
||
356
|
||
357 with a cell potential of 0.5V.
|
||
358
|
||
359 2 2
|
||
360 All %'s based on D + D reactions, i.e. no projection
|
||
361 to [next line lost in scanning]
|
||
362
|
||
363 3) Fig. 1A illustrates the gamma-ray spectra which have been
|
||
364 recorded in regions above the water bath adjacent to the
|
||
365 electrolytic cells and this spectrum confirms that 2.45 MeV
|
||
366 neutrons are indeed generated in the electrodes by reaction (vi).
|
||
367 These gamma-rays are generated by the reaction (vii). We note
|
||
368 that the intensities of the spectra are weak and, in agreement
|
||
369 with this, the neutron flux calculated from the measurements with
|
||
370 the dosimeter is of the order 4 x 10E4 1/s for a 0.4 x 10 cm rod
|
||
371 electrode polarised at 64 mA/(cm*cm).
|
||
372
|
||
373 Figure 1A
|
||
374
|
||
375 gamma-ray spectrum recorded above the water bath containing the
|
||
376 rod cathodes. Measurements carried out with a sodium iodide
|
||
377 crystal scintillation detector and a Nuclear Data ND-6 High
|
||
378 Energy Spectrum Analyzer. The background in this region (taken
|
||
379 over a water bath 5 m from the experiment containing identical
|
||
380 shielding materials) is level at about 400 counts; spectrum
|
||
381 accumulation time: 48 hours.
|
||
382
|
||
383 4) In agreement with this low neutron flux, the accumulation
|
||
384 in the electrolyte also indicates a low rate for reaction (v)
|
||
385 (which has been found to be somewhat faster than (vi) in high
|
||
386 energy physics experiments). The time dependent fraction of
|
||
387 tritium in the solvent can be shown to follow(?)
|
||
388
|
||
389 (1):
|
||
390 -(1 + lambda * delta )*Rt
|
||
391 D,T
|
||
392 alpha = gamma * exp ---------------------------
|
||
393 T T lambda * S * N
|
||
394 D,T
|
||
395 .
|
||
396
|
||
397 delta
|
||
398 D,T
|
||
399 + ((1 + lambda)gamma + beta/R) * --------------------- * -+
|
||
400 T (1 + lambda*delta ) |
|
||
401 D,T |
|
||
402 |
|
||
403 +-------------------------------------------+
|
||
404 |
|
||
405 | -(1 + lambda * delta )Rt
|
||
406 | D,T
|
||
407 +--> * (1 - exp --------------------------)
|
||
408 lambda*S * N
|
||
409 D,T
|
||
410
|
||
411 where:
|
||
412
|
||
413 gamma is the fraction of T in the electrolyte/solvent feeds,
|
||
414 T
|
||
415
|
||
416 lambda * R (atoms T/s, here 4x10E11 atoms/s) is the sampling rate
|
||
417 which has been assumed to be continuous in time,
|
||
418
|
||
419 N is the total number of atoms of D in the Dewar (14.6x10E23),
|
||
420
|
||
421 S is the D/T separation factor,
|
||
422 D,T
|
||
423
|
||
424 beta is the rate of the nuclear reaction (v) (events/s), and
|
||
425
|
||
426 R is the rate of electrolysis expressed as atoms D 1/s
|
||
427 (here 1.24x10E14(?) atoms/s)
|
||
428
|
||
429 It can be seen that the final value alpha for the cell containing
|
||
430 T
|
||
431 the Pt-cathode (for which we assume beta = 0) is:
|
||
432 A
|
||
433
|
||
434 .
|
||
435 delta
|
||
436 D,T
|
||
437 alpha = ((1 + lambda)*gamma + beta/R) * ---------------------- (1)
|
||
438 T T (1 + lambda * delta )
|
||
439 D,T
|
||
440
|
||
441 Blank experiments using Pt-cathodes (which have very similar
|
||
442 separation factors to Pd) indicate little accumulation of DTO so
|
||
443 that S is close to unity under the conditions of our
|
||
444 D,T
|
||
445 experiments. DTO accumulates in the cells containing Pd cathodes
|
||
446 to the extent of about 100dpm/ml of electrolyte and Fig. 1B
|
||
447 demonstrates that the species accumulated is indeed tritium. Use
|
||
448 of equation (2) then indicates that reaction (v) takes place to
|
||
449 the extent of 1-2 x 10E4 atoms/s which is consistent with the
|
||
450 measurements of the neutron flux, bearing in mind the difference
|
||
451 in radii. On the other hand the data on enthalpy generation
|
||
452 would require rates for reactions (v) and (vi) in the range 10E11-
|
||
453 10E14 atoms/s. It is evident that reactions (v) and (vi) are
|
||
454 only a small part of the overall reaction scheme and that other
|
||
455 nuclear processes must be involved.
