It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Synopsis: The team travels to Germany and Poland to investigate bizarre,
centuries-old alien links that might be connected to technology unleashed by
Nazi Germany during World War II.
Originally posted by TeslaandLyne
I missed the episode, however there might be a Saturday showing:
UFO Hunters - Nazi UFOs Saturday 25th April 4:00pm EDT - History
Synopsis: The team travels to Germany and Poland to investigate bizarre,
centuries-old alien links that might be connected to technology unleashed by
Nazi Germany during World War II.
How does that sound, possible repeat.
A piece of hardware might have been looked at.
Originally posted by Nohup
A guy finds a compass.
The guy says it's classified, and likely from flying saucer he saw?
They go to Germany to see if they can find where the compass was made, and what it was made for.
A lot of people fill them with some mythology with nothing solid to back it up.
[edit on 23-4-2009 by Nohup]
A jet of hydrogen gas is dissociated as it passes through an electric arc. H2 > H + H - 422 kJ. An endothermic reaction, with the intensely hot plasma core of the arc providing the dissociation energy. The atomic hydrogen produced soon recombines; and this recombination is the source of such high temperatures (easily outperforming oxy-hydrogen: 2800oC and oxy-acetylene: 3315oC). The hydrogen can be thought of as simply a transport mechanism to extract energy from the arc plasma and transfer it to a work surface. It produces a true flame, as the heat is liberated by a chemical reaction. H + H > H2 + 422kJ. The molecular hydrogen burns off in the atmosphere, contributing little to the heat output.
It was apparent from the newer text, that the writers intended for us to believe that the final l00 k.cal./gram molecule heat---later upped to 109 k.cal/gram molecule---was absorbed from the arc, but the 103 cal./gram molecule dissociation heat figure showed a net 108,897 cal./gram molecule unexplained. If there are about 65 cubic centimeters per mole of hydrogen at its critical volume, it seemed highly unlikely that sufficient energy to weld could be absorbed from the 'dissociating arc', during the time required for 65 cubic centimeters of gas to pass from the orifice and through the arc.
109,000 cal./gram mole equals 432.6 BTU/gram mole--- roughly the heat energy contained in 60 loaves of bread---the "extra heat energy" which they have asked us to believe is 'stored' in an amount of atomic hydrogen which weighs 1/28th of an ounce, during its brief passage through the arc! How could the transformer produce that much energy, especially when it uses only half what it does in conventional welding processes? It seems more likely that excess heat could be stored in molecules than in 'almost naked' atomic hydrogen atoms. What ever happened to Bohr's little atom! It got bigger, and bigger, and........