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The sad case of Niels Harrit

Thanks for your reply Oystein, much appreciated!

I'm not a proponent of the thermite theory, so I won't pretend to defend their position. I'm skeptical of Jones for all of his grievous errors in methodology and procedure in the creation and publication of his information.

That said, I find it fascinating that Harrit, Jones et al. continue to proclaim their findings as proof, when the JREF opposition is so certain the case is closed. What is the sticking point here?


WRONG.
We are focussing on ALL samples that Harrit e.al. provide data for. All that data shows that one sample is different from the others. It follows that whatever results Harrit gathered for this different sample, can not be applied to the other samples. When the authors claim that the red-grey chips contain elemental Al and release so and so much energy in the calorimeter, then it must be pointed out that they are in ERROR.

Here, straight from the horse's mouth from the blog link posted above...

A lot of Zn was present in the dust (a fact recorded also in the USGS data set for the WTC dust). The fact that no Zinc or Ca show up in the post-MEK XEDS spectra, Figs 16, 17 and 18, appears to be ignored by the JREF'ers but is crucially important as demonstration that this is NOT primer paint.

a) What would this disappearance of Zn and Ca prove? Did the MEK magically remove these?

From Harrit paper: In one experiment the chips were to be soaked in methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) and could not – for good reasons – be broken before. The resulting XEDS of this chip (Figure 6, below) displays tiny blips indicating the presence of chromium and zinc. They disappeared after the chips had been soaked/rinsed with the organic solvent. Therefore, they are believed to derive from surface contamination, which very well could have been from the primer paint(!).

b) They didn't do a proper before/after soak comparison. The one before graph (Fig. 14) shows one thing, the 3 after graphs (Fig. 16-18) show another.

figures...

c) For Fig. 17, they used a weak (10 kV) electron ray that would not yield any results above 3 or 4 keV, and would thus miss the Ca and Zn peaks at 4.01 and 8.64keV

wouldn't surprise me; what's the alternate scenario then? Complete fabrication?

d) The broad, low peak near 1 keV in Fig. 18 is quite possibly the same as the one in Fig 14, and may well represent Zn (1.01-1.04keV) instead of Na (1.04-1.07keV)

quite possibly...

I'll see what I can drum up in regards to the rest later....
 
Thanks for your reply Oystein, much appreciated!

I'm not a proponent of the thermite theory, so I won't pretend to defend their position. I'm skeptical of Jones for all of his grievous errors in methodology and procedure in the creation and publication of his information.

That said, I find it fascinating that Harrit, Jones et al. continue to proclaim their findings as proof, when the JREF opposition is so certain the case is closed. What is the sticking point here?
...

The sticking point is that Harrit, Jones et al. depend on belief. They set up a dogma, and they must stick to it, or else they will be ousted as high priests of that cult. They have reason to hope that a good portion of their flock will never listen to reason. Just like the churches resisted revisions of their world view in the face of scientific advances, and many conservative believers remained faithful.

Theirs is a political movement, not a scientific endeavour. The results are determined by political goals, not by rational inspection.
 
c) For Fig. 17, they used a weak (10 kV) electron ray that would not yield any results above 3 or 4 keV, and would thus miss the Ca and Zn peaks at 4.01 and 8.64keV

Sorry to cut in here again, Oystein. I'm not picking on you, I promise! But a 10 keV electron beam will excite all the way up to the iron absorption edge around 7 keV. There is more than sufficient over voltage to excite the Ca K-L3 transition at 3.63 keV. When we're analyzing concrete, we frequently run at 10 keV and I still see everything below iron very clearly. Zn is another story since the absorption edge is over 9 keV, so an exciting electron needs to retain more than 90% of its initial energy. You'll still get the line, but the X-rays will only come from the first few nanometers of the surface. Most of those buggers, of course, end up being backscattered, and don't undergo any photoelectric ionization.

d) The broad, low peak near 1 keV in Fig. 18 is quite possibly the same as the one in Fig 14, and may well represent Zn (1.01-1.04keV) instead of Na (1.04-1.07keV)

Good catch on this one. Both the Cu L3-M5 (L-alpha) and Zn L3-M5 transitions are right near there around Na, and most vendor supplied EDX software will actually misidentify these peaks.