|
||
456
|
||
457 (see figure on trailing pages)
|
||
458
|
||
459 Figure 1B
|
||
460
|
||
461 beta-ray disintegration scintillation spectrum measured with a
|
||
462 Bockman LS5000TD counter-spectrometer.
|
||
463
|
||
464 DISCUSSION
|
||
465
|
||
466 We realise that the results reported here raise more questions
|
||
467 than they provide answers and that much further work is required
|
||
468 on this topic. The observation of the generation of neutrons and
|
||
469 of tritium from electrochemically compressed D+ in Pd cathode is
|
||
470 in itself a very surprising result and, evidently, it is
|
||
471 necessary to reconsider the quantum mechanics of electrons and
|
||
472 deuterons in such host lattices. In particular we must ask: is
|
||
473 it possible to achieve a fusion rate of 10E-19 1/s for reactions
|
||
474 (v) and (vi) for clusters of deuterons (presumably located in the
|
||
475 octahedral lattice positions) at typical energies of 1eV?
|
||
476 Experiments on isotopically substituted hydrides of well defined
|
||
477 structures might well answer this question.
|
||
478
|
||
479 The most surprising feature of our results however, is that
|
||
480 reactions (v) and (vi) are only a small part of the overall
|
||
481 reaction scheme and that the bulk of the energy release is due to
|
||
482 an hitherto unknown nuclear process or processes (presumably
|
||
483 again due to clusters of deuterons). We draw attention again to
|
||
484 the very large magnitude of the effects in the confinement
|
||
485 parameter diagram, fig. 2. We note that the values of the
|
||
486 confinement parameter are extremely high compared to conventional
|
||
487 research on fusion (high particle densities, lifetimes of 10E2 -
|
||
488 10E4 years) while the chemical potential is very low compared to
|
||
489 the equivalent parameter, (T), in those experiments. It is
|
||
490 evident that diagrams of this kind require extension in the third
|
||
491 dimension for electrochemical experiments since the results are
|
||
492 so markedly dependent on electrode volume (increase of current
|
||
493 density displaces the points in a vertical direction). We draw
|
||
494 attention again to the fact that the experiments already carried
|
||
495 out are close to the breakeven point; further work to extend the
|
||
496 electrode dimension (and to establish the nature of the processes
|
||
497 responsible for the enthalpy release) is in progress. Finally, we
|
||
498 urge the use of extreme caution in such experiments: a plausible
|
||
499 interpretation of the experiment using the Pd-cube electrode is
|
||
500 in terms of ignition. Projection of the values in Tables 1 and 2
|
||
501 to more extreme conditions indicate that this may indeed be
|
||
502 feasible.
|
||
503
|
||
504 Figure 2
|
||
505 2 2
|
||
506 Confinement parameter-chemical potential-size diagram for D + D
|
||
507 2 3
|
||
508 fusion reaction in Pd-cathodes, projection to the D + T
|
||
509 reaction.
|
||
510
|
||
511 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
|
||
512
|
||
513 We wish to thank Johnson Matthey PLC for the loan of precious
|
||
514 metals for this project.
|
||
515
|
||
516 LITERATURE REFERENCES
|
||
517
|
||
518 1. W. M. Mueller, J. T. Blacklodge, G. G. Libowitz, "Metal
|
||
519 Hydrides", Academic Press, New York (1968); G. Bambakadis, Ed.,
|
||
520 "Metal Hydrides", Plenum Press (1981).
|
||
521
|
||
522 2. B. Dandapani and M. Fleischmann, Journal of Electroanalytical
|
||
523 Chemistry, 12 (1972) 323.2.39
|
||
524
|
||
525 3. A. N. Frumkin and N. A. Aladzhalova, Acta Physicochim.
|
||
526 U.R.S.S., 2 (1940) 1.9
|
||
527
|
||
528 4. Unpublished results
|
||
529
|
||
530 5. M. Fleischmann, M. Hawkins, and B. Pons, to be published.
|
||
531
|
||
532
|
||
533 *************************************************************************
|
||
004=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 04/20/89 18:50 Msg:3648 Call:20529 Lines:22
|
||
534
|
||
535 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
536 The paper above has the potential to change the world. (I'm
|
||
537 commenting on it, I didn't do the uploading.)
|
||
538
|
||
539 So many of the things we take for granted today did not exist 20 years
|
||
540 ago. Many of the things we will be using in 20 years do not exist today.
|
||
541 Cold Fusion combined with the possibility of room temputure super-conductors
|
||
542 are the greatest scientific discoveries of this decade.
