I am not sure if it's relevant or what it's worth, but in the following
paper -
Anomalous Nuclear Phenomena Assocoated with Ultrafast Processes
www.iscmns.org/asti06/jianglaoshi2.pdf
- the authors speculate on whether the concept of torsion field
contributes to the LENR phenomena they observed
This is an absolutely fascinating hypothesis, Lou - yet it so intricately
complex that it would be a surprise if more than a few multi-disciplinary
thinkers will invest the time and study necessary to grasp the ultimate
significance.
DNA, proteins, amino acids - all of the important molecules of
What I am curious about is whether the reduced radioactivity that
Reifenschweiler observed for tritium and heavier nuclei meant that the
radioactive decays were actually suppressed, or that the energetic decay
products were thermalized in the small monocrystalline particles via some
hypothetical
.
Regards
Fran
·
Re: [Vo]:Overview of (Ahern) Vibronic Energy Technologies Approach
Axil Axil
Thu, 24 Nov 2011 00:00:11 -0800
What I am curious about is whether the reduced radioactivity that
Reifenschweiler observed for tritium and heavier nuclei meant
.[/snip] but remain uncertain
if this effect can occur with only atomic hydrogen or if it needs the condensed
form of hydrogen to occur.
Regards
Fran
*
Re: [Vo]:Overview of (Ahern) Vibronic Energy Technologies Approach
Axil Axil
Thu, 24 Nov 2011 00:00:11 -0800
What I am curious about
Thanks Axil, Fran, Jones,
- for lots of intriguing information.
You have put lot of effort into this.
On the quantum entanglement/nonlocality issue - possibly relevant is:
Undetectable quantum transfer through a continuum
http://arxiv.org/abs/1106.2901 - but interesting even if not.
The Ni-64
Francis, Axil,
What I am curious about is whether the reduced radioactivity that
Reifenschweiler observed for tritium and heavier nuclei meant that the
radioactive decays were actually suppressed, or that the energetic decay
products were thermalized in the small monocrystalline particles via
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