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{{Short description|Company based in Cranbury, New Jersey}}
'''Hydrino theory''' is a colloquial term for a series of claims by Randell Mills, an American entrepreneur. Mills proposes the existence of ]s for the ] of a ] with enhanced ] compared to the hydrogen ], which he terms 'hydrinos'.<ref>cited by {{cite journal |last= Rathke|year= 2005|month= May|title= A critical analysis of the hydrino model|journal= New Journal of Physics|volume= 2005|issue= 7|pages= 127|id= 10.1088/1367-2630/7/1/127|url= http://www.iop.org/EJ/article/1367-2630/7/1/127/njp5_1_127.html|accessdate= 2007-12-03 }}</ref> ] excludes states of the hydrogen atom less energetic than the ground state: while the existence of such a state under some circumstances may be possible, such a state cannot exist in the environment proposed by Mills.<ref>{{cite journal |last= Rathke|year= 2005|month= May|title= A critical analysis of the hydrino model|journal= New Journal of Physics|volume= 2005|issue= 7|pages= 127|id= 10.1088/1367-2630/7/1/127|url= http://www.iop.org/EJ/article/1367-2630/7/1/127/njp5_1_127.html|accessdate= 2007-12-03 |quote= "a state of the hydrogen atom that is less energetic than the ground state cannot be ruled out completely under some exotic conditions at our current level of understanding. Such conditions are however not likely to be fulfilled in the relatively low-energy, low electromagnetic field environment of the plasmas studied by Mills et al." and "standard quantum mechanics cannot encompass hydrino states, with the properties currently attributed to them"}}</ref>
{{pp|small=yes}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2012}}
{{Infobox company
| name = Brilliant Light Power, Inc.
| logo = Brilliant_Light_Power_Logo.png
| foundation = HydroCatalysis Inc.<ref name="parkorigin"/> in 1991.<ref name=crimson>
{{cite news |url=http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2000/5/17/academics-question-the-science-behind-blacklight/
|author=Jacqueline A. Newmyer
|title=Academics Question The Science Behind BlackLight Power, Inc.
|publisher=]
|date=May 17, 2000
|access-date=February 10, 2009
}}</ref>
| founder = Randell L. Mills
| num_employees = 22 fulltime, 8 consultants<ref name="blp_staff">{{cite web |url=http://www.brilliantlightpower.com/facilities |title=BlackLight Power Company Facilities |publisher=BlackLight Power |access-date=2016-01-18}}</ref>
| location_city = 493 Old Trenton Rd.<br>]
| location_country = USA
| subsid = {{cite web
|url=http://www.millsian.com
|title=Millsian, Inc.
}}
| homepage =
}}
'''Brilliant Light Power, Inc.''' ('''BLP'''), formerly '''BlackLight Power, Inc.''' of ], is a company founded by Randell L. Mills, who claims to have discovered a new energy source from what he says is the electron in a hydrogen atom dropping below its ground energy state into a "hydrino state".<ref name="parkorigin" /> The claims lack corroborating ] and the proposed hydrino states are unphysical and incompatible with key equations of ].<ref name="dombey" /><ref name="ieee" /> BLP has announced several times that it was about to deliver commercial products based on Mill's theories but has never delivered any working product.<ref name="ieee" />


Mills has self-published a closely related book, ''The Grand Unified Theory of Classical Physics'' and has co-authored numerous articles on hydrino-related phenomena.<ref name="GUT-CP">{{cite web
Mills says that this work, which he terms ''"Classical Quantum Mechanics"'', is entirely based on ], rejecting well-established ] and the associated experimental data. Furthermore, Mills claims that, using a ], the electron in a hydrogen atom can reach an energy level below the ] permitted by ], thereby releasing large amounts of energy — and turning the hydrogen into a "hydrino".<ref>cited by {{cite journal |last= Rathke|year= 2005|month= May|title= A critical analysis of the hydrino model|journal= New Journal of Physics|volume= 2005|issue= 7|pages= 127|id= 10.1088/1367-2630/7/1/127|url= http://www.iop.org/EJ/article/1367-2630/7/1/127/njp5_1_127.html|accessdate= 2007-12-03}}</ref>
|last=Mills
|first=Randell L.
|title=The Grand Unified Theory of Classical Physics
|edition=August 2011
|publisher=BlackLight Power
|date=August 2011
|url=http://brilliantlightpower.com/book-download-and-streaming/
|format=]
|access-date=2016-01-18
}} (Self-published)</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2005/nov/04/energy.science |title=Fuel's paradise? Power source that turns physics on its head |work=The Guardian |date=4 Nov 2005}}</ref> Critical analyses have been published in the peer reviewed journals '']'', '']'', '']'', and '']''.<ref name="dombey"/> In 2009, '']'' magazine characterized it as a "loser" technology because "most experts don't believe such lower states exist, and they say the experiments don't present convincing evidence" and mentioned that physicist ] had said the claims are "nonsense".<ref name="ieee" />


== Company ==
Mills first put forth his proposition of the hydrino in 1991, claiming to explain the purported excess heat reported in 1989 by ] experimentalists] (the excess heat claimed in that particular experiment was later attributed to ]<ref>e.g. Browne, M.. ""Physicists Debunk Claim Of a New Kind of Fusion"", New York Times, May 3, 1989. </ref>). He has continued to develop his ideas in the form of a now two-thousand page book, ''The Grand Unified Theory of Classical Quantum Mechanics'', which he distributes electronically (). Mills says he can explain various wide-ranging phenomena in chemistry, quantum mechanics, particle physics, and cosmology with hydrinos.
The company, originally called HydroCatalysis Inc.,<ref name="parkorigin"/> was founded in 1991 by Randell Mills<ref name=crimson/> who claimed to have discovered a power source that ''"represents a boundless form of new primary energy"'' and that will ''"replace all forms of fuel in the world"''.<ref name="reuters, 2009">{{cite news
|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/internal_ReutersNewsRoom_BehindTheScenes_MOLT/idUSTRE58202P20090903
|author=Gerard Wynn
|title=Sweet dreams are made of geoengineering
|work=Reuters
|date=September 3, 2000
|access-date=October 15, 2009
}}</ref> On April 25, 1991 at a press conference in ], Mills first announced his hydrino state hypothesis which rejects the idea that "cold fusion" was occurring in studies surrounding the ]. According to Mills all the effects (which themselves were disputed to be unreproducible) were caused by shrinkage of hydrogen atoms as they fell to a state below the ground state. Arguments offered by Mills were in contradiction to known chemistry and were dismissed by the scientific community.<ref name="parkorigin">{{cite web |title=What's New Friday, 26 April 1991 Washington, DC |author=Robert L. Park |url=http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN91/wn042691.html |date=April 26, 1991 |access-date=May 17, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927142638/http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN91/wn042691.html |archive-date=September 27, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }} and {{cite web |title=What's New Friday, October 31, 2008 |author=Robert L. Park |url=http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN08/wn103108.html |date=October 31, 2008 |access-date=May 17, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927142645/http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN08/wn103108.html |archive-date=September 27, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref><ref name="sheldon">
{{cite journal
|title= An overview of almost 20 years' research on cold fusion
|author= E. Sheldon
|journal= ]
|volume= 49
|issue= 5
|date= September–October 2008
|pages= 375–378
|doi= 10.1080/00107510802465229
|quote= , which involves a nowadays widely discredited 'hydrino' model that was proposed in 1991 to account for the excess heat observations in 'cold fusion' studies. (...) , is contrary to conventional quantum principles and unacceptable to me or to the general theoretical-physics community.|bibcode = 2008ConPh..49..375S |s2cid= 119406105
}}
</ref><ref name="voodoo">{{cite book
|title= Voodoo science: the road from foolishness to fraud
|author= Robert L. Park
|edition= illustrated, reprint
|publisher= ]
|year= 2002
|pages= 133–135
|isbn= 978-0-19-860443-3
|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=xzCK6-Kqs6QC&q=mills+hydrinos+press+conference&pg=PA133
}}</ref><ref name="broad">
{{cite news
|work=The New York Times
|title= 2 Teams Put New Life in 'Cold' Fusion Theory
|author= William J. Broad
|date= April 26, 1991
|url= https://www.nytimes.com/1991/04/26/us/2-teams-put-new-life-in-cold-fusion-theory.html
}}</ref>


