Dear Subscriber,
This month we are joining in with the Rossi
phenomenon (story #1) by featuring a foreign article by a Swedish independent
lab Ny Teknik that found excess heat generation in the kilowatt range from the
300 watt input energy catalyzer with a calibrated probe. Since no deuterium is
involved, it is hard to label it "cold fusion" and have the majority of the
public dismiss it immediately. IRI recommends keeping an open mind toward this
amazing invention that was recently awarded an Italian patent to see if it can
survive continuous output life-testing of weeks and months. That's what
separates the men from the boys in the 20-year old excess heat game.
Anyone interested in a Nobel Prize? Well, the nature of scientific celebrity
is such that Elizabeth Blackburn made more headlines for being sacked from the
Bush administration's bioethics council than for discovering telomerase, for
which she has been tipped for Nobel laurels. However, compare Elizabeth
Blackburn's award (story #4) for discovering the problem of telomere
shortening and lifespan and the enzyme telomerase that can lengthen them, as
well as designing a telomere test for the public, to our Scott Kelsey
COFE4 plenary lecture on a non-pharmaceutical breakthrough method of
electromagnetically lengthening telomeres (link #5 below). In our mind, a
solution without a monthly drug purchase is worth more than simply finding the
problem and another enzyme. We have now posted Scott's entire paper online
for a free PDF download. The next step should be to credit Nikola Tesla and
award him a Nobel Prize posthumously.
Solar energy and
electric vehicles are presented in other stories in the FE eNews to keep you
updated on the trends which keep pushing the envelope on renewable energy.
However, the surprise is the story #3 on the Calera
process which unexpectedly converts coal burning effluent to a means for
creating clean water and air. Study this cement prototype factory which should
be a required blueprint for solving the US CO2 and SO2 emissions
future.
Also, for those Star Trek fans that still
might be out there, $2 billion was just invested in the Shuttle launch this past
week to detect antimatter at the international space station:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/shuttle-endeavour-arrives-at-space-station-for-final-visit-delivers-pricey-physics-experiment/2011/05/18/AFWe1R6G_story.html
. It will be nice if it occurs naturally somewhere in space, rather than
manufacturing it atom by atom!
Thomas Valone, PhD, PE
Editor
www.IntegrityResearchInstitute.org
Read the newsletter: Future Energy eNews, May 2011