|
||
543
|
||
544 If things work out as it appears they will, the face of the world
|
||
545 will be changed radicly.
|
||
546
|
||
547 I remember hearing that somebody said 'may you live in interesting
|
||
548 times.' and meaning it as a curse. It is sad that anybody would be that
|
||
549 blind to the potential of the progress and the future it can bring.
|
||
550
|
||
551 So, comments?
|
||
552
|
||
553 An Astral Dreamer
|
||
554 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
555
|
||
005=Usr:219 Friar Mossback 04/20/89 19:12 Msg:3649 Call:20530 Lines:9
|
||
556 [][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][]
|
||
557 I hope it is all true.
|
||
558
|
||
559 The paper that appeared to all in the Inn roused even sleepy old Friar.
|
||
560 A force greater than Magik itself had been foretold in the past, and the
|
||
561 paper that we read said it might be coming soon. This would be the end
|
||
562 of life as we know it. It would become better.
|
||
563 Where is that mole fellow, he might enjoy hereing about this too!
|
||
564 [][][][][][][][][][][][][] Friar [][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][]
|
||
006=Usr:465 Gregg Harris 04/20/89 19:42 Msg:3650 Call:20531 Lines:59
|
||
565 )(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&)(*)(*&)(*&&)(*&)(*&
|
||
566
|
||
567 Doom, Dispare, Distruction.
|
||
568
|
||
569 "When will my jailor release me?" asked the Mole to himself.
|
||
570
|
||
571 "NOW" boomed a voice around him.
|
||
572
|
||
573 the voice had come from a short aelf, a full 6" shorter then the others.
|
||
574 the aelf, later introduced as rodrigues, opened the thick jail door
|
||
575 with a strange square key and lead the Mole into a small room next to his
|
||
576 previous prison.
|
||
577
|
||
578 "So, your the Mole. What were you doing down here?" asked rodrigues.
|
||
579
|
||
580 "Me? I heard a noise coming from the floor of my room, so I dug down
|
||
581 to investigate."
|
||
582
|
||
583 "Well! A curious type are you. We have ways to deal with curious 'types."
|
||
584 said rodrigues.
|
||
585
|
||
586 "So can I go now?" asked the Mole.
|
||
587
|
||
588 "GO! YOU WANT TO GO! "
|
||
589 "SURE We'll let you go, go to the other side you will!"
|
||
590 "Right into their hands, Tell them our floor plans. help them plan their
|
||
591 attack"
|
||
592 "Sure, We'll let you go"
|
||
593
|
||
594 "Just asking." whispered the Mole.
|
||
595
|
||
596 "What did you say? whispering into a mic no doubt."
|
||
597 "Manuel, get in here!"
|
||
598 An aelf walked into the room and saluted.
|
||
599 "Private Manuel reporting for duty"
|
||
600
|
||
601 "Private, search this prisoner." ordered Rodrigues.
|
||
602
|
||
603 The aelf frisked the mole, pulling out from the numerous folds of
|
||
604 skin; two cans of dehydrated worms for long journeys, a can of
|
||
605 Fosters', claw ointment to keep those clas nice and sharp, and
|
||
606 the last months edition of playmole with pictures cut out for
|
||
607 reading material.
|
||
608
|
||
609 "Obviously packed for a long journey, now aren't we mr. mole" said
|
||
610 rodrigues sarcastically.
|
||
611
|
||
612 "Oh, yea. We moles don't have any real permanent homes to speak
|
||
613 of, so we always carry the bare neccesities with us at all times.
|
||
614 makes livin' real cheap." said the Mole.
|
||
615
|
||
616 "Humpf! Manuel, stuff this overgrown rodent into the cell. i'll
|
||
617 deal with him later." said rodrigues.
|
||
618
|
||
619 As Manuel started to shove the Mole back to the cage the mole said
|
||
620 "Well, can't I at least keep the magazine.."
|
||
621
|
||
622 The Mole
|
||
623 )((*&)(*&&)(*&)(*&()*&&)(*&)(*&(*&()*)(*&
|
||
007=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 04/20/89 21:46 Msg:3651 Call:20535 Lines:28
|
||
624 .
|
||
625
|
||
626 "What do you mean when you say your quiting College? You must
|
||
627 be nearly done by now."
|
||
628 "No, I've got the better part of another year to go."
|
||
629 "Its only one more year then, why not get it done with?"
|
||
630 "Because, I'm sick of the whole thing. Most of the Profesors don't
|
||
631 care, the subjects I'm interested in are always taught by people who
|
||
632 really should find another field to work in... And, because I want to."
|
||
633 "Aren't you being selfish? How hard can it really be? You just go
|
||
634 to class and you do your homework and in three terms you'll be done."