By December 1999, BLP raised more than $25 million from about 150 investors.<ref name=crimson/><ref name="quantum leap"/> By January 2006, BLP funding exceeded $60 million.<ref name="nyt2008">{{cite news
Mills' work is not accepted by the scientific community, and has been largely ignored by it (as of November 2007, only four papers discussing hydrinos were present in the ] physics database , three of which say that hydrinos cannot exist ). The only ]ed evaluation, published in 2005 by Andreas Rathke of ], found "severe inconsistencies" in the theory, including a lack of "solutions that predict the existence of hydrinos". Rathke also noted that Mills' equations are not ], a requirement of any theory that explains the behavior of particles moving close to the ]<ref>{{cite journal |last= Rathke|year= 2005|month= May|title= A critical analysis of the hydrino model|journal= New Journal of Physics|volume= 2005|issue= 7|pages= 127|id= 10.1088/1367-2630/7/1/127|url= http://www.iop.org/EJ/article/1367-2630/7/1/127/njp5_1_127.html|accessdate= 2007-12-03 |quote= this wave equation is not Lorentz-invariant for any other phase velocity than the speed of light}}</ref> . Several scientists have issued informal evaluations of Mills' work, which are almost entirely negative. One evaluator, Aaron Barth of ], determined that the only portions of Mills' book which were valid were plagiarized from various physics textbooks<ref></ref>.
|title= Blacklight Power bolsters its impossible claims of a new renewable energy source
|last=Morrison|first= Chris
|date= October 21, 2008
|work=The New York Times
|url= https://www.nytimes.com/external/venturebeat/2008/10/21/21venturebeat-blacklight-power-bolsters-its-impossible-cla-99377.html
}}</ref><ref>http://professional.venturewire.com/story.asp?sid=NIMHPJLMMQ{{dead link|date=May 2018 |bot=Josve05a |fix-attempted=yes }} {{Dead link|date=July 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://venturebeat.com/2006/01/04/blacklight-power-gets-50m-but-is-it-profound-or-utter-nonsense/|title=Blacklight Power gets $50M; but is it profound, or utter nonsense?|first=Matt|last= Marshall|work=VentureBeat|date=January 4, 2006}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.siliconbeat.com/entries/2006/01/04/blacklight_power_gets_50m_but_is_it_profound_or_utter_nonsense.html|title=SiliconBeat: Blacklight Power gets $50M; but is it profound, or utter nonsense?}}</ref>


Among the investors are ], ], retired executives from ]<ref name="quantum leap"/> and several BLP board members like ] who was the top nuclear official for the Reagan Administration and Chief Executive Officer of ABB-Combustion Engineering Nuclear Power<ref name=inv>{{cite web|url=https://venturebeat.com/2008/12/11/blacklight-power-lands-first-license-agreement-for-electricity-from-water/|title=BlackLight Power lands first license agreement for electricity from ... water?|work=VentureBeat|date=December 11, 2008|first=Camille|last= Ricketts}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.blacklightpower.com/business/management/|title=Management}}</ref> and former board member ] (1936 – 2010), who was Chief Executive Officer of ] Worldwide Foods, ], ] and ].<ref name=inv/>
In spite of his work's flaws, Mills' company () says it has raised tens of millions of dollars in venture capital. It has also given rise to a subsidiary company () which has developed and released a molecular modeling program based on Mills' models.


In 2008, Mills said that his cell stacks could provide power for long-range electric vehicles,<ref name="nyt2008"/> and that this electricity would cost less than 2 cents per kilowatt-hour.<ref name="kimes">{{cite web
==Mills' Claims==
|url=https://money.cnn.com/2008/07/01/smallbusiness/blacklight.fsb/index.htm
|work=CNNMoney.com
|title=BlackLight's physics-defying promise: Cheap power from water
|author=Mina Kimes
|date=July 29, 2008
}}</ref>


In December 2013, BLP was one of 54 applicants to receive ~$1.1M in grant funding from the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nj.com/middlesex/index.ssf/2013/12/20_middlesex_companies_receive_part_of_60_million_state_grant.html|title=20 Middlesex companies receive part of $60 million state grant|work=NJ.com|date=December 20, 2013}}</ref>
=== Atomic Physics ===


=== Collaborators with the company ===
Mills claims that the ] is an extended particle which in ] is a flat disk of spinning ]. The magnitude of charge is highest in the center, and falls to zero at the edge. Mills claims that the charge distribution holds itself together by achieving a force balance between the ]s that act inwards, and outward ]s. The ] of classical physics says this is not possible, and observations of electrons likewise invalidate the idea of a non-spherically-symmetric charge distribution.


In 1996, NASA released a report describing experiments using a BLP electrolytic cell. Although not recreating the large heat gains reported for the cell by BLP, unexplained power gains ranging from 1.06 to 1.68 of the input power were reported, which, whilst "...admit the existence of an unusual source of heat with the cell...falls far short of being compelling". The authors went on to propose the recombination of hydrogen and oxygen as a possible explanation of the anomalous results.<ref name="NiedraNasa">{{cite web
Mills goes on to claim that since the charge distribution is continuous, it may be treated as a ], and therefore the ]s due to the charge distribution are normal to the surface. In mainstream classical physics, only a surface charge that is free to move under the influence of any tangential electric field will reach an equilibrium where only the normal component of the electric field remains.<ref name="Lorrain_and_Corson">Paul Lorrain and Dale Corson. Electromagnetic Fields and Waves. (2nd edition) Ch 4. W.H. Freeman, 1970</ref>.
|last1=Niedra
|first1=Janis M.
|first2=Ira T.
|last2=Myers
|first3=Gustave C.
|last3=Fralick
|first4=Richard S.
|last4=Baldwin
|url=http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/sensors/PhySen/docs/TM-107167.pdf
|osti=236808
|title=Replication of the apparent excess heat effect in light water-potassium carbonate-nickel-electrolytic cell
|date=February 1996
|access-date=February 27, 2011
|archive-date=July 21, 2011
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721050334/http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/sensors/PhySen/docs/TM-107167.pdf
|url-status=dead
}}</ref>


Around 2002, the ] (NIAC) granted a Phase I grant to Anthony Marchese, a mechanical engineer at Rowan University, to study a possible rocket propulsion that would use hydrinos.<ref name="villagevoice.com">{{cite news|url=https://www.villagevoice.com/2002/12/10/eureka/|title=Eureka?|first=Erik|last= Baard|work=]|date=December 10, 2002}}</ref>
According to Mills, when an electron is captured by a ] to form a ] ], it deforms into a ] shell, called the 'orbitsphere'. Mills claims this sphere may act as a 'dynamic resonator cavity', able to absorb or emit discrete frequencies of radiation, giving rise to quantization and the basis for the excited states.


