Sunday, July 6, 2014

Spiderwebs and Deuterium

 
Source for Deuterium image: J. R. Dunning (1949). ATOMIC STRUCTURE AND ENERGY. American Scientist, Vol. 37, No. 4 (OCTOBER 1949), pp. 504-528
 
 

Spiderwebs at Daiichi.

I've noticed many times that the FAT SPIDERWEBS at Daiichi look similar to the Deuterium ion beam created by a cyclotron.

Deuterium is a stable isotope of hydrogen according to Wikipedia. Also known as heavy water, Deuterium is used in nuclear reactors:

(Wikipedia Entry on Deuterium) Nuclear reactors

Deuterium is used in heavy water moderated fission reactors, usually as liquid D2O, to slow neutrons without high neutron absorption of ordinary hydrogen.[18] This is a common commercial use for larger amounts of deuterium.
In research reactors, liquid D2 is used in cold sources to moderate neutrons to very low energies and wavelengths appropriate for scattering experiments.
Experimentally, deuterium is the most common nuclide used in nuclear fusion reactor designs, especially in combination with tritium, because of the large reaction rate (or nuclear cross section) and high energy yield of the D–T reaction. There is an even higher-yield D–3He fusion reaction, though the breakeven point of D–3He is higher than that of most other fusion reactions; together with the scarcity of 3He, this makes it implausible as a practical power source until at least D–T and D–D fusion reactions have been performed on a commercial scale. However, commercial nuclear fusion is not yet an accomplished technology.
Majia here: So, perhaps the smeared white spider webs could possibly be Deuterium produced by the fission-fusion of melted fuel in the water table? Thoughts?

8 comments:

  1. Majia,

    Great picture of a deuteron ion beam, it does look similar to the fat spiderweb, so we should not exclude that possibility either. The ion beam could be curved by the earth’s magnetic field into the arch shape. Your suggestion opens an interesting avenue to investigate.

    I’m glad you are still interested in investigating the strange light effects as I think they have something to tell us about what is happening at Daiichi. I’m reluctant to post anything about the spiderwebs on the webcam forum after being attacked for suggesting plasma effects and then for posting the orb information. I check your forum regularly, so as you develop more evidence, please post it. Thanks again for the information and for providing a forum to post the evidence I find.

    Horse

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    1. I really appreciate your analyses Horse and always read them with interest.

      I agree with you that the spiderwebs are signs if we can only decode their semiotics.

      It seems likely to me that there are probably multiple causes but your explanation of the plasma makes sense and I know others found it relevant.

      Its true that radioactive rain drops on the lens could also be a culprit but the presence of spiderweb effects in the absence of rain makes me suspicious that all of the web phenomena cannot be explained away by hot rain.

      The last 4 months have been the busiest in my life. I'm hoping things slow down a bit from here on out and that i have more time for posting and responding to comments.

      Delete
    2. Reminds me somewhat of Ontological's Sky series.
      That was an eye-opener.

      Delete
  2. I think it is something similar but I doubt we will ever know exactly what, since that would take real science and they are anti. I imagine its a combination of all the different radionuclides permeating the site, and when it rains and conditions are right, it creates huge vapor chamber type charges. When its jumping from the smoke stack to the crane hundreds of feet up or through the number four reactor and out the top you can see the sheer size of some of those those bolts or arcs or plasma or whatever you want to call them. Also the tepcams are suspended above ground level, Im guessing 20-50 feet so that gives a little more impact when you see arcs and ball shapes rising up out of or hanging at the bottom of the camera frame.
    I just cant get behind the anything on the lens theory, they are far too uniform, they often obviously follow the shape of structures, they are often different colors, and the light sourcing isnt the same. If it was a static light source reflecting through water drops, the light would always come from the same directions, even when its bending, like a round droplet. Wind pushing round droplets tends to distort their shape, and anything that was in the water like dirt or oil would leave a residue on the lens. And then when it changes color mid arc, that means the reflected light source would had to have changed color. Its easy to make orb-shaped light distortions using curved glass, but its hard using flat glass, you have to be underneath and in my experience its impossible using fans and a vertical glass pane.
    So I think it is something very similar to what you describe, who knows what with this amount of radiation and contamination spread across a irradiated water saturated facility, then with 3 coriums underneath. I think when it rains, and under the right conditions, the whole site turns into some kind of giant radiation battery conducting through the structures. I don't think we'll ever find out what it really is, but I think your on the right track, its just never happened before.
    I do sometimes wonder if the whole fuku site isn't operating like a giant nuclear radiotelescope just beaming 24/7 in big slow circles into the universe...We are here (and probably not too bright).

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    1. I would like to re-post your comment with some screenshots of the site today.

      Thank you for your acute observations.

      Delete
  3. Greetings to All,
    The "WEBS" seen in this video are an example of fast neutrons striking the image sensor "CCD" in the camera.These webs are only 1/4" long inside the camera! The neutrons are beamed all over the fuku site from the open nuclear chain reactions.

    In many cases, this 'WEB' or "ARCING" can be duplicated on a much smaller scale at home. all you need is a web cam and a neighboring industrial building with large security lights. Many models of HID, Metal Halide, and Sodium Vapor industrial lighting have a small amount of radioactive material in the arc starter.
    See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metal-halide_lamp;"Inside the fused quartz arc tube two tungsten electrodes doped with thorium"
    See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thorium;"Secondary decay products of thorium include radium and actinium"
    Aim the camera at the light just before the sunlight eye turns the lamp on, during warm-up quite often you can see these webs. I have a 40 second clip of a network TV news show with this effect behind the news-caster

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  4. Correction: UVB does not seem to be a part of web phenomenon. They appear at night time too. WPPSS! My mistake, and am thankful for "critical thinking" skills.

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