[/quote]
 
[...]Maybe, just maybe, Tnemec red primer paint wasn't the only paint or type used at the WTC.

This is The Almond making a shocked face. :jaw-dropp
On 1 - The Almond has addressed that. I can't see any issue but I've just had to go for a quick crash course on the state of detector technology courtesy of the interweb (getting down towards Be now!). I'm fairly sure that even 10 years ago Oxygen was not a problem for detectors due to the change in material (polycarbonate??)

UTWs have been an industry standard for at least 10 years in VP-SEM/ESEM applications. Prior to that, UTW detectors couldn't support atmospheric pressure, so you had to be very careful. Us XRF guys still use Be windows, though.

Carbon conductive tabs (for holding the sample down) could potentially be an issue but I assume they knew what they are doing. This could all get highly technical very quickly and I doubt a lot of readers have got a scooby what we are jabbering on about anyway!

Without getting overly technical...Their carbon numbers might be in question precisely because of the carbon tape. If they're operating in variable pressure mode, where water vapor is introduced to the chamber to combat surface charging, the "skirt" of the electron beam widens considerably. It is possible for an electron to bounce off a water molecule and hit the carbon tape, generate an X-ray, and then travel to the detector. Unusually high carbon peaks are really common in VP-SEM's nowadays.
 
Sorry to cut in here again, Oystein. I'm not picking on you, I promise! But a 10 keV electron beam will excite all the way up to the iron absorption edge around 7 keV. There is more than sufficient over voltage to excite the Ca K-L3 transition at 3.63 keV. When we're analyzing concrete, we frequently run at 10 keV and I still see everything below iron very clearly. Zn is another story since the absorption edge is over 9 keV, so an exciting electron needs to retain more than 90% of its initial energy. You'll still get the line, but the X-rays will only come from the first few nanometers of the surface. Most of those buggers, of course, end up being backscattered, and don't undergo any photoelectric ionization.

Hehe you are not picking at all, and I am here to learn. Prior to yesterday, my knowledge about EDS didn't significantly differ from zero. I had read a few things here and there and read that the beam voltage limits the possible results, and was too lazy to go back and check for the precise numbers. I admit I went out on limp there - my mistake. But here is the beauty of it: You just showed that we here at JREF don't simply support each other; instead, we are commited to facts.
Thanks for correcting me, and the explanation.

Now do you have a guess where the Ca peak went in Fig. 16?

Good catch on this one. Both the Cu L3-M5 (L-alpha) and Zn L3-M5 transitions are right near there around Na, and most vendor supplied EDX software will actually misidentify these peaks.

So actually it could have been Na or even Cu both times?
 
I linked to another portion of this 2009 lecture by Steven Jones in another thread, where Dr. Jones mentions that Dr. Farrer had been in contact with Dr. Tillotson of LLNL.

However, elsewhere Dr. Jones lauds the work of the 'Journal of 9/11 Studies' and features none other than 'Dr. David Griscom', who was apparently one of the peer reviewers of the 2008 Bentham Open paper.

Seems like an awfully cosy relationship between Dr. Jones and Dr. Griscom - I wonder how truthers would react if something like this had gone on on the 'official' side? Just wondering....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h_LMIyeuy-Q&t=1m50s

ETA I forgot to add that Jones introduces Griscom's relationship as follows:

' who read our paper, by the way....and supported it, and he's also published a paper challenging the official story(™) of 9/11 in the Journal of 9/11 Studies'

Nowhere of course does the ever-slick Jones mention Griscom's role as a peer-reviewer of the paper. That would give the impression (rightly) of a possible conflict of interest, and a too-cosy relationship. Jones avoids this problem by simply omitting those facts.