In 2002, Rowan University's Anthony Marchese said that whilst "agnostic about the existence of hydrinos", he was quite confident that there was no fraud involved with BLP. Although his NIAC grant was criticised by ], Marchese said ''"for me to not continue with this study would be unethical to the scientific community. The only reason not to pursue this would be because of being afraid of being bullied."''<ref name="villagevoice.com"/>
In Mills' model, ]s of the electron are charge density distributions of high and low charge density. These distributions exist on the surface of the orbitsphere, but reflect the ]s of quantum orbitals.<ref>e.g. McCarthy and Weingold, "Wavefunction mapping in collision experiments", Rep. Prog. Phys. 51, 299 (1988)</ref>


== Criticism ==
In ], the ]s of the hydrogen atom are solutions of the ], and different energy states correspond to different ] or ]s of the electron's position relative to the proton, which have been observed and are nonspherical (except for the ]s).


In 1999, the Nobel prize winning physicist ] said he is "sure that it's a fraud",<ref name="quantum leap">
==== Hydrinos ====
{{cite news
|url=http://www.villagevoice.com/1999-12-21/news/quantum-leap/full/
|work=]
|first=Erik|last= Baard
|title=Quantum Leap: Dr. Randell Mills says he can change the face of physics. The Scientific Establishment thinks he's nuts.
|date=December 21, 1999
|access-date=February 10, 2009
}}</ref> and in the same year another Nobel prize winning physicist, ], called it "extremely unlikely".<ref name="chu"/> The following year, a 2000 patent based on its hydrino-related technology<ref>{{patent|US|6024935}} "Lower-energy hydrogen methods and structures"</ref><ref name=US6024935>{{patent|US|6024935}}, , Lower-energy hydrogen methods and structures, February 15, 2000. Retrieved February 11, 2011</ref> was later withdrawn by the ] (USPTO) due to contradictions with known physics laws and other concerns about the viability of the described processes, citing Park and others.<ref name="baard" />


A hydrino laser patent and a hydrino energy patent have not been withdrawn by the USPTO.{{patent|US|7773656}}{{patent|US|10443139}}
According to Mills, a specific ] he calls "The BlackLight Process" allows the bound electron to fall to an ] below that of currently accepted quantum theory, at 1/integer that of the ground state radius. These below-ground hydrogen atoms are called 'hydrinos'. The mechanism consists of an ] between a hydrogen atom and a ] that is capable of ] a certain amount of energy. The total energy Mills claims is released for hydrino transitions is large compared to the ] of hydrogen but less than ]s. Allegedly, limitations on confinement and terrestrial conditions have prevented the achievement of hydrino states below 1/30, which would correspond to an energy release of approximately 15 ] per hydrogen atom. No-one outside Mills' group has been verified to have, or even claimed to have, produced 'hydrinos', nor have they been observed to occur naturally.


An April 2000 editorial column by Robert L. Park<ref name="baard">{{cite web
=== Collective Phenomena, High-Energy Physics, and Cosmology ===
|title= The Empire Strikes Back. Alternative-Energy Scientist Fights to Save Patent
==== Superconductivity ====
|author=Erik Baard
|work= ]
|date= April 25, 2000
|url= https://www.villagevoice.com/2000/04/25/the-empire-strikes-back/
}}</ref><ref name="rimmer">{{Cite journal |first= Matthew |last= Rimmer | title= Patenting free energy: the BlackLight litigation and the hydrogen economy |year= 2011 |journal= Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice |issue= 6 |volume= 6 |page= 374 |doi= 10.1093/jiplp/jpr010 }}</ref> and an outside query by an unknown person<ref name="parkpatent">, ''What's New'', Robert Park, September 6, 2002</ref> prompted Group Director Esther Kepplinger of the USPTO to review this new patent herself. Kepplinger said that her "main concern was the proposition that the applicant was claiming the electron going to a lower orbital in a fashion that I knew was contrary to the known laws of physics and chemistry", and that the patent appeared to involve cold fusion and perpetual motion.<ref name="rimmer"/> Kepplinger contacted another Director, Robert Spar, who also expressed doubts on the patentability of the patent application. This caused the USPTO to withdraw from issue the patent application before it was granted and re-open it for review, and to withdraw four related applications, including one for a hydrino power plant.<ref name="baard"/><!--Baard is only sourcing two withdrawn patents: 1 for IA and 1 for power plant-->


In 2000, a law firm engaged by BLP sent letters to four prominent physicists asking them to stop making what it called "defamatory comments". The physicists had been quoted in the '']'', '']'' and other publications as dismissing BLP's claims on the basis that they violated the laws of physics. In response, one of the physicists, Robert L. Park of the ], said that if BLP sued, he was confident the scientific community would lend its support and that the court would side with the physicists.<ref name=lawfare2000>{{cite journal |author=Reichhardt T |title=New form of hydrogen power provokes scepticism |journal=Nature | volume=404 |issue=6775 |year=2000 |page=218 |quote=A law firm representing the energy company BlackLight Power, Inc. of Cranbury, New Jersey, sent letters earlier this month to Nobel laureate Philip Anderson of Princeton University, Michio Kaku of the City University of New York, Paul Grant of the non-profit energy agency EPRI and Robert L. Park, of the ] ... |doi=10.1038/35005254 |pmid=10749181|doi-access=free }} {{subscription required}}</ref> Park later wrote that a number of the recipients of the letter, who had "responded honestly to questions from the media", had since fallen silent. Scientists, Park wrote, are easy to intimidate since they are not rich enough to risk costly legal actions.<ref name="fraud-in-science"/>
According to Mills, ] is due to the extended nature of the electron, and in a superconductive ], the electrons forms "ribbons" of charge/current. This in contradiction to validated models of superconductivity, such as ], based on the ] of electrons.


In May 2000, BLP filed suit in the ] of Columbia, saying that withdrawal of the application after the company had paid the fee was contrary to law. In 2002, the District Court concluded that the USPTO was acting inside the limits of its authority in withdrawing a patent over whose validity it had doubts, and later that year, the ] ratified this decision.<ref name="rimmer"/><ref name="parkpatent"/><ref>{{cite web
==== Dark matter ====
|title=Blacklight Power, Inc. v. James E. Rogan
|author=United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
|url=http://www.ll.georgetown.edu/federal/judicial/fed/opinions/00opinions/00-1530.html
}}</ref><ref name="coffey">{{cite news
|title=Follow-Through. Weird Science
|author=Brendan Coffey
|date=May 15, 2000
|work=]
|url=https://www.forbes.com/forbes/2001/0430/032.html}}</ref> Applications were rejected by the UK patent office for similar reasons.<ref name="rimmer" /><ref>UK-IPO decisions {{cite web
|url= http://www.ipo.gov.uk/patent/p-decisionmaking/p-challenge/p-challenge-decision-results/p-challenge-decision-results-bl?BL_Number=O/114/08
|title= O/114/08|date= September 19, 2006}} and {{cite web
|url= http://www.ipo.gov.uk/patent/p-decisionmaking/p-challenge/p-challenge-decision-results/p-challenge-decision-results-bl?BL_Number=O/076/08
|title= O/076/08|date= September 19, 2006}}</ref><ref>
{{cite BAILII
|litigants = Blacklight Power Inc v Comptroller-General of Patents
|court = EWHC
|division = Patents
|year = 2008
|num = 2763
|date = 18 November 2008
}}</ref><ref>
{{cite book
|title=2003 Federal Circuit Yearbook: Patent Law Developments in the Federal Circuit
|author=Gale R Peterson
|author2=Derrick A Pizarro
|author3=Practising Law Institute
|publisher=]
|year=2003
|isbn=978-0-87224-443-6
|page=1
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_jqYOShTHBMC&pg=PA1
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
|url= http://www.ipo.gov.uk/pro-types/pro-patent/pro-p-os/p-challenge-decision-results-bl?BL_Number=O/170/09
|title= UK-IPO decision O/170/09|date= September 19, 2006}}</ref> The ] (EPO) rejected a similar BLP patent application due to lack of clarity on how the process worked. Reexamination of this European patent is pending.<ref name="rimmer"/>


