In reply to  Jones Beene's message of Sat, 27 Sep 2008 18:03:28 -0700 (PDT):
Hi,
[snip]
>The 'magic' if there is any, would be in the special properties of the BEC 
>state. If that state were to be strongly involved, then it is not simply 5 keV 
>used to push nuclei together, which want to repel - but it is more comparable 
>to 5 keV added to already superimposed nuclei, which is used to keep them in 
>that condition for long enough, in a phase transition, so that the lower 
>entropy alpha particle results in the ending nucleus, instead of the two 
>deuterons repelling.
>
>This could have been essentially unknown or unappreciated when the early atom 
>smashers were being designed... Or else - maybe that is for good reason. 
>Perhaps it is impossible to maintain such a required very hard vacuum in an 
>accelerator, such that the BEC state is maintained in an accelerated particle.

There is an early CF experiment where Pd/D(Or was that Al?) is bombarded with
fast electrons. That is almost a "turned around" version of what you want. IOW
iso accelerating the BEC and crashing it into something, accelerate the
"something" and crash it into the BEC. That is probably easier to do, as it
avoids your vacuum problem. For that matter, if BECs are forming in CF cathodes,
and fast particles are being generated by fusion events, then this is probably
already happening.
Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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