His technique is not surprising while it is less than ethical - Jones has a chronic habit of downplaying any uncertainties in his arguments, completely omitting contradictory information, and otherwise acting far less like a good scientist than a salesman with a pitch to make.*



*just one example is the way he gravely and rather cavalierly misrepresents the extent and nature of the fires in WTC 7, cherry-picking thru factoids and completely ignoring all the other good evidence.

IMO it's entirely fitting that he is once again chasing the free-energy Holy Grail, similar to his former cold-fusion research career.....which has also been a dead-end, but provided him with ample career opportunities.
 
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That said, I find it fascinating that Harrit, Jones et al. continue to proclaim their findings as proof, when the JREF opposition is so certain the case is closed. What is the sticking point here?

That's the question I have for all truthers not just them and not just this subject. Of course its worth pointing out that its not just "JREF opposition" that think they're wrong, the complete lack of any mainstream support or any articles in legitimate and respected peer reviewed journals and the hilariously fringe number of supporters they have managed to drum up since 2005/2006 apparently doesn't make them think maybe there is a reason for that either.

In the end they are like Creationists, they can be shown to be wrong 100% of the time back to front and they will still think they are right. I'm only still interested because I want to know how they can rationalise being wrong all the time yet still think they are on the side of "truth"
 
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Whats the best evidence we have that he reviewed the Bentham paper?

His own admission:

'Some disparagers of the 9/11 Truth movement have alleged that TOCPJ is a place on the web where anybody can buy a publication without peer review. Absolutely false! I know this because I was one of the referees of the Harrit et al. paper. The editors asked for my opinion. And after about two weeks of studying what the authors had written, checking relevant references, and gathering my thoughts, I finally provided my advice to authors in 12 single-spaced pages, together with my recommendation to the Editors that they publish the paper after the authors had considered my suggestions. '

http://impactglassman.blogspot.com/2010/09/911-truth-evidence-of-energetic.html

An example of the judgement of this man is provided on the SLC blog

'I envision a similar 9/11 scheme, but one where the passengers boarded under their true names. Indeed, the seat occupancies on all four aircraft allegedly hijacked on 9/11 were very much lower that industry average (averaging 26% of capacity vis-à-vis 71% for all domestic flights in July 2001). So, here I extend my “all passengers survived” postulate to all four 9/11 “hijacked” flights on the notion that this small number of passengers might have been considered by conspirators as the minimum number for public credulity, while at the same time not exceeding the maximum number of “true believers in the cause” willing to accept long separations from their loved ones (sweetened by handsome Swiss bank accounts).'

Here he speculates about how the passengers who were killed on the four flights were actually paid frauds who agreed never to contact their families again..... seriously?

http://screwloosechange.blogspot.com/2010/12/ready-for-laugh.html
 
Gunnar Ries vs. Niels Harrit

Hello,

a bit late, but do you know the response from Niels Harrit to Gunnar Ries (Questions German, answers English)?

www mysteries-magazin com/index.php?op=news&func=news&id=5252

(sorry, but as new user I am not allowed to post a real external link - I hope that form does not violate the forum rules)

He clarifies some aspects, for example the used equipment. For me the remarkable sections are:

Niels Harrit: Dr. Ries is correct. There is no doubt that the iron mineral is hematite, but we didn’t know for sure at the time of writing the paper. Later, we have obtained TEM diffraction evidence for the identity of the iron mineral, but in my opinion, this result alone does not merit a new publication.

and

Niels Harrit: The DSC measurements were conducted with access of the atmosphere because these were the conditions for the only published comparable measurement by Tillotson. We contacted Dr. Tillotson personally on the phone, and he informed us of this detail. Furthermore, WTC was not demolished under argon.

To my knowledge the difference is, that Tillotson knows exactly what his sample contains, and therefore knows which energy comes from what.

