Saturday, January 12, 2008

Whitetail Carbon Arrows

A sensational discovery!

After ' car air now move your attention to a discovery that could be the discovery of the century! You can create as much energy (and then use that as fuel for cars, for example) from WATER AND SALT! Yes, you read right! The sensational discovery comes from Ohio where an engineer by exposing salt water to certain radio frequencies, has triggered an exothermic reaction, producing a large amount of "clean energy"! .. How does what? Virtually destroy the radio frequency hydrogen-oxygen bonds by ensuring that engages with a flame burning hydrogen. This combustion produces a flame that can in fact exceed 1700 ° C.. The news is already making the rounds of the World .. Here's an example from a news program!

The discovery was made by chance in this way: A scientist
retired Pennsylvania, that John Kanzius, was looking for a cure to the cancer that afflicted him for some time.
Specializes in physics and chemistry, was trying to separate the molecules bombarding it with radio waves of sea water. The intent was to to produce a system to destroy cancer cells without harming healthy cells, but to the astonishment of the scientist, the contents of the tube caught fire, releasing enormous amounts of energy.
The hydrogen content in the tube produced a flame that has achieved rapid temperature of 1700 ° C! To better understand the situation had to be moved even researchers at Penn State University chemist and Rustum Roy, who confirmed the discovery. "The radio waves at a certain frequency have the character to split water molecules, separating hydrogen from oxygen. With a particular radio frequency that seems to generate hydrogen combustion, burning as long as it remains exposed frequencies.
The problem lies in determining the amount of energy needed to produce such a reaction and therefore the relationship between energy used and energy produced.
"This discovery could be the most important in decades," the scientists added, "the potential could be enormous, both in the energy sector, industrial and transportation, but we need funds for research."

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