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Cold Fusion & Hydrinos

Created: Fri Apr 24Updated: Fri Apr 24

Overview

Cold fusion, first reported by Pons and Fleischmann in 1989, refers to the phenomenon of nuclear fusion occurring at relatively low temperatures. The Disclosure Project briefing document highlights a specific variant known as "hydrinos," proposed by Dr. Randell Mills, which posits that hydrogen atoms can collapse below their ground state, releasing significant thermal energy through catalytic reactions.

Technical Mechanisms & Evidence

Mills' work, backed by U.S. Patent 6,024,935 (granted 2000), describes a new form of energy derived from the collapse of the hydrogen atom. Early reports claimed up to 1,000 times more energy output than input. The Patterson Power Cell, a thin-film variation confirmed by Professor George Miley, demonstrated continuous 20-watt output with zero input power during Motorola tests. Overunity coefficients (COP) exceeding 1200 have been documented across multiple independent experiments.

Scientific Context & Disinformation

Despite successful replications in hundreds of laboratories worldwide, cold fusion faced a massive disinformation campaign from conventional science. Critics dismissed it as thermodynamically impossible, while others suggested researchers were simply unaware of embedded batteries. The phenomenon is framed as a threat to centralized power industries and orthodox scientific communities, paralleling early aspirin adoption where efficacy preceded theoretical explanation.

Related Concepts

unacknowledged-special-access-programs disclosure-project-secrecy-architecture nonlethal-weapons-overview

Sources

  • Full_text_of_Disclosure_Project_Briefing_Document_-_Internet_Archive_part11.md