Robert L. Park, emeritus professor of physics at the ] and a notable skeptic, has been particularly critical of BLP since 1991.<ref name="parkorigin"/> By 2000, Park remained skeptical, stating:
According to Mills, hydrinos are the bulk of ]. He claims that they do not ], unless they are being formed or ]ized. Over 90% of the visible ] consists of ordinary hydrogen, and according to this hypothesis the remaining matter in the universe (90% of the total mass of the universe) is hydrogen in stable states below that of the typical ground state. However, ] is also ], meaning that dark matter particles do not interact by any means other than gravity or that such interactions are very rare<ref>e.g. Moore et al. 2000. Collisional versus Collisionless Dark Matter. Astrophysical Journal, 535 L21-L24</ref>. This contradicts the properties of hydrinos as claimed by Mills, who claims to have produced 'molecular hydrinos' and other chemical compounds containing hydrinos and normal matter.
<blockquote>"Unlike most schemes for free energy, the hydrino process of Randy Mills is not without ample theory.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN99/wn010899.html#2|title=What's New by Bob Park - Friday, January 8, 1999|access-date=July 14, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100601155736/http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN99/wn010899.html#2|archive-date=June 1, 2010|url-status=dead|df=mdy-all}}</ref> Mills has written a 1000 page tome, entitled, "The Grand Unified Theory of Classical Quantum Mechanics", that takes the reader all the way from hydrinos to ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN97/wn050997.html#3|title=What's New by Bob Park - Friday, May 9, 1997|access-date=July 14, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100603170211/http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN97/wn050997.html#3|archive-date=June 3, 2010|url-status=dead|df=mdy-all}}</ref> Fortunately, Aaron Barth has taken upon himself to look through it, checking for accuracy. Barth is a post doctoral researcher at the ], and holds a PhD in Astronomy, 1998, from ]. What he found initially were mathematical blunders and unjustified assumptions. To his surprise, however, portions of the book seemed well organized. These, it now turns out, were lifted verbatim from various texts. This has been the object of a great deal of discussion from Mills' Hydrino Study Group. "Mills seems not to understand what the fuss is all about." – Park<ref>{{cite web
|url = http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN00/wn102700.html
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20051122165404/http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN00/wn102700.html
|url-status = dead
|archive-date = November 22, 2005
|title = Blackout: Where do ideas like these come from?
|last = Park
|first = Bob
|publisher = University of Maryland
|date = October 27, 2000
|access-date = 2009-03-02
}}</ref></blockquote>


By 2008, Park continued to express his skepticism:
==== The accelerating expansion of the universe ====
<blockquote>"BlackLight Power (BLP), founded 17 years ago as HydroCatalysis, announced last week that the company had successfully tested a ] power system that would generate 50 KW of thermal power. BLP anticipates delivery of the new power system in 12 to 18 months. The BLP process,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN91/wn042691.html|title=What's New by Bob Park - Friday, April 26, 1991|access-date=May 17, 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927142638/http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN91/wn042691.html|archive-date=September 27, 2011|url-status=dead|df=mdy-all}}</ref> discovered by Randy Mills, is said to coax hydrogen atoms into a "state below the ground state", called the "hydrino". There is no independent scientific confirmation of the hydrino, and BLP has a patent problem. So they have nothing to sell but bull shit. The company is therefore dependent on investors with deep pockets and shallow brains." – Park<ref name="how long">{{cite web
|url = http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN08/wn060608.html
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081211033610/http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN08/wn060608.html
|url-status = dead
|archive-date = December 11, 2008
|title = Hydrinos: How long can a really dumb idea survive?
|work = What's New?
|last = Park
|first = Bob
|publisher = University of Maryland
|date = June 6, 2008
|access-date = 2010-12-04
}}</ref></blockquote> In 2008, ] wrote that BLP has benefited from wealthy investors who allocate a proportion of their funds to risky ventures with a potentially huge upside, but that in the case of BLP since the science underlying the offering was "just wrong" investment risk was, in Park's view, "infinite".<ref name="fraud-in-science">{{cite journal |journal=Social Research: An International Quarterly |volume=75 |issue=4 |pages=1135–1150 |year=2008 |quote=Companies frequently designate a percentage of these funds for investment in high-risk, high-payoff startups. Most will fail, but it is a hedge against technological obsolescence. Mills had just what they were looking for—except the risk was infinite. |title=Fraud in Science |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/social_research/toc/sor.75.4.html |author=Park RL |doi=10.1353/sor.2008.0010 |s2cid=141705050 |author-link=Robert L. Park}}</ref>


Various scientists also voiced their opinions as far back as the 1990s. ], Nobel Laureate in Physics in 1997, said "it's extremely unlikely that this is real, and I feel sorry for the funders, the people who are backing this".<ref name="chu">{{cite news
Starting in the 1995 version of his book, Mills claimed that the universe is accelerating as it expands, taking this idea from ]. ]. According to Mills, the universe expands and contracts sinusoidally over billions of years, due to a posited equivalence of matter and spacetime<ref></ref>. The universe has been found to be expanding. Mills' model, however, does not agree with other observational evidence, nor does it explain various open questions in the topic of ].
|title=Researcher Claims Power Tech That Defies Quantum Theory
|first=Erik|last= Baard
|publisher=Dow Jones NewsWire
|date=October 6, 1999
|url=http://www.rexresearch.com/millshyd/millshyd.htm#dow
}}
</ref> In 1999, Princeton University's physics Nobel laureate ] said of it, "If you could fuck around with the hydrogen atom, you could fuck around with the energy process in the sun. You could fuck around with life itself." "Everything we know about everything would be a bunch of nonsense. That's why I'm so sure that it's a fraud."<ref name="quantum leap"/> ], a professor of physics at ], said BLP's claims are "nonsense" and that "there is no state of hydrogen lower than the ground state".<ref name="ieee">{{cite news
|title = Winners & Losers 2009—Loser, Power & Energy: Hot or not? Blacklight Power says it's developing a revolutionary energy source—and it won't let the laws of physics stand in its way
|author = Erico Guizzo
|author-link = Erico Guizzo
|work = ]
|date = January 2009
|url = http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/energy/nuclear/loser-hot-or-not/0
|doi = 10.1109/MSPEC.2009.4734311
|volume = 46
|issue = 1
|page = 36
|access-date = February 8, 2016
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160207074637/http://spectrum.ieee.org/energy/nuclear/loser-hot-or-not/0
|archive-date = February 7, 2016
|url-status = dead
|df = mdy-all
}}</ref> ], a theoretical physicist based at City University of New York, adds that "the only law that this business with Mills is proving is that a fool and his money are easily parted."<ref name="quantum leap"/> and that "There's a sucker born every minute."<ref name="chu"/> While ] was chief arms-control scientist at the State Department, he stated that his department and the Patent Office "have fought back with success" against "pseudoscientists" and he railed against, among other things, the inventors of "hydrinos".<ref name="baard"/> In 2009, the editors of '']'' magazine characterized it as a "loser" technology because "ost experts don't believe such lower states exist, and they say the experiments don't present convincing evidence" and mentioned that ] had said the claims are "nonsense".<ref name="ieee"/> BLP has announced several times that it was about to deliver commercial products based on Mill's theories but has not delivered a working product.<ref name="ieee"/>