|
||
635 "But I can't do that anymore. I've been grinding myself down for
|
||
636 three and 1/2 years now, and there just isn't much left. I need to grow,
|
||
637 and I'm being stunted."
|
||
638 "Think about your future, do you know what this will do for your
|
||
639 earning power?"
|
||
640 "I have thought about it. I know someday I'll have to go back if I
|
||
641 Really want to accomplish the goals I've set for myself. But right now
|
||
642 I can earn fairly good money, and I'm still young. I'll have time later."
|
||
643 "Thats what my father thought, he never did go back."
|
||
644 "But he had a family, and a full time job..."
|
||
645 "And you won't in a few years?"
|
||
646 "I just don't want to talk about it ok?"
|
||
647 "You can't get away from it you know. I am you after all."
|
||
648
|
||
649
|
||
650 .
|
||
651
|
||
008=Usr:4 Milchar 04/21/89 01:07 Msg:3652 Call:20541 Lines:44
|
||
652 ::: BGN CYBER-LINK: ID F78B:9EA1:C88D CODED: SEMAPHORE :::
|
||
653 The muted drone of a flycar interrupted Sem's fitful doze. He
|
||
654 jerked awake, a wild terror posessing him for a few moments. The
|
||
655 flycar passed on, not knowing or perhaps not caring to know about the
|
||
656 havoc it had wrought. Tremors wreaked Sem's thin body. Sleep
|
||
657 was his enemy, the little Death that tried to posess him. Sem fumbled
|
||
658 for his roll of blood-red derms that lay upon the very top of his
|
||
659 console, yearning for the reprieve they would lend him.
|
||
660 His body shook as he peeled the thin backing and applied the
|
||
661 time-release packet to his inner wrist. There it would deal out minute
|
||
662 quantities of the energy he desired.
|
||
663 The derm hit him with a rush of power. Every fiber of his body
|
||
664 sang with the drug's sweet song. It was very special stuff, made up
|
||
665 in a private chem-shop in Atlanta and coded to Sem's DNA. It cost half
|
||
666 of what Sem made on his job, but it was worth the price-- any price.
|
||
667 It gave Sem his edge. If a console jockey got wind of critical data
|
||
668 just ten minutes before anyone else, he could be rich for life. Sem
|
||
669 was good. Very good. He'd topped out the C-space aptitude test in
|
||
670 school- a talent that would have been worthless in another day and age,
|
||
671 but enabled Sem to live any way he wished.
|
||
672 Calmed now, Sem turned to his console. It was as unique as
|
||
673 Sem was, a towering monster of circuits, solder, and fiber-optic cable.
|
||
674 His keyboard resembled that of an organ, and his 'trodes hung from a
|
||
675 large hook on his left. It was custom-made, all of it. Factory
|
||
676 prototypes from all over the world meshed in a titanium-steel frame to
|
||
677 produce the most powerful ICE-cutter ever built. Sem felt like a god
|
||
678 at its controls, able to alter history with a few well-timed commands.
|
||
679 He carefully placed the 'trodes upon his head and adjusted
|
||
680 them for comfort. Nothing could be allowed to intrude upon his
|
||
681 concentration, once he was in the C-space matrix. In there, it could
|
||
682 be infect or be infected. Virus programs could cripple a console,
|
||
683 reduce its effectiveness, render it useless. It would be unable to
|
||
684 protect the operator from lethal feedback programs. Too many things
|
||
685 could go wrong on a "sick" console, which explained the dozens of
|
||
686 quality rigs on the black market that had been involved in one run
|
||
687 too many. Buying one was like playing Russian roulette. Never paid
|
||
688 to stay with one longer than you had to. Eventually all the luck ran
|
||
689 out-- or so superstition went. Jockeys that believed changed rigs
|
||
690 often, avoiding the end of the luck in each one.
|
||
691 Sem avoided the superstitious. He had faith in his console.
|
||
692 It wouldn't fail him.
|
||
693 Especially not on the most important run of his life...
|
||
694 ::: END CYBER-LINK: RUN TIME 00:10:45 CODED: SEMAPHORE :::
|
||
695 ::: ADVERT: buy Silicon vallEy stoCk and pRoducE a forTune :::
|
||
009=Usr:71 David Shult 04/21/89 12:19 Msg:3653 Call:20545 Lines:71
|
||
696 696969696969
|
||
697 APn 04/21 0451 Tanker Spill
|
||
698 By PAUL JENKINS Associated Press Writer
|
||
699 NAKED ISLAND, Alaska (AP) -- For a few seconds, Interior Secretary Manuel
|
||
700 Lujan Jr. tottered this way and that on an oil-slickened rock. A worker laborin
|
||
701 to rid the shore of gooey oil stepped in and saved him from an embarrassing
|
||
702 fall.
