comode wrote:Can you explain how you bombard your germanium nucleus with a neutron? As a reminder, the neutron is - by definition - not charged. I don't see where the neutron comes from this electric contraption ... Your only chance is to have an unstable radioactive source, like uranium 235 or plutonium 238 capable of emitting free neutrons , which is difficult to find in a hardware store.
In the diagram visible on the subject of the post, SI!
If you make an electric arc, you ionize the air ... If then you attract the charged particles towards the electrodes, you are likely to create a potential difference between the electrodes, and thus to produce a very weak current (much more lower than that required for the oscillator to operate).
Finally, to cut short (lol, I understand myself) to speculations on "radiative energy", it's been a long time since the principle is used, and electric generators using it are called "radioisotope thermoelectric generator". It is found in space probes, but also in some lighthouses far from any source of electricity, or in Russian military equipment because they allow several kilowatts to be produced for several decades before releasing. They use the natural (heat) radiation of very unstable isotopes to convert it into electricity.
Rumors are also circulating about a more direct way to convert beta radiation into electricity (instead of a heat recovery unit) about which I know nothing, but which is completely irrelevant in the assembly indicated anyway.
So once again, this is how to make anything say to a montage by making a muddy assembly of various and varied theories unrelated to the diagram.
@Petrus: me, I give you free energy with a length of electric wire and a diode ... You wind it, you put the diode on one side, and presto, you have electricity. .. You will recover with that the radio waves which are wandering in the air. The hardest part will then be to make people understand that no, it is not the energy of the vacuum, and that no, it is not energy which comes out of nowhere (TV wave, radio, GSM, EDF parasites , thunderstorms, etc.)
comode!
always true to its motto to sink into the pile ...
and then think ...
full of elegance
tactful
with much courtesy
but also full of arrogance
and always rigor, straight, resistant to any test
good
in all this rubbish, I will take the time to answer it