In my opinion Harrit's statement WTC was not demolished under argon is not scientific - very friendly expressed - regarding to the nanothermite reaction and the analysis of unknown mixed materials.

I'am not sure about this, but what about kaolinite suspension properties, keyword "card house structure". I think such micrographs are matching even better to Harrit's micrographs than pure mineralic kaolinite. For those people without expertise to understand the excellent work from sunstealer et al.

Meikel.
 
Hello and welcome to the forum, Meikel! Funny thing: Just last night I met a German by the name of Michael who calls and spells himself informally "Meikel", excatly as you do :D

Hello,

a bit late, but do you know the response from Niels Harrit to Gunnar Ries (Questions German, answers English)?

www mysteries-magazin com/index.php?op=news&func=news&id=5252

(sorry, but as new user I am not allowed to post a real external link - I hope that form does not violate the forum rules)
...
First of all: Here is the link:
http://mysteries-magazin.com/index.php?op=news&func=news&id=5252
No, posting a link like you did is not against rules - barring newbees from posting fully-formed links is just a guard against spam-bots.

...
He clarifies some aspects, for example the used equipment. For me the remarkable sections are:

Niels Harrit: Dr. Ries is correct. There is no doubt that the iron mineral is hematite, but we didn’t know for sure at the time of writing the paper. Later, we have obtained TEM diffraction evidence for the identity of the iron mineral, but in my opinion, this result alone does not merit a new publication.

Amazing that 8 great scientists and their peer-reviewer Griscom and their "independent" confirmer Mark Basile had to be told it's hematite - goes to show that none of them apparently have any experience with these kinds of materials.

...
and

Niels Harrit: The DSC measurements were conducted with access of the atmosphere because these were the conditions for the only published comparable measurement by Tillotson. We contacted Dr. Tillotson personally on the phone, and he informed us of this detail. Furthermore, WTC was not demolished under argon.

To my knowledge the difference is, that Tillotson knows exactly what his sample contains, and therefore knows which energy comes from what.

In my opinion Harrit's statement WTC was not demolished under argon is not scientific - very friendly expressed - regarding to the nanothermite reaction and the analysis of unknown mixed materials.

I think you are spot on the mark. Apparently, they did this DSC test with a forgone conclusion in mind. It's rather astonishing that they did not discard that conclusion when the results differed so markedly from Tillotson's, with a much higher peak at a significantly lower temperature.

I'am not sure about this, but what about kaolinite suspension properties, keyword "card house structure". I think such micrographs are matching even better to Harrit's micrographs than pure mineralic kaolinite. For those people without expertise to understand the excellent work from sunstealer et al.

Meikel.

Sorry, I don't get what you are trying to say here... :confused:
 
Some more remarks on Harrit's reply:

1. XEDS equipment:
Harrit said:
...About half of the discussion in the essay refers directly and indirectly to the ability of an X-ray detector to record radiation with energies below 1 keV. The background is, that X-ray detectors are commonly equipped with a beryllium window, which does not transmit below this threshold.
...
I can inform about the following:
The X-ray detector used in our measurements is NOT equipped with a Be window. It is NOT windowless. It is equipped with a SUTW (super-ultra thin window) capable of detecting down to at least 110 eV.

We already discussed Ries' problem with supposed Be-windows, and rejected them.
Harrit's clarification is helpful, and shows that we (in this case: The Almond, iirc) were right, Ries wrong.


2.
Harrit said:
Another main claim by Dr. Ries is that the Al-Si-O rich particles are some alumino-silicate clay mineral.
...
Interesting. It would become Dr. Ries well to provide a reference for a swelling reaction by a clay particle with MEK comparable to that observed by the red/grey chips. If – at the same time – Dr. Ries could provide a reference to a chemical reaction by a clay mineral, which provides elemental iron. It would be sensational.
This rebuttal is pretty weak. The primary data - XEDS and SEM - make a very strong case for kaolinite. While it is true that Ries has not provided any reference to experiment, I am not sure he has the burden of proof here. Harrit has failed to rule out an obvious candidate, and that leaves us with reasonable doubt.
Asking for a clay reaction that yields elemental iron is silly on several levels: a) We are unconvinced by claims of elemental iron; b) there were admittedly iron pigments in the sample, and no reason to assume that the Al-Si-O compound played any role in the reaction; c) there is still that unidentified carbon matrix, the invisible elephant in the room, that must have provided most of the energy, as the paper itself hints.