|
||
703 While Lujan and two congressman were touring a section of the Prince William
|
||
704 Sound shoreline Thursday, a giant Soviet oil skimmer was testing its booms at
|
||
705 Resurrection Bay some 80 miles west in the Gulf of Alaska.
|
||
706 The Coast Guard plainly was delighted with the promise of progress brought b
|
||
707 the 425-foot Vaidogubsky, and gains made by a 120-foot Mr. Clean III, a skimmer
|
||
708 from Santa Barbara, Calif.
|
||
709 "This was a major step, having those two skimmers out there," said Coast
|
||
710 Guard Lt. Gary Stock, who was monitoring the cleanup in Anchorage.
|
||
711 Exxon spokesman Henry Beathard in Valdez estimated that more than 2 million
|
||
712 gallons of the 10.1 million-gallon spill was recoverable from the surface of th
|
||
713 gulf and Prince William Sound. The spill occurred March 24 after the tanker
|
||
714 Exxon Valdez hit Bligh Reef.
|
||
715 Lujan, Reps. Don Young, R-Alaska, and Curt Weldon, R-Pa., and a sizable
|
||
716 entourage flew from Valdez on Thursday by helicopter to Naked Island, a remote
|
||
717 beach 45 miles to the southwest.
|
||
718 The group got a look at the only area in Prince William Sound where shorelin
|
||
719 cleanup operations have started. Exxon estimates it has cleaned 2,100 feet of
|
||
720 the more than 300 miles of oil-splotched shore.
|
||
721 As Lujan inspected the cleanup effort, oil glistened off rocks or stood in
|
||
722 gleaming puddles in the bright sun. A black stain along the driftwood-strewn
|
||
723 beach marked the high-tide line. The smell of crude was strong.
|
||
724 From a distance, the shore was a palette of oil-smeared workers clad in hard
|
||
725 hats and bright orange, yellow and black rainwear. They used fire hoses to blas
|
||
726 oil off a 75-yard stretch of rocky beach as the sun played through the mist,
|
||
727 casting rainbows.
|
||
728 Landing craft laden with heavy equipment hugged the shore, and an oil skimme
|
||
729 dipped up the runoff from the beach facing McPherson Passage.
|
||
730 Lujan, wearing an orange float suit, picked his way to the end of the beach
|
||
731 nearest his aircraft, and in moments was posing with a fire hose for
|
||
732 photographs.
|
||
733 Before it was over, several of the secretary's traveling companions had
|
||
734 joined him. Laughing, they enthusiastically blasted the oily mess with such
|
||
735 force that it carried over a boom and into the water workers were trying to
|
||
736 protect. That sparked an obscenity laced tirade from people on a barge nearby.
|
||
737 Retreating, Lujan said, "It looks like this is going to be a big job to clea
|
||
738 up."
|
||
739 But he said it was too early for him to know what he would tell President
|
||
740 Bush come Monday.
|
||
741 Lujan and the congressmen were briefed early Thursday by the U.S. Coast Guar
|
||
742 in Valdez, then by Exxon officials.
|
||
743 Weldon, a member of the House's Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee, sai
|
||
744 he was unimpressed.
|
||
745 "There were a lot of people covering their rear ends," he said.
|
||
746 Weldon noted the two briefings covered essentially the same ground, "but the
|
||
747 were completely, diametrically opposed."
|
||
748 He said the question that must be answered is why -- if there were a
|
||
749 contingency plan -- it was not implemented almost immediately after the spill.
|
||
750 Young credited the beach workers with making some headway.
|
||
751 "They're making progress, that's the big thing," he said.
|
||
752 Vice President Dan Quayle will stop in Anchorage and Valdez on May 4-5 as he
|
||
753 returns from a Pacific Rim excursion and will tour spill sites, U.S. Sen. Frank
|
||
754 Murkowski, R-Alaska, said.
|
||
755
|
||
756 So when will Bush and his people
|
||
757 and EXXON take the oil spill seriously? So how much higher will gasoline price
|
||
758 s go before there is a consumer revolt? How much are you doing to express your
|
||
759 dissatisfaction with the handling of the environment?
|
||
760
|
||
761 B O Y C O T T E X X O N---BOYCOTT EXXON---B O Y C O T T E X X O N
|
||
762
|
||
763
|
||
764 696969696969696969
|
||
765
|
||
766
|
||
010=Usr:131 THE VISION 04/21/89 15:34 Msg:3654 Call:20551 Lines:3
|
||
767 Fastest fill on a disk I've ever seen.
|
||
768 --THE VISION
|
||
769
|
||
011=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 04/21/89 17:35 Msg:3655 Call:20556 Lines:15
|
||
770 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
771 Turbo Pascal 5 is really nice. Not only the language, but all the support
|
||
772 stuff as well. Some of the things you can do are really neat.
