>>>> Say... maybe I should rush this idea off to USPTO : Too late, you made
this prior art by posting it on this public reflector.


On Fri, Jun 17, 2016 at 1:03 AM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> -----Original Message-----
> From: mix...@bigpond.com
>
> > Could that happen? Hope not, since its more than all the nukes in
> everyone's arsenal. Could a gram of anything spell the end of everything.
> that is the big scare.
>
> >> Probably not, since, as you have previously pointed out, enriched Ni62
> is
> available for purchase, and hence 13 Ni62 atoms have already been assembled
> in billions of crystals, without dire consequence.
>
> Yes, Robin - but perhaps the normal use of the isotope as an accelerator
> target is not sufficient to achieve a transition to the super-Higgs. As you
> say, an anomaly would have been seen. Has anyone added cryogenics?
>
> It could require the condensate in order to make the transition, and not
> just the BEC but also an source of very sharp implosion such as a chirped
> laser pulse. Otherwise, someone would have noticed some anomaly with it
> already, since the use of the isotope itself is fairly common in medicine.
>
> One suggestion to test the possibility would be fabrication of a laser
> target composed only of the Ni-62 isotope, possibly plated into a hohlraum
> -
> which is brought to near absolute zero in temperature - and thus the nickel
> is in the condensed state to begin with. Magnetization could help to
> achieve
> the BEC.
>
> Say... maybe I should rush this idea off to USPTO.
>
>

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