RE: [Vo]:Is the proton friable?

2016-04-20 Thread Jones Beene
Bob, Here is more detail with a lot of reference which I am trying to wade through -- but you may find easier to navigate. https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Strong_gravitational_constant Obviously – if there were a solid case for this proposition, it would have gotten traction many

Re: [Vo]:Is the proton friable?

2016-04-20 Thread Bob Higgins
After having read Dufour's paper, it appears that it is complete hypothesis on the basis of the fact that the other forces seem to converge in magnitude at a sub-nuclear scale - so why shouldn't gravitation? He presents no apparent data that his hypothesis has any basis. Gravitation would have

Re: [Vo]:Is the proton friable?

2016-04-19 Thread Axil Axil
Bob Higgins question about the size of the hydrogen bonds in metalized hydrogen might be best seen in the light of how a snowflake formed from a seed. The seed around which a snowflake gets it structure can be microscopic in size and yet provide the snowflake with all the instructions it needs to

RE: [Vo]:Is the proton friable?

2016-04-18 Thread Jones Beene
One other thought about Dufour’s hypothesis of a VERY SIZEABLE INCREASE OF GRAVITATION AT PICOMETER DISTANCE (on the order of Coulomb repulsion). This provides the effective pressure, on the order of hundreds of gigapascals, which is required for the known version of metallic hydrogen. The

RE: [Vo]:Is the proton friable?

2016-04-18 Thread Russ George
://atom-ecology.russgeorge.net/2016/04/18/cold-kaon-fusion/ From: Bob Higgins [mailto:rj.bob.higg...@gmail.com] Sent: Monday, April 18, 2016 2:03 PM To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Subject: Re: [Vo]:Is the proton friable? One of the things I don't get about Holmilid's theory for RM formation

Re: [Vo]:Is the proton friable?

2016-04-18 Thread Axil Axil
Mesoscopic Rydberg-blockaded ensembles in the superatom regime and beyond - T. M. Weber , - M. Höning , - T. Niederprüm

Re: [Vo]:Is the proton friable?

2016-04-18 Thread Bob Higgins
One of the things I don't get about Holmilid's theory for RM formation is that the small RM cluster has a 150pm atomic separation, or about 300pm radius. The Fe-K Fischer-Tropsch catalysts typically have pore diameters of 10-20nm, or nearly 100 times the size of the already huge RM cluster. How

Re: [Vo]:Is the proton friable?

2016-04-18 Thread Axil Axil
On Mon, Apr 18, 2016 at 1:05 PM, Jones Beene wrote: > *From:* Bob Higgins > > Ø What you describe is certainly an interesting and scary > proposition - that protons could be sheared or broken apart. However, it > is hard to imagine a number of thing in this hypothesis

RE: [Vo]:Is the proton friable?

2016-04-18 Thread Jones Beene
Bob, There is one other paper I keep forgetting to bring into this discussion on ultra-dense hydrogen. It is Dufour’s brilliant hypothesis of a VERY SIZEABLE INCREASE OF GRAVITATION AT PICOMETER DISTANCE http://www.iscmns.org/asti06/J-DUFOUR%20-%20ASTI%20PRESENTATION%20-%202006.pdf This can

RE: [Vo]:Is the proton friable?

2016-04-18 Thread Jones Beene
From: Bob Higgins * What you describe is certainly an interesting and scary proposition - that protons could be sheared or broken apart. However, it is hard to imagine a number of thing in this hypothesis and that of Olafssen/Holmlid. First of all, where did the potential energy come

Re: [Vo]:Is the proton friable?

2016-04-18 Thread Bob Higgins
Hi Jones, What you describe is certainly an interesting and scary proposition - that protons could be sheared or broken apart. However, it is hard to imagine a number of thing in this hypothesis and that of Olafssen/Holmlid. First of all, where did the potential energy come from to put two

[Vo]:Is the proton friable?

2016-04-18 Thread Jones Beene
fri.a.ble is an adjective meaning "brittle" or easily broken - having little to do with applied heating, as would be expected of "fry-able" if it were a word. Actually "friable" can have something to do with lack of heat, in practice. A few of the toughest steels become friable at low temperature