|
||
773
|
||
774 It seems that the tools have finally caught up with the IBM's
|
||
775 kamilian nature. You can tell what sort of space you've got on the
|
||
776 screnn, and lots of other neat stuff. Plus it is nearly trivial to
|
||
777 write a TSR. (Though I don't know how hard it once was, I'm writting my
|
||
778 first right now.)
|
||
779
|
||
780 Now, If we could only get rid of that 640k limet.
|
||
781
|
||
782 An Astral Dreamer
|
||
783 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
784
|
||
012=Usr:131 THE VISION 04/21/89 17:57 Msg:3656 Call:20557 Lines:9
|
||
785 __T_H_E__V_I_S_I_O_N___
|
||
786
|
||
787 Lurking up a storm...
|
||
788
|
||
789 Hey AD how's it going?
|
||
790
|
||
791 _*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_
|
||
792
|
||
793
|
||
013=Usr:465 Gregg Harris 04/21/89 18:59 Msg:3657 Call:20558 Lines:9
|
||
794 )(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&(*&
|
||
795 Lurk mode.
|
||
796
|
||
797 Der svingee on der svango.
|
||
798
|
||
799 Huh?
|
||
800
|
||
801 The Lurking Mole.
|
||
802 )(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&
|
||
014=Usr:465 Gregg Harris 04/21/89 21:16 Msg:3658 Call:20561 Lines:7
|
||
803 )(*&)(*&)*&)(*&)(*&)(*&)(**&)(&)(*&(&
|
||
804 SSSHHH. I'm huntin' luwrkwers. hehehe.
|
||
805
|
||
806 There's one now. bang bang.
|
||
807
|
||
808 The Mole
|
||
809 )(*&)(*&((*)*&((*)&()**&)(*&((*)&&()**
|
||
015=Usr:33 Mike Stanfill 04/21/89 21:50 Msg:3659 Call:20563 Lines:5
|
||
810 /*/*/*/*/*/*/*
|
||
811 be vewwy vewwy awied... I'm hunting wurkers too... huhuhuhuhuhuh
|
||
812 Hey, you! Yeah, you! Wurker! Post somefing now owr I'w bwow youwr
|
||
813 bwains out! Youuuu scwewy wurkers....
|
||
814 /*/*/*/*/*/*/* -swob (A Self-Willed OBjec{ and self-appointed LurkBuster)
|
||
016=Usr*53 prince dragon 04/21/89 22:43 Msg:3660 Call:20565 Lines:4
|
||
815 .-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.
|
||
816 Oh good we are all in a *LURKER war* HHHMmmmmm
|
||
817 (that was in post mode)
|
||
818 .-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.prince dragon aks dragon@agora
|
||
017=Usr:84 Michqel ]iller j 04/21/89 23:09 Msg:3661 Call:20567 Lines:52
|
||
819 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
820 I'm fine Vision. Going through a spat of the blues, but I'll survive.
|
||
821
|
||
822 An Astral Dreamer
|
||
823 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
824
|
||
825 .
|
||
826 The new console was in. On the outside it was shiny and blue, but
|
||
827 in was what was on the inside that counted. Kit wistled while reading
|
||
828 the specs. He'd heard about this model some months back, and had been
|
||
829 waiting for it ever since.
|
||
830 Berry sat on the couch watching Kit. After listening to Kit whistle
|
||
831 and sigh for several minutes he decided it was time to break in.
|
||
832 "Yo! ,Kit. I need my money."
|
||
833 "Money? Oh yeah, Payday. Do you want it in the ussual place?"
|
||
834 "Sure, I've got a shipment comyng yn tommorow..."
|
||
835 Kit grew more distant. "Fine, I'll take care of it somtime before
|
||
836 tonight."
|
||
837 "Look man, don't be playing those mind games with me. You think I
|
||
838 like my life?"
|
||
839 "Look, relax. I didn't mean to upset you.0I just don't like to
|
||
840 hear about you and your drugs."
|
||
841 "Hey man, we all got to get by somehow. Take you away from the
|
||
842 net for more then a week and you'd be a basket case. Can't even go
|
||
843 outside. Atleast I don't have those proble}c."
|
||
844 Kit walked over to one of the chairs that sat by the small table
|
||
845 in his dining area and sat down. "It's all got to come down you know."
|
||
846 "Sh*t, your not going off on that kick again are you?"
|
||
847 "What Kick? I'm just telling you straight and true that all the C*ap
|
||
848 we put up with has got to end."
