User talk:Jed Rothwell
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correcting your own text
Jed, your last two edit summaries:
- "It isn't "just" by creating -- creating is very difficult."
- "Let us get the products right. Do not distort the claims made by researchers. It isn't "ordinary" helium; it is unexpected"
In both instances you are making changes to parts of the text that are unchanged from the original version you uploaded here. I find this very confusing, have you changed you opinion since uploading it here? I'm guessing not, was this from wikipedia and you brought the wrong version? Chris Day 16:32, 15 September 2008 (CDT)
- I don't know why. Sorry. Not an experienced Wiki user. The former was supposed to remark this change:
- . . . highly loaded palladium deuteride. That is, palladium which has absorbed nearly as many atoms of deuterium as the number of palladium atoms in the sample. This material is extremely difficult to produce.
- - Jed
- Yes, it is does reflect that change but you seem to be critising your own work, or is it just that your original version still needs work? The latter one is an odd comment. Who is distorting the claims of researchers? the implication is it someone else but that is text you wrote? Chris Day 17:12, 15 September 2008 (CDT)
- I don't think I was the one who called it "just helium." That's a strange way to put it. The helium (alpha particles) is highly unexpected and in these circumstances it is proof of a nuclear reaction. But anyway, I do frequently criticize and revise my own work!
- Someone else added the fact that it is a deuteride. That's a good thing to mention, but it should be specified that it is a highly loaded deuteride, with a D/Pd ratio close to 1. Most of the experiments in 1989 that failed, did not work because the loading ratio was low, probably 0.6 at most. They did not measure loading but given the techniques it is hard to imagine they got above that.
- - Jed