Mark Chu-Carroll a ] and professional software engineer accused Mills of engaging in a scam: "Mills... is getting investors to give him money, promising that whatever they invest, they'll get back manifold when he starts selling hydrino power generators! He promises they'll be on market within a year or two – five at most! Then he comes up with either a demonstration, or the testimonial from his neighbor, or the self-publication of his book, or another press release talking about the newest version of his technology..... It's been going on for almost 25 years, this constant cycle of press release/demo/testimonial every couple of years.... claims from 2009 claiming commercialization within 12 to 18 months; from 2005 claiming commercialization within months; and claims from 1999 claiming commercialization within a year.... But he always comes up with an excuse why those deadlines needed to be missed. And he always manages to find more investors, willing to hand over millions of dollars. As long as suckers are still willing to give him money, why ''wouldn't'' he keep on making claims?"<ref>{{Cite web |last=Chu |first=Mark |date=14 January 2014 |title=The Latest Update in the Hydrino Saga |url=https://goodmath.scientopia.org/2014/01/14/the-latest-update-in-the-hydrino-saga/}}</ref>
== Alleged experimental evidence ==


'']'' reported that in 2014, Mills was asked by an interested follower if he had ever isolated hydrinos and, in spite of previous claims, Mills said that he had not and that it would be “a really, really huge task.” The interlocutor pointed out that if hydrinos were being produced at the rate Mills claimed, there would be obvious observations. Moreover, there was no sign of progress, “Every year they make up half the remaining distance to commercialization, but will they ever get there?”<ref>{{Cite web |last=News |first=Stephen K. Ritter,Chemical & Engineering |title=Cold Fusion Lives: Experiments Create Energy When None Should Exist |url=https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/cold-fusion-lives-experiments-create-energy-when-none-should-exist1/ |access-date=2023-10-13 |website=Scientific American |language=en}}</ref>
The website of ] Inc., founded by Mills to 'develop hydrino technology', claims to have produce these phenomena:


In 2015, an energy analyst writing for '']'' noted that Mills had made numerous extraordinary and difficult-to-believe claims including that he had "refuted quantum mechanics, can explain “mysteries of the sun” and has identified dark energy. His inventions can: produce power very cheaply through “’shrinking’ the hydrogen atom's orbitsphere” with a power density of 100 billion watts per liter. Additionally, the materials created can act as an explosive or propellant, make ships rustproof and endowed with stealth properties, produce an anti-gravity effect that will allow a vessel to elevate, and “form the basis of batteries the size of a briefcase to drive your car 1000 miles at highway speeds on a single charge.”"<ref>{{Cite web |last=Lynch |first=Michael |title=Warning Signs For Energy Technology Investors 3: Yes, They Can Be That Stupid |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/michaellynch/2015/06/01/warning-signs-for-energy-technology-investors-3-yes-they-can-be-that-stupid/ |access-date=2023-10-13 |website=Forbes |language=en}}</ref>
* Formation of ] in gas cells with input energies far below that required to form such plasmas.
* Spectral lines from gas cell plasmas which match the claimed predictions for hydrino transitions.<ref>Mills, R., and P. Ray, "Extreme ultraviolet spectroscopy of helium-hydrogen plasma," J. Phys. D. 36, 17 (7 July 2003), pp. 1535-1542.</ref>
* Detection of excess heat from plasma cells using water bath calorimetry.
* New chemical compounds said to have been formed from hydrino hydrides (ie a hydrino which has captured another electron to form a negative hydride ion) which show unusual properties and structure.
* Molecular 'dihydrino' gas formation and detection.


== Peer-reviewed criticisms ==
Mills and collaborators claim only hydrino theory can adequately explain their results. Mainstream scientists have called into question the quality of these experiments, and have determined that the results can be explained by conventional physics.


In the 2000s, several reviewed articles were published criticizing Hydrino theory for being incompatible with Quantum Mechanics.
Šišović et al have reported line broadening that contradicts Mills's models.<ref>(Eur. Phys. J. D '''32''':347-354, 2005, {{doi|10.1140/epjd/e2004-00192-1}})</ref>


For example, in 2005, Andreas Rathke of the ], publishing in the '']'', wrote that Mills' description of quantum mechanics is "inconsistent and has several serious deficiencies", and that there is "no theoretical support of the hydrino hypothesis". Rathke said it would be helpful if Mills' experimental results could be independently replicated, and suggested that any evidence produced should be reconsidered in the context of a conventional physical explanation.<ref name=rathke>{{cite journal |author=Rathke A |title=A critical analysis of the hydrino model |journal=New Journal of Physics |doi=10.1088/1367-2630/7/1/127 |year=2005 |volume=7 |issue=127|pages=127 |arxiv=quant-ph/0505150 |bibcode=2005NJPh....7..127R |s2cid=33907938 }}</ref> One inconsistency of Mills' CQM with quantum mechanics regards its inability to be reconciled with the probability density function in quantum mechanics. Rathke stated, "However, while solutions of the Schrödinger equation with n<1 indeed exist, they are not square integrable. This violates not only an axiom of quantum mechanics, but in practical terms prohibits that these solutions can in any way describe the probability density of a particle."<ref name=rathke /> In the same year, the '']'' published a critique by A.V. Phelps of the 2004 article, "Water bath calorimetric study of excess heat generation in resonant transfer plasmas" by J. Phillips, R. Mills and X. Chen.<ref name="phelpsCritique">{{cite journal
Experiments have demonstrated a radial probability distribution of the bound electron in the hydrogen atom ground state that contradicts the idea of an orbitsphere.<ref>McCarthy and Weigold, "", Rep. Prog. Phys. 51, 299 (1988)</ref> ] has imaged the electron ] of numerous compounds and found it to agree with ], in contradiction to Mills' predictions.
|title= Comment on 'Water bath calorimetric study of excess heat generation in resonant transfer plasmas'
|last=Phelps
|first=A.V.
|journal=Journal of Applied Physics
|date=October 2, 2005
|doi=10.1063/1.2010616
|volume=98
|issue= 6
|pages = 066108–066108–3|bibcode=2005JAP....98f6108P
|doi-access=free
}}</ref> Phelps criticized both the ] techniques and the underlying theory described in the Phillips/Mills/Chen article. The journal also published a response to Phelps' critique on the same day.<ref name="phillipsResponse">{{cite journal
|title= Response to "Comment on 'Water bath calorimetric study of excess heat generation in resonant transfer plasmas'
|last=Phillips
|first=Jonathan
|journal=Journal of Applied Physics
|date=October 2, 2005
|doi=10.1063/1.2010617
|volume=98
|issue= 6
|pages = 066109–066109–1|bibcode=2005JAP....98f6109P
|doi-access=free
}}</ref> In 2005 Šišović and others published a paper describing experimental data and analysis of Mills' claim that a resonant transfer model (RTM) explains the excessive Doppler broadening of the Hα line. Šišović concluded that: "The detected large excessive broadening in pure hydrogen and in Ne–H2 mixture is in agreement with CM and other experimental results" and that "these results can't be explained by RTM". The collision model explanation for excessive broadening of the Hα line is based on established physics.<ref name="Šišovic">
{{cite journal
|title=Excessive hydrogen and deuterium Balmer lines broadening in a hollow cathode glow discharges
|last1=Šišović
|first1=N. M.
|last2=Majstorović
|first2=G. Lj.
|last3=Konjević
|first3=N.
|journal=European Physical Journal D
|volume=32
|pages=347–354
|date=January 4, 2005
|doi=10.1140/epjd/e2004-00192-1
|bibcode = 2005EPJD...32..347S
|issue=3 |s2cid=117346954
}}</ref>