|
||
849 "I'd really thought you were over that. Man, can't you understand that
|
||
850 the human race just doesn't give a d*mn anymore? We're on the road to
|
||
851 extinction in dxe fqst lane."
|
||
852 "Hey, its not to late."
|
||
853 "It was to frigging late when we climbed down out of the trees. Something
|
||
854 just wasn't right. We've been working overtime since then to kill ourselves
|
||
855 off."
|
||
856 "I just can't believe that."
|
||
857 "Fine, don't face the facts. But don't be suprised when you get ground
|
||
858 under either."
|
||
859 "If I go down I'm going to take a lot of people with me."
|
||
860 "You just get to sounding older everyday. If your going to boar
|
||
861 me gith this Sh*t, atleast have the decency to do it quitly."
|
||
862 Kit sighed. "I'm all talk and no do."
|
||
863 "Glad to see you realize that. You used to be really great to."
|
||
864 "Yeah, well maybe I'm ready to start again."
|
||
865 "Its about time. Just remember though,Cerius wants you. Your still
|
||
866 his man."
|
||
867 "Yeah? Well I guess its about time I showed him what I'm going to be
|
||
868 doing for him from now on."
|
||
869 .
|
||
870
|
||
018=Usr:4 Milchar 04/21/89 23:47 Msg:366"0Cal|:20568 Lines:1
|
||
871 ++++++++ brief Milchlurk. Wow, talk about a fast disk. +++++++++++++++++++
|
||
019=Usr:131 THE VISION 04/22/89 12:50 Msg:3663 Call:20576 Lines:11
|
||
872 ________T_H_E__V_I_S_I_O_N_L_U_R_K_E_R_______
|
||
873
|
||
874 OH OH! I've been shot!! Ahhhhhhhhh!
|
||
875
|
||
876 HEY AD!
|
||
877
|
||
878 Glad to hear you are doing pretty
|
||
879 good. Well, not more to say so later!
|
||
880
|
||
881 _*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_
|
||
882
|
||
020=Usr:84 Michael Mil|er j 04/22/89 13:32 Msg:3664 Call:20577 Lines:11
|
||
883 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
884 I've been busy revising Patricks story. I'm going to be uploading the
|
||
885 latest (And probably last electronic.) Version to Enky, and possibly
|
||
886 alt.prose on usenet.
|
||
887
|
||
888 I've been thinking about the rest of the story, I may begin the next
|
||
889 part sometime soon. You'll see it here first! (Big deal Ah? :-) )
|
||
890
|
||
891 An Astral Dreamer
|
||
892 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
893
|
||
021=Usr:465 Gregg Harris 04/22/89 18:04 Msg:3665 Call:20%85 \ines:9
|
||
894 (*&)(*&&()**&&)((*&)((**)((*&)(*&)(*(*(&)(*&)((&((&
|
||
895 a hundred lines to finish this disk. com'on ever' body kill this disk off.
|
||
896
|
||
897 And now a word from our sponser. Aaaaiiigggghhhh!!!!
|
||
898
|
||
899 And a minute passed, and yet qnotxer minute passed .......
|
||
900
|
||
901 The Languid Mole (Not knowing what Languid means)
|
||
902 )(*)(*&)(*&)((*&)(*&)(*&()*&()*&)*&()*&()(*(*&)(*&
|
||
022=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 04/22/89 19:01 Msg:3666 Call:20587 Lines:8
|
||
903 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
904 Well, I sent the story off to alt.prose. And what happens? I find out that
|
||
905 there is atleast one glaring error. After writting something and then
|
||
906 reading it 15 times it gets a bit harder to notice these things.
|
||
907
|
||
908 An Astral Dreamer
|
||
909 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
9!0
|
||
023=Usr:33 Mike Stanfill 04/22/89 19:31 Msg:3667 Call:20589 Lines:13
|
||
911 /*/*/*/*/*/*/*
|
||
912 Lines Remaining: 89 Disable LURKMODE
|
||
913 Hey what's the record for a disk fill around here? Are we even close?
|
||
914 I'd write more, but my "monitor"0is getting so bad I can hardly see what
|
||
915 I'm typing. Someday I'll learn to buy a decent monitor BEFORE I've had
|
||
916 the computer for several years. Sigh. MultiSync, here I come!
|
||
917 [related drivel deleted for lack of existence]
|
||
918 /*/*/*/*/*/*/* swob (A Self Willed OBject)
|
||
919
|
||
920 p.s. Smile, you could have been crushed by a giant meteorite
|
||
921 the other day!
|
||
922
|
||
923 /*/*/*/*/*/*/*
|
||
024=Usr:233 molusk the crab 04/22/89 22:05 Msg:3668 Call:20593 Lines:7
|
||
924 *:*******************************
|
||
925 76 lines to fill on this disk,
|
||
926 75 lines to fill. Write something
|
||
927 down and then wrap around,
|
||
928 73 lines to fill.
