Scientists must Study the Nuclear Weak Force to Better Understand LENR

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By Daily Energy Report | Tue, 07 May 2013 21:33 |

In the early part of the 20th Century physicists theorized that a
mysterious force held the nucleus of an atom together.  When it was
demonstrated that this force could be tapped, releasing tremendous amounts
of energy, a wave of excitement swept the scientific world.  It took only a
few short years before atomic energy theories were experimentally validated
in the first nuclear weapon detonations.  Hiroshima and Nagasaki followed.
Most of us alive today were born under the mushroom cloud that has loomed
over humanity ever since.  Accessing the power of the strong nuclear force
has been a mixed blessing:  it has brought the possibility of energy beyond
our wildest dreams but with nightmarish consequences that were literally
unimaginable a generation ago.

That physicists would become enamored of the strong nuclear force is
understandable:  the energy locked in the nucleus of the atom is potent, it
is real, and the challenge of harnessing it for useful purposes has become
the “holy grail” of scientific endeavor.

But could another, more subtle, “fundamental force” hold the key to our
energy future?

The Fundamental Forces of Nature and the Weak Force

Of the four fundamental forces (gravity, electromagnetism, strong nuclear
force and weak nuclear force), the “weak force” is the most enigmatic.
Whereas the other three forces act through attraction/repulsion mechanisms,
the weak force is responsible for transmutations – changing one element
into another – and incremental shifts between mass and energy at the
nuclear level.

Simply put, the weak force is the way Nature seeks stability.  Stability at
the nuclear level permits elements to form, which make up all of the
familiar stuff of our world.  Without the stabilizing action of the weak
force, the material world, including our physical bodies, would not exist.
The weak force is responsible for the radioactive decay of heavy
(radioactive) elements into their lighter, more stable forms.  But the weak
force is also at work in the formation of the lightest of elements,
hydrogen and helium, and all the elements in between.

A good way to understand the weak force is in comparison with the actions
of the other forces at work in the center of the Sun.  The Sun, although
extraordinarily hot (10 million degrees), is cool enough for the
constituent parts of matter, quarks, to clump together to form protons.  A
proton is necessary to form an element, which occurs when it attracts an
electron – the simplest case being hydrogen, which is composed of a single
proton and a single electron.  By the force of gravity, protons are pulled
together until two of them touch – but because of the electrostatic
repulsion of their two positive charges, their total energy becomes
unstable and one of the protons undergoes a form of radioactive decay,
turning it into a neutron and emitting a positron (the antiparticle of an
electron) and a neutrino.  This action forms a deuteron (one proton and one
neutron), which is more stable than the two repelling protons.  This
transmutation of proton into neutron plus beta particles is mediated by the
weak force.

Related article: Nuclear Fusion – Possible at Last?
A neutron is slightly heavier, and therefore less stable, than a proton.
So the normal action of the weak force causes a neutron to decay into a
proton, an electron and a neutrino.  At any rate, at the center of the Sun,
once a deuteron is formed, it will fuse with another free proton to form
helium-3 (one neutron and two protons), releasing tremendous amounts of
energy.  These helium-3 atoms then fuse to form helium-4 and releasing two
more protons and more energy.  The release of energy in these fusion
reactions from the strong force is what powers the Sun.  But the entire
process is set in motion by the weak force.

Enter “Cold Fusion”

When in 1989 Pons and Fleishman stunned the world by reporting nuclear
reaction signatures at room temperatures, physicists were understandably
baffled and skeptical.  Given that virtually all nuclear physicists at the
time were trained in the powerful energies of the strong force, table top
fusion made no sense.  The fact that the phenomenon was dubbed “cold
fusion” was unfortunate and likely contributed to almost universal
rejection by the scientific community.  Standard theoretical models were
not able to explain how cold fusion might even be possible and unless it
could be understood it was pointless