3.
Ries said:
Leider wurden vor der MEK-Behandlung keine Elementverteilungsbilder und nach der MEK-Behandlung keine Elementspektren (von der selben Stelle) aufgezeichnet. (Translation: Unfortunately, before the MEK treatment no images of the distribution of elements was done, and after MEK treatment, no spectra of elements were recorded (from the same location).)
Harrit said:
All XEDS maps in the paper – exept one(!) - were done on broken chips. That is, just before measurement a chip was broken and the measurement carried out on a freshly exposed, uncontaminated surface. This also true of figure 6 in Dr. Ries’ assay (Fig. 10 in Harrit et al.), which must do as an account for the elemntal distribution in the red layer before MEK soaking. Obviously, it was not possible to follow the same procedure on the chip, which were used for MEK soaking.
Harrit is confused. Fig. 10 in Harrit et. al. shows a cross section with element distribution of one of the chips that were NOT treated with MEK. The problem were have with the MEK-treated chip is that there is strong evidence it is a different material.
It is not obvious to me at all why it wasn't possible to treat the MEK-soaked chip just like the others and break it and measure uncontaminated surfaces. Maybe I am missing something here, but that is precisely the kin of sloppy work that the paper has become so infamous for.


4.
Harrit said:
In this case, the XEDS was taken from the ”raw” surface (Fig. 7 in Ries’ essay), and the signals from calcium and sulfur is most probably from calcium sulfate (as both parties agree upon).
Maybe Ries agrees, but we don't. That MEK chip is just too good a match with WTC primer paint presented by Steven Jones in a subsequent lecture to be dismissed as merely contaminated. See my blog post on this, with the usual thanks to Sunstealer:
http://oystein-debate.blogspot.com/2011/03/steven-jones-proves-primer-paint-not.html


5.
Harrit said:
This paint contained ca. 30 % ZnCrO4 which is one reason why the red/grey chips are not primer paint. Another major difference between the chips and the primer paint is the thermal stability, which went to 650 °C in case of the primer paint.
Harrit is correct here. The red-grey chips that they incinerated are not WTC primer paint. They are paint still, but an, as yet, unidentified kind. The MEK soaked chip however is very likely WTC primer (Tnemec), but that piece wasn't subjected to heating. That chip has signals for Zn and Cr, which shouldn't be hand-waved as contaminations, since they did not do a proper "after" XEDS of the same location.


6.
Ries said:
Tonminerale, mit ihrer teilweise extrem hohen Kationen-Austauschkapazität können ohne Probleme Elemente an ihre Umgebung abgeben, vorausgesetzt, Tauschpartner und entsprechende Lösungsmittel stehen zur Verfügung. (Translation: Clay minerals, with their sometimes high capacity to exchange cations, can release elements to their environment without problem, provided that exchange partners and suitable solvents are available.)
Harrit said:
Interesting. It would become Dr. Ries well to provide a reference for an cation-exchange reaction under comparable circumstances which could remove aluminum from a clay mineral.

And where is the cation being substituted for aluminum in figure 9 (Ries’ numbering)?
Can anybody comment on this?


7.
Harrit said:
Some have suggested, that the nanothermitic material could be formed from the ingredients in the fires is WTC. This is total nonsense from a chemical point of view.
I agree with Harrit. These chips did not mix and form as a result of collapse and fires. They are some well-formulated paint.



