Cold “Fusion”: The Transmission Resonance Model Fits Data on Excess Heat, Predicts Optimal Trigger Points, and Suggests Nuclear Reaction Scenarios
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] C. Scott,et al. Measurement of Excess Heat and Apparent Coincident Increases in the Neutron and Gamma-Ray Count Rates During the Electrolysis of Heavy Water , 1990 .
[2] R. Pool. Wolf: my tritium was an impurity. , 1990, Science.
[3] G. Taubes. Cold Fusion Conundrum at Texas A&M: The administration's laissez faire response to worries about possible fraud raises questions about the proper balance between academic freedom and the need to guarantee the integrity of research. , 1990, Science.
[4] Takaaki Matsumoto. Cold Fusion Observed with Ordinary Water , 1990 .
[5] G. Miley,et al. Plasma and surface tension model for explaining the surface effect of tritium generation at cold fusion , 1990 .
[6] R. Pool. Teller, chu "boost" cold fusion. , 1989, Science.
[7] Friedman,et al. Cluster-impact fusion. , 1989, Physical review letters.
[8] G. Miley,et al. On the Possibility of Deuteron Disintegration in Electrochemically Compressed D+ in a Palladium Cathode , 1989 .
[9] L. Turner,et al. Thoughts Unbottled by Cold Fusion , 1989 .
[10] M. Fleischmann,et al. Electrochemically Induced Nuclear Fusion of Deuterium , 1989 .
[11] Peroni Paolo. Cold fusion: what's going on? , 1989, Nature.
[12] J. McNally. Cold fusion and graser prospects , 1985 .
[13] E. Wicke,et al. Hydrogen in palladium and palladium alloys , 1978 .
[14] S. S. Sidhu,et al. NEUTRON DIFFRACTION STUDIES OF HAFNIUM-HYDROGEN AND TITANIUM-HYDROGEN SYSTEMS , 1956 .