In 2006, a paper published in '']'', concluded that Mills' theoretical hydrino states are unphysical. For the hydrino states, the ] increases as the strength of the ] decreases, with maximum binding strength when the potential has disappeared completely. The author ] remarked "We could call these anomalous states "]" states because the smaller the coupling, the larger the effect." The model also assumes that the ] distribution is a point rather than having an arbitrarily small non-zero radius. It also lacks an analogous solution in the ], which governs non-relativistic systems. Dombey concluded: "We suggest that outside of ] this is sufficient reason to disregard them."<ref name="dombey">
==Controversy==
{{cite journal
===2000===
|journal=Physics Letters A
In a Space.com article on May 23, ], ] winner<ref></ref> and ] of physics at ], is quoted as saying: <blockquote> may be creating compounds with unusual properties. This is obviously a rather clever guy, and he may be onto something, but he seems to think it's more fundamental than it really is.<ref></ref></blockquote>
|last=Dombey
Furthermore, Osheroff remained certain that hydrinos were a "crackpot idea".
|first=Norman
|title=The hydrino and other unlikely states
|volume=360
|issue=1
|pages=62–65
|arxiv=physics/0608095
|date=August 8, 2006
|doi=10.1016/j.physleta.2006.07.069
|bibcode = 2006PhLA..360...62D |s2cid=119011776
}}</ref> From a suggestion in Dombey's paper, further work by Antonio Di Castro has shown that states below the ground state, as described in Mills' work, are incompatible with the Schrödinger, ] and ] equations, key equations in the study of quantum systems.<ref name="castro">
{{cite journal
|journal=Physics Letters A
|last=de Castro
|first=Antonio S.
|title=Orthogonality criterion for banishing hydrino states from standard quantum mechanics
|volume=369
|arxiv=0704.0631
|date=April 4, 2007
|bibcode=2007PhLA..369..380D
|doi=10.1016/j.physleta.2007.05.006
|issue=5–6 |pages=380–383
|s2cid=14214907
}}</ref>


In 2008, the ] published an article by Hans-Joachim Kunze, ] at the Institute for Experimental Physics, ],<ref>{{cite web
===2002===
|url=http://www.ep5.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/en/emeriti_en.html
A ] (NIAC) Phase I study was conducted at ], led by mechanical engineering professor Anthony Marchese, to investigate the so-called BlackLight Process for use in spacecraft propulsion. The team spent some time replicating results obtained by BlackLight, Inc., such as the observation of line broadening and excess heat (although the final report stated "Additional studies are required to rule out all other possible explanations other than 'excess power' for these observations.").<ref>Marchese, A. J., Jansson, P., Schmalzel, J. L., '''' (May 1 – November 30, 2002).</ref>
|title= Ruhr-Universität Bochum information page on Hans-Joachim Kunze
|publisher=Ruhr-Universität
|access-date=2011-02-20
}}</ref> critical of the 2003 paper authored by R. Mills and P. Ray, Extreme ] of ]–]. The abstract of the article is: "It is suggested that ]s, on which the fiction of fractional principal ]s in the hydrogen atom is based, are nothing else but artefacts." Kunze stated that it was impossible to detect the novel lines below 30&nbsp;nm reported by Mills and Ray because the equipment they used did not have the capability to detect them as per the manufacturer and as per "every book on vacuum-UV spectroscopy" and "therefore the observed lines must be artefacts". Kunze also stated that: "The enormous spectral widths of the novel lines point to artefacts, too."<ref>
{{cite journal
|title=On the spectroscopic measurements used to support the postulate of states with fractional principal quantum numbers in hydrogen
|last=Kunze
|first=H-J
|year=2008
|journal=J Phys D
|volume=41
|page=108001
|doi=10.1088/0022-3727/41/10/108001
|bibcode=2008JPhD...41j8001K
|issue=10 |s2cid=122153555
}}</ref>


== See also ==
On October 27 2002, Bob Park, a professor at the ], wrote a follow-up:
<blockquote>Mills has written a 1000 page tome, entitled ''The Grand Unified Theory of Classical Quantum Mechanics'', that takes the reader all the way from hydrinos to antigravity (WN 9 May 97). Fortunately, Aaron Barth (not to be confused with Erik Baard, the Randy Mills apologist), has taken upon himself to look through it, checking for accuracy. Barth is a post doctoral researcher at the Harvard-Smithsonian Institute, and holds a PhD in Astronomy, 1998, from UC, Berkeley. What he found initially were mathematical blunders and unjustified assumptions. To his surprise, however, portions of the book seemed well organized. These, it now turns out, were lifted verbatim from various texts. This has been the object of a great deal of discussion from Mills's Hydrino Study Group. Mills seems not to understand what the fuss is all about.<ref></ref></blockquote>


* ]
===2004-2005===
Andreas Rathke of the ] published an evaluation that appeared in the ].<ref>Rathke, A., ', ''New J. Phys.'' '''7''' 127 (2005).</ref><ref></ref> He concluded:
<blockquote>We found that CQM is inconsistent and has several serious deficiencies. Amongst these are the failure to reproduce the energy levels of the excited states of the hydrogen atom, and the absence of ]. Most importantly, we found that CQM does not predict the existence of hydrino states!</blockquote>
No formal rebuttal has been published by Mills or his supporters. However, through other channels, Mills pointed out that Rathke had made a sign error.<ref></ref> (The sign error does not affect the main conclusions, as Rathke notes in a ] added 23 June 2006.)


===2006=== == References ==
{{reflist|colwidth=30em}}
Blacklight Power announced it had raised over $50M in venture capital.<ref></ref>


== External links ==
In June, the subsidiary Molegos, Inc. was formed to market a molecular-modelling software application based on CQM theory. In October 2006, Molegos was renamed to Millsian. On June 14th 2007, Millsian made the beta-version of their molecular modeling software available for download.<ref name="software-download-page"></ref>


* Robert L. Park: , in his newsletter ''What's New'', January 13, 2006

; General media

* {{cite news |url=http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2005/aug/05/hydrogen-result-causes-controversy|title=Hydrogen result causes controversy |publisher=Institute of Physics |work=] |date=August 5, 2005 }}

* {{cite journal |url=http://www.popsci.com/gear-gadgets/article/2003-06/blue-light-special |title=Blue Light Special |periodical=Popular Science |date=June 2, 2003}}

* {{cite book |first=Robert L. |last=Park |chapter=The Alchemists Of Energy |periodical=]|date=May 15, 2000 |title=Voodoo Science |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/voodooscienceroa00park |chapter-url-access=registration |isbn=0-19-514710-3 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=New York}}
==External links==
* {{cite news |url=https://www.cjr.org/the_observatory/weird_science_reporting.php |title=Weird Science (Reporting) – CNN covers unfounded claims about new energy technology |publisher=] |last=Raeburn |first=Paul |date=December 15, 2008}}
===Advocacy===
*, corporate website.
* (HSG) website

===Critical===

* from Bob Park's newsletter ''What's New'', January 13, 2006
* , ''What's New'', June 21, 2002
* , ''What's New'', September 6, 2002

