Think of a big lightning ball floating inside that reactor creating
ionizing radiation and lots of heat.  I would think you would want to keep
it away from the walls of your reactor and maybe spark plug/instruments
else you will cook them.

On Thu, Aug 9, 2012 at 7:16 PM, David Roberson <dlrober...@aol.com> wrote:

> DGT mentioned that the reacting hydrogen electron was in the vicinity of
> the proton and nickel atom for a short time period during which the fusion
> occurred.  Does this match quantum physics theory?  I thought that there is
> no way to locate an electron at a particular time and that it is everywhere
> within its orbital all of the time.
>
> Perhaps they are adding support to classical physics in their
> description.  The other possibility is that they really do not understand
> the mechanism.  I bet on the later.
>
> It is interesting to see that DGT suggests that a magnetic field is
> important for the device operation just as I have suspected.
>
> Dave
>

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