Proton 21 lab: Difference between revisions

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Proton 21 lab is a topic appearing in the source material in connection with reported experiments, observations, devices, or theoretical interpretations.
Proton 21 lab is described in LENR research discussions as a former Soviet isotopic facility near Kyiv, Ukraine, associated with experiments using intense discharges into metals.
 
Proton 21 lab is described in the source material as a former Soviet isotopic facility near Kyiv, Ukraine, associated with experiments using intense discharges into metals.


==LENR context==
==LENR context==


The source material links Proton 21 to work between 2000 and 2006 involving ceramic dielectric barrier discharges, momentary charge storage in metals, reported emissions, and transmutation claims. It appears in the dataset as part of a research thread connecting disruptive discharge methods, Stanislav Adamenko, and LENR-related material changes.
Proton 21 is connected to work between 2000 and 2006 involving ceramic dielectric barrier discharges, momentary charge storage in metals, reported emissions, and transmutation claims. It appears as part of a research thread connecting disruptive discharge methods, Stanislav Adamenko, and LENR-related material changes.


==Related topics==
==Related topics==
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* [[Transmutation]]
* [[Transmutation]]


==Source dataset==
==Source==


* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gW0JPZedjXM
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gW0JPZedjXM

Latest revision as of 05:23, 2 June 2026

Proton 21 lab is described in LENR research discussions as a former Soviet isotopic facility near Kyiv, Ukraine, associated with experiments using intense discharges into metals.

LENR context

Proton 21 is connected to work between 2000 and 2006 involving ceramic dielectric barrier discharges, momentary charge storage in metals, reported emissions, and transmutation claims. It appears as part of a research thread connecting disruptive discharge methods, Stanislav Adamenko, and LENR-related material changes.

Related topics

Source