===General media===
*'''', from , August 5, 2005
* , Kathleen McGinn Spring, '']'', January 20, 1999
*'''', ], May 15, 2000. &mdash; offers excerpts from ]'s book ''Voodoo Science'', ISBN 0-19-514710-3
*'''', ], May 17, 2000
*'''' ], January 4, 2006
* {{cite web |url= http://www.villagevoice.com/news/9951,baard,11218,1.html |title= Quantum Leap |author= Erik Baard |work= ] |date= ] ] }}
* {{cite web |url= http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0017,baard,14377,1.html |title= The Empire Strikes Back |author= Erik Baard |work= ] |date= ] ] }}
* {{cite web |url= http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2005/nov/04/energy.science |title= Fuel's paradise? Power source that turns physics on its head |author= Alok Jha |work= ] |date= ] ] }}

==References==
<references />


] ]
] ]
]

]
]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 22:31, 10 November 2024

Company based in Cranbury, New Jersey

Brilliant Light Power, Inc.
FoundedHydroCatalysis Inc. in 1991.
FounderRandell L. Mills
Headquarters493 Old Trenton Rd.
Cranbury Township, New Jersey, USA
Number of employees22 fulltime, 8 consultants
Subsidiaries"Millsian, Inc".
WebsiteBrilliantLightPower.com

Brilliant Light Power, Inc. (BLP), formerly BlackLight Power, Inc. of Cranbury, New Jersey, is a company founded by Randell L. Mills, who claims to have discovered a new energy source from what he says is the electron in a hydrogen atom dropping below its ground energy state into a "hydrino state". The claims lack corroborating scientific evidence and the proposed hydrino states are unphysical and incompatible with key equations of quantum mechanics. BLP has announced several times that it was about to deliver commercial products based on Mill's theories but has never delivered any working product.

Mills has self-published a closely related book, The Grand Unified Theory of Classical Physics and has co-authored numerous articles on hydrino-related phenomena. Critical analyses have been published in the peer reviewed journals Physics Letters A, New Journal of Physics, Journal of Applied Physics, and Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics. In 2009, IEEE Spectrum magazine characterized it as a "loser" technology because "most experts don't believe such lower states exist, and they say the experiments don't present convincing evidence" and mentioned that physicist Wolfgang Ketterle had said the claims are "nonsense".

Company

The company, originally called HydroCatalysis Inc., was founded in 1991 by Randell Mills who claimed to have discovered a power source that "represents a boundless form of new primary energy" and that will "replace all forms of fuel in the world". On April 25, 1991 at a press conference in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Mills first announced his hydrino state hypothesis which rejects the idea that "cold fusion" was occurring in studies surrounding the Fleischmann–Pons experiment. According to Mills all the effects (which themselves were disputed to be unreproducible) were caused by shrinkage of hydrogen atoms as they fell to a state below the ground state. Arguments offered by Mills were in contradiction to known chemistry and were dismissed by the scientific community.

By December 1999, BLP raised more than $25 million from about 150 investors. By January 2006, BLP funding exceeded $60 million.

Among the investors are PacifiCorp, Conectiv, retired executives from Morgan Stanley and several BLP board members like Shelby Brewer who was the top nuclear official for the Reagan Administration and Chief Executive Officer of ABB-Combustion Engineering Nuclear Power and former board member Michael H. Jordan (1936 – 2010), who was Chief Executive Officer of PepsiCo Worldwide Foods, Westinghouse Electric Corporation, CBS Corporation and Electronic Data Systems.

In 2008, Mills said that his cell stacks could provide power for long-range electric vehicles, and that this electricity would cost less than 2 cents per kilowatt-hour.

In December 2013, BLP was one of 54 applicants to receive ~$1.1M in grant funding from the New Jersey Economic Development Authority.

Collaborators with the company

In 1996, NASA released a report describing experiments using a BLP electrolytic cell. Although not recreating the large heat gains reported for the cell by BLP, unexplained power gains ranging from 1.06 to 1.68 of the input power were reported, which, whilst "...admit the existence of an unusual source of heat with the cell...falls far short of being compelling". The authors went on to propose the recombination of hydrogen and oxygen as a possible explanation of the anomalous results.

Around 2002, the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC) granted a Phase I grant to Anthony Marchese, a mechanical engineer at Rowan University, to study a possible rocket propulsion that would use hydrinos.

In 2002, Rowan University's Anthony Marchese said that whilst "agnostic about the existence of hydrinos", he was quite confident that there was no fraud involved with BLP. Although his NIAC grant was criticised by Bob Park, Marchese said "for me to not continue with this study would be unethical to the scientific community. The only reason not to pursue this would be because of being afraid of being bullied."

Criticism

In 1999, the Nobel prize winning physicist Philip Warren Anderson said he is "sure that it's a fraud", and in the same year another Nobel prize winning physicist, Steven Chu, called it "extremely unlikely". The following year, a 2000 patent based on its hydrino-related technology was later withdrawn by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) due to contradictions with known physics laws and other concerns about the viability of the described processes, citing Park and others.

A hydrino laser patent and a hydrino energy patent have not been withdrawn by the USPTO.US 7773656 US 10443139 

An April 2000 editorial column by Robert L. Park and an outside query by an unknown person prompted Group Director Esther Kepplinger of the USPTO to review this new patent herself. Kepplinger said that her "main concern was the proposition that the applicant was claiming the electron going to a lower orbital in a fashion that I knew was contrary to the known laws of physics and chemistry", and that the patent appeared to involve cold fusion and perpetual motion. Kepplinger contacted another Director, Robert Spar, who also expressed doubts on the patentability of the patent application. This caused the USPTO to withdraw from issue the patent application before it was granted and re-open it for review, and to withdraw four related applications, including one for a hydrino power plant.

In 2000, a law firm engaged by BLP sent letters to four prominent physicists asking them to stop making what it called "defamatory comments". The physicists had been quoted in the Village Voice, Dow Jones Newswire and other publications as dismissing BLP's claims on the basis that they violated the laws of physics. In response, one of the physicists, Robert L. Park of the American Physical Society, said that if BLP sued, he was confident the scientific community would lend its support and that the court would side with the physicists. Park later wrote that a number of the recipients of the letter, who had "responded honestly to questions from the media", had since fallen silent. Scientists, Park wrote, are easy to intimidate since they are not rich enough to risk costly legal actions.

In May 2000, BLP filed suit in the US District Court of Columbia, saying that withdrawal of the application after the company had paid the fee was contrary to law. In 2002, the District Court concluded that the USPTO was acting inside the limits of its authority in withdrawing a patent over whose validity it had doubts, and later that year, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ratified this decision. Applications were rejected by the UK patent office for similar reasons. The European Patent Office (EPO) rejected a similar BLP patent application due to lack of clarity on how the process worked. Reexamination of this European patent is pending.

