Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Illustrations Update

Hi folks,

Happy to announce that I just finished the draft of The Search for Hydrino Energy and submitted it to my editor. Lots of great illustrations coming in. This batch has some fun pop-culture references.

What of Lazarus?
Bohr Model of the Hydrogen Atom - Predicted vs. Actual Orbits

The electric field within a continuous extension of charge


Evanescent tails of coupled oscillators
Peter Jansson, Bucknell University Professor and occasional BLP collaborator


Randell Mills in the IEEE Spectrum

Tracking the migration of superfluid helium bubbles

Illustration of a continuous charge distribution

Daryl Zero from The Zero Effect 
Now a few words on looking for things. When you go looking for something specific, your chances of finding it are very bad. Because of all the things in the world, you are looking for only one of them. When you go looking for anything at all, your chances of finding it are very good. Because of all the things in the world, you're sure to find some of them.

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Illustrations Update

Thanks to everyone who participated in the kickstarter! We were succesfully funded at over 250% of the initial fundraising total.
 
As promised, illustrations are starting to come in...
Ignac Semmelweis


The BlackLight Rocket Thruster Test Chamber
(revised)
 

LC Circuit

Predicted Quantum 2p Orbital of Electron Bubble in Superfluid Helium

Alfred Meyer's Electrified Corks Experiment

Electrified Corks Experimental Setup


 
Early BlackLight Power Logo

Electron Configurations of the Thompson Atom

 
 

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

The BlackLight Rocket Thruster

4 days left!

With the kickstarter on track to be a success, Matt was anxious to get started! And started we did, with one of the most difficult and complex figures in the book.
This is the vacuum test chamber Anthony Marchese used as part of a NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts study for a rocket thruster adapting the BlackLight hydrogen-neon plasma cell. We are still working some of the kinks out this very complicated drawing, but it gives a good idea of the approach we are taking for the book.

Anyone recognize Fritz? He discovered the hydrino in the 1930's, but didn't know it.


Thanks again for everyone who is helping out. As a reminder, those with the highest funding contributions will get first pick of the illustrations from the book! But I also expect that we will have enough to go around, so everyone will find something special inserted into their copy.

Meanwhile, I put in few long days of writing and got over the hump. I have a draft. Some minor edits left, and I will be ready to hand over the manuscript.

Visit the kickstarter to reserve your copy of the book!

best,

Brett