|
||
929 *********************************
|
||
930
|
||
025=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 04/23/89 01:06 Msg:3669 Call:20598 Lines:10
|
||
931 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
932 I heard about that meteor. Very rare event from what I've been able to find
|
||
933 out. Should be several million years more before we have to worry about
|
||
934 it.
|
||
935
|
||
936 Sigh, what am I doing awake at !qm a~yway?
|
||
937
|
||
938 An Astral Dreamer (Who did not always do his borders this way.)
|
||
939 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
940
|
||
026=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 04/23/89 12:33 Msg:3670 Call:20605 Lines:6
|
||
941 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
942 Mighty quit around here today.
|
||
943
|
||
944 An Astbal Dreamer (Don't be afraid to fill the disk.)
|
||
945 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
946
|
||
027=Usr:228 Phoenix Polymorp 04/23/89 21:26 Msg:3671 Call:20611 Lines:2
|
||
947 Phoenix just lurking around..................
|
||
948 ^P
|
||
028=Usr:53 prince dragon 04/23/89 22:35 Msg:3&72 Call:20612 Lines:3
|
||
949 .-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.prince dragon
|
||
950 a lurking we will go alurking we will go etc..
|
||
951 .-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.1000days to go
|
||
029=Usr:33 Mike Stanfill 04/23/89 23:02 Msg:3673 Call:20613 Lines:11
|
||
952 /*/*/*/*/*/*/*
|
||
953 47 lines to go! Do I get a prize if I fill the rest? Too Bad! I ain't got
|
||
954 46 lines of stuff to say. Well, not important stuff anyway.
|
||
955 Hey, Astral, what *does* your border mean? Looks kinda like some
|
||
956 obfuscated S co~struct (address-of-contents-of-address-of-contents-of-...).
|
||
957 But then again by the same (exceedingly subtle compiler joke alert!) token,
|
||
958 mine is like a *really* important comment... hmmm.... I kinda like that!
|
||
959 And I thought it just looked nice!
|
||
960 */*/*/*/*/*/*/ swob (A Self-Willed OBject)
|
||
961 Ampersands, comments and splats, oh my!
|
||
962 */*/*/*/*/*/*/
|
||
030=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 04/24/89 00:16 Msg:3674 Call:20615 Lines:32
|
||
963 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
964 My border? Well, it started out looki~g like this '&*&*&*'s' and evolved into
|
||
965 what you see it as now over a couple of months. (I'm working hard to become a
|
||
966 backwater historian, have read all of 87,88 and 89 so far. Now its time to
|
||
967 go back to the real early days.)
|
||
968
|
||
969 As for what the boarder means... Well, I guess it just sort of went with my
|
||
970 handle.
|
||
971
|
||
972 A Historical note follows.
|
||
973 The first Inn was destroyed when backwater one was taken off line. When
|
||
974 backwater two came up (Nearly two years ag.) Q new slate was decreed.
|
||
975 Unfortunetly, things have meandered since then. The Inn was resurected las
|
||
976 {_t year, perhaps accidentally by Friar, who mentioned an etherial tavern. It w
|
||
977 as pick up on by Hagbard Celine first, and then one Trokyn Krka(sp?) followed
|
||
978 by Kurfur and myself. And no doubt others. A multi-author story started and
|
||
979 we meandered on for awhile before friar and Trokin dissapered.
|
||
980
|
||
981 I have been toying with a rather revised Inn in some of my story untries.
|
||
982 At the time I wrote them I did not know that the origional had been destroyed.
|
||
983 (It was at that time that many great names passed from the scene, Bard, the
|
||
984 psi master, voyeur, Green eyes, and others.
|
||
985
|
||
986 There has been qltogether to little story telling going on these last two
|
||
987 years, though things have been fairly decently here these last few months. I
|
||
988 sort of wonder why we never see CM make entries anymore...
|
||
989
|
||
990 Enough of my meanderings, I've filled e~ougx of this disk. It is time for me to
|
||
991 depart and leave the last few lines for others.
|
||
992
|
||
993 An Astral Dreamer
|
||
994 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
031=Usr:71 David Shult 04/24/89 01:00 Msg:3675 Call:20616 Lines:4
|
||
995 BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON--
|
||
996 -BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON-
|
||
997 --BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON
|
||
998 ---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXON---BOYCOTT EXXO
|
||
032=Usr:13 voyeur 04/24/89 01:51 Msg:3676 Call:20618 Lines:1
|
||
999 ::::::::O O:::01:54::::::voyeur - on the bottom:::::::04/24:::::::O O::::::::::
|