Mischugenons however unlike 'hydrinos' do produce irrefutable isotopic
shifts in recipient nuclei, though the quantity of shifted isotopes is much
lower than the apparent mischugenon flux as measured/inferred by the
resulting weak emissions! Perhaps a 'third' miracle is needed, oh shit, will
it ever all be revealed. 

-----Original Message-----
From: mix...@bigpond.com [mailto:mix...@bigpond.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 18, 2017 6:36 PM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: [Vo]:RE: [Vo]:Patent application by Lundin & Lidgren - nuclear
spallation and resonance

In reply to  Russ George's message of Wed, 18 Jan 2017 17:53:41 -0800:
Hi Russ,
[snip]
>Agreed that is the second miracle required! But is there any standing 
>reported evidence for strange mishugenonistic neutron resonance, aka 
>reflected neutrons, that subsequently behave in a manner effecting the 
>lack of 'energetic gamma'-less absorbing of neutrons save perhaps 
>invoking quasi-dark matter-like behavior, nah... ;) Perhaps said 
>resonant conditioned mischugenon/neutrons would behave somewhat like 
>normal neutrons and be captured preferentially by nuclei according to 
>their neutron capture cross-section resulting in only rather weak 
>emissions. Such beasties would be revealed by the pattern of measurable 
>though weak emissions increasing as they passed through thin foils of 
>metals with increasing neutron capture cross sections, I can live with that
:) That's a neat experiment and result!
>http://atom-ecology.russgeorge.net/2013/05/04/edward-teller/

Are you the "I" in this tale?

As for "mischugenons" they sound a lot like well shrunken Hydrinos. Not as
small as neutrons, so they penetrate the electron shells of atoms less
easily, and need to tunnel into the target nucleus, reducing the reaction
rate. When they merge with a target nucleus, the resultant energy can be
carried by the accompanying electron, or by the other proton if the initial
particle was a Hydrino molecule. The latter possibility in particular might
account for a considerable reduction in emitted gammas (by many orders of
magnitude).

Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html


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