8.
Harrit said:
If Dr. Ries can come up with a coherent, comprehensive model to explain all the evidence including this, I will be happy to consider it.
Dr. Harrit has no comprehensive model that would explain his data:
- The energy release that exceeds that of thermite
- The differences to Tillotson's data
- What the heck Si is doing in a thermitic formulation
- etc.
 
Niels Harrit: [...] Furthermore, WTC was not demolished under argon.

Good God. Words are simply inadequate to convey just how stupid a statement that is, from someone claiming even a rudimentary level of understanding of chemical analysis, let alone a serious scientist. The only possible response to this sort of idiocy is a Stundie nomination for Harrit.

Dave
 
Niels Harrit: [...] Furthermore, WTC was not demolished under argon.

Good God. Words are simply inadequate to convey just how stupid a statement that is, from someone claiming even a rudimentary level of understanding of chemical analysis, let alone a serious scientist. The only possible response to this sort of idiocy is a Stundie nomination for Harrit.

Dave

Dave is right; that is monumentally stupid.

For new folks who haven't been keeping up with this: The point of the calorimeter test being run with something other than oxygen is to eliminate the possibility of simple organic combustion being the source of the energy peak. You see, Harrit, Jones, and the like are claiming that their chips are not paint and furthermore have an organic "sol gel" binder. Well, if that's so, how do they know that their DSC results were from a thermitic reaction and not that supposed "binder" burning?

The answer to that was to have eliminated the possibility of organics combining by making sure the DSC test was not run in an atmosphere with oxygen. If you keep the organic constituent from burning, you eliminate the criticism that the organics were the source of the energy showing up in their DSC data.

To make the argument he did is beyond mind-blowing. The point of the criticism of the DSC is not about replication of the WTC conditions, it's about failing to properly account for other sources of the energy released.

--------

This is all irrelevant anyway, though. There was only one real energy release in the DSC data, so Jones and Harrit cannot argue both that the organic binder burnt and that there was a "thermitic" release of energy. Can't have it both ways, not when their own DSC data only shows a single energy release. This is exactly what I mean when I say that their own data contradicts their claim.
 
...
This is all irrelevant anyway, though. There was only one real energy release in the DSC data, so Jones and Harrit cannot argue both that the organic binder burnt and that there was a "thermitic" release of energy. Can't have it both ways, not when their own DSC data only shows a single energy release. This is exactly what I mean when I say that their own data contradicts their claim.

I have read this before, and it sounds reasonable, but I am not yet 100% convinced: Is it really true that the type of DSC that they used would show two peaks at distinct temperatures if the sample was a mix of (at least) two different compounds with different ignition points? You see, you can control the external temperature of the device, but I can imagine that once the first compound starts to burn, this might raise local temperature enough to ignite the second compound without any raise in the measured (externally applied) temperature.

Does anybody have a link that shows me such double peaks are both possible and expected?
 
I have read this before, and it sounds reasonable, but I am not yet 100% convinced: Is it really true that the type of DSC that they used would show two peaks at distinct temperatures if the sample was a mix of (at least) two different compounds with different ignition points? You see, you can control the external temperature of the device, but I can imagine that once the first compound starts to burn, this might raise local temperature enough to ignite the second compound without any raise in the measured (externally applied) temperature.

Does anybody have a link that shows me such double peaks are both possible and expected?

Actually, I was working from Jones/Harrit's own DSC comparison, as well as the original Tillotson DSC graph. Fig. 29 in Jones/Harrit's Bentham paper, which references Fig. 3 of Tillotson's Nanostructured Energetic Materials... paper. Tillotson's peak occurs at around 530oC. Jones'/Harrit's is lower.

I guess you can make an argument that it would be one broad, smeared graph, but I'd need to be convined of that. I'll defer to actual chemists on this, but what I recall from my degree back in the dim origins of time (ok, fine, 1988 to 92), there should be more or less discrete peaks since there are only two compounds and therefore two exotherms to deal with.
 