Robert L. Park, emeritus professor of physics at the University of Maryland and a notable skeptic, has been particularly critical of BLP since 1991. By 2000, Park remained skeptical, stating:

"Unlike most schemes for free energy, the hydrino process of Randy Mills is not without ample theory. Mills has written a 1000 page tome, entitled, "The Grand Unified Theory of Classical Quantum Mechanics", that takes the reader all the way from hydrinos to antigravity. Fortunately, Aaron Barth has taken upon himself to look through it, checking for accuracy. Barth is a post doctoral researcher at the Harvard–Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, and holds a PhD in Astronomy, 1998, from UC Berkeley. What he found initially were mathematical blunders and unjustified assumptions. To his surprise, however, portions of the book seemed well organized. These, it now turns out, were lifted verbatim from various texts. This has been the object of a great deal of discussion from Mills' Hydrino Study Group. "Mills seems not to understand what the fuss is all about." – Park

By 2008, Park continued to express his skepticism:

"BlackLight Power (BLP), founded 17 years ago as HydroCatalysis, announced last week that the company had successfully tested a prototype power system that would generate 50 KW of thermal power. BLP anticipates delivery of the new power system in 12 to 18 months. The BLP process, discovered by Randy Mills, is said to coax hydrogen atoms into a "state below the ground state", called the "hydrino". There is no independent scientific confirmation of the hydrino, and BLP has a patent problem. So they have nothing to sell but bull shit. The company is therefore dependent on investors with deep pockets and shallow brains." – Park

In 2008, Robert L. Park wrote that BLP has benefited from wealthy investors who allocate a proportion of their funds to risky ventures with a potentially huge upside, but that in the case of BLP since the science underlying the offering was "just wrong" investment risk was, in Park's view, "infinite".

Various scientists also voiced their opinions as far back as the 1990s. Steven Chu, Nobel Laureate in Physics in 1997, said "it's extremely unlikely that this is real, and I feel sorry for the funders, the people who are backing this". In 1999, Princeton University's physics Nobel laureate Phillip Anderson said of it, "If you could fuck around with the hydrogen atom, you could fuck around with the energy process in the sun. You could fuck around with life itself." "Everything we know about everything would be a bunch of nonsense. That's why I'm so sure that it's a fraud." Wolfgang Ketterle, a professor of physics at MIT, said BLP's claims are "nonsense" and that "there is no state of hydrogen lower than the ground state". Michio Kaku, a theoretical physicist based at City University of New York, adds that "the only law that this business with Mills is proving is that a fool and his money are easily parted." and that "There's a sucker born every minute." While Peter Zimmerman was chief arms-control scientist at the State Department, he stated that his department and the Patent Office "have fought back with success" against "pseudoscientists" and he railed against, among other things, the inventors of "hydrinos". In 2009, the editors of IEEE Spectrum magazine characterized it as a "loser" technology because "ost experts don't believe such lower states exist, and they say the experiments don't present convincing evidence" and mentioned that Wolfgang Ketterle had said the claims are "nonsense". BLP has announced several times that it was about to deliver commercial products based on Mill's theories but has not delivered a working product.

Mark Chu-Carroll a science blogger and professional software engineer accused Mills of engaging in a scam: "Mills... is getting investors to give him money, promising that whatever they invest, they'll get back manifold when he starts selling hydrino power generators! He promises they'll be on market within a year or two – five at most! Then he comes up with either a demonstration, or the testimonial from his neighbor, or the self-publication of his book, or another press release talking about the newest version of his technology..... It's been going on for almost 25 years, this constant cycle of press release/demo/testimonial every couple of years.... claims from 2009 claiming commercialization within 12 to 18 months; from 2005 claiming commercialization within months; and claims from 1999 claiming commercialization within a year.... But he always comes up with an excuse why those deadlines needed to be missed. And he always manages to find more investors, willing to hand over millions of dollars. As long as suckers are still willing to give him money, why wouldn't he keep on making claims?"

Scientific American reported that in 2014, Mills was asked by an interested follower if he had ever isolated hydrinos and, in spite of previous claims, Mills said that he had not and that it would be “a really, really huge task.” The interlocutor pointed out that if hydrinos were being produced at the rate Mills claimed, there would be obvious observations. Moreover, there was no sign of progress, “Every year they make up half the remaining distance to commercialization, but will they ever get there?”

In 2015, an energy analyst writing for Forbes noted that Mills had made numerous extraordinary and difficult-to-believe claims including that he had "refuted quantum mechanics, can explain “mysteries of the sun” and has identified dark energy. His inventions can: produce power very cheaply through “’shrinking’ the hydrogen atom's orbitsphere” with a power density of 100 billion watts per liter. Additionally, the materials created can act as an explosive or propellant, make ships rustproof and endowed with stealth properties, produce an anti-gravity effect that will allow a vessel to elevate, and “form the basis of batteries the size of a briefcase to drive your car 1000 miles at highway speeds on a single charge.”"

Peer-reviewed criticisms

In the 2000s, several reviewed articles were published criticizing Hydrino theory for being incompatible with Quantum Mechanics.

For example, in 2005, Andreas Rathke of the European Space Agency, publishing in the New Journal of Physics, wrote that Mills' description of quantum mechanics is "inconsistent and has several serious deficiencies", and that there is "no theoretical support of the hydrino hypothesis". Rathke said it would be helpful if Mills' experimental results could be independently replicated, and suggested that any evidence produced should be reconsidered in the context of a conventional physical explanation. One inconsistency of Mills' CQM with quantum mechanics regards its inability to be reconciled with the probability density function in quantum mechanics. Rathke stated, "However, while solutions of the Schrödinger equation with n<1 indeed exist, they are not square integrable. This violates not only an axiom of quantum mechanics, but in practical terms prohibits that these solutions can in any way describe the probability density of a particle." In the same year, the Journal of Applied Physics published a critique by A.V. Phelps of the 2004 article, "Water bath calorimetric study of excess heat generation in resonant transfer plasmas" by J. Phillips, R. Mills and X. Chen. Phelps criticized both the calorimetric techniques and the underlying theory described in the Phillips/Mills/Chen article. The journal also published a response to Phelps' critique on the same day. In 2005 Šišović and others published a paper describing experimental data and analysis of Mills' claim that a resonant transfer model (RTM) explains the excessive Doppler broadening of the Hα line. Šišović concluded that: "The detected large excessive broadening in pure hydrogen and in Ne–H2 mixture is in agreement with CM and other experimental results" and that "these results can't be explained by RTM". The collision model explanation for excessive broadening of the Hα line is based on established physics.

In 2006, a paper published in Physics Letters A, concluded that Mills' theoretical hydrino states are unphysical. For the hydrino states, the binding strength increases as the strength of the electric potential decreases, with maximum binding strength when the potential has disappeared completely. The author Norman Dombey remarked "We could call these anomalous states "homeopathic" states because the smaller the coupling, the larger the effect." The model also assumes that the nuclear charge distribution is a point rather than having an arbitrarily small non-zero radius. It also lacks an analogous solution in the Schrödinger equation, which governs non-relativistic systems. Dombey concluded: "We suggest that outside of science fiction this is sufficient reason to disregard them." From a suggestion in Dombey's paper, further work by Antonio Di Castro has shown that states below the ground state, as described in Mills' work, are incompatible with the Schrödinger, Klein–Gordon and Dirac equations, key equations in the study of quantum systems.

In 2008, the Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics published an article by Hans-Joachim Kunze, professor emeritus at the Institute for Experimental Physics, Ruhr University Bochum, critical of the 2003 paper authored by R. Mills and P. Ray, Extreme ultraviolet spectroscopy of heliumhydrogen. The abstract of the article is: "It is suggested that spectral lines, on which the fiction of fractional principal quantum numbers in the hydrogen atom is based, are nothing else but artefacts." Kunze stated that it was impossible to detect the novel lines below 30 nm reported by Mills and Ray because the equipment they used did not have the capability to detect them as per the manufacturer and as per "every book on vacuum-UV spectroscopy" and "therefore the observed lines must be artefacts". Kunze also stated that: "The enormous spectral widths of the novel lines point to artefacts, too."

See also

References

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  3. "BlackLight Power Company Facilities". BlackLight Power. Retrieved January 18, 2016.
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