Actually, I was working from Jones/Harrit's own DSC comparison, as well as the original Tillotson DSC graph. Fig. 29 in Jones/Harrit's Bentham paper, which references Fig. 3 of Tillotson's Nanostructured Energetic Materials... paper. Tillotson's peak occurs at around 530oC. Jones'/Harrit's is lower.

I guess you can make an argument that it would be one broad, smeared graph, but I'd need to be convined of that. I'll defer to actual chemists on this, but what I recall from my degree back in the dim origins of time (ok, fine, 1988 to 92), there should be more or less discrete peaks since there are only two compounds and therefore two exotherms to deal with.

Well, now, wait... re-skimming Tillotson's paper just nudged me into thinking something else. His paper had a few lines that said:
... and aerogel composite will have a more difficult time dissipating a thermal stress than a xerogel composite. This likely results in the more rapid formation of 'hot spots' in the aerogel material, at a given temperature. Once one of the hot spots reaches the ignition point the reaction is self-propogating an the entire compiste is ignited.
... So therefore it could indeed be that areas in a gel matrix can get hot enough to set off the redox. That's basically what Tillotson's saying there. That opens the door to such a reaction having a lower DSC exotherm due to the reaction being set off by a localized hot spot.

That's starting to get lost in individual trees and losing sight of the forest, though. We've got to keep in mind that this is only the case if the researcher has an aerogel-thermite composite to begin with. It's a bit absurd to claim that's the case when the micrographs and X-ray spectra demonstrate the presence of aluminosilicates, and no effort is made to identify the presence of thermite reaction products. My point in all this is to acknowledge the possibility that I'm wrong about dual/multiple peaks showing up in a calorimeter test, not to defend the Jones/Harrit findings. Dave Rogers and everyone else here are still correct about the notion of testing in inert atmosphere, and that's specifically because the charge of ogranic combustion still stands. The researchers still haven't eliminated that as the sole reason for the DSC result, either via analysis of the reaction products in the end, or eliminating the possibility of organic combustion during the DSC. So from that data alone we still can't tell whether the peak only due to organics burning or not (fine, we can tell from other methods, but I'm isolating down the calorimeter data itself; in the absence of the photomicrographs and X-ray spectra, all you have is a peak, and you don't know which reaction it comes from when there's more than one to choose from).

And remember: It's Jones and Harrit themselves who tried to use this an an excuse for their energy figures:
We suggest that the organic material in evidence in the red/gray chips is also highly energetic...

...As this test was done in air it is possible that some of the enhancement of energy output may have come from air oxidation of the organic component.
That leaves it to them to work to eliminate "air oxidation" as the source of the energy peak. They can't simply say "oh, we got this peak, it's thermite plus some organic combustion" when they haven't established the "thermite" to begin with.

And to reassert proper perspective: It's still the case that none of this overturns what the micrographs and X-EDS data says (second link on that). So I admit, we've allowed ourselves to slip into a very minute examination of a point that doesn't make any difference in the overall view. The photomicrographs and X-ray spectra that Sunstealer analyzed is, by itself, already definitive for refuting the thermite claim. The points regarding the DSC results turn out to be purely pedantic in the light of all that. It functions more as a point to show the sloppy work and rush to conclusions than anything else.
 
That leaves it to them to work to eliminate "air oxidation" as the source of the energy peak. They can't simply say "oh, we got this peak, it's thermite plus some organic combustion" when they haven't established the "thermite" to begin with.

Another way to look at it is that they've established that there is some energy E released by the reaction, comprising Ec + Et, where Ec is the combustion and Et the thermite energy. From the conservation of energy, we can be certain that Ec is non-zero; there isn't enough energy in a thermite reaction to supply all that's observed. However, it's easily possible for Et to be zero, because combustion reactions release more energy. The heart of Harrit et al's argument is that Et is non-zero, yet they have produced no evidence demonstrating that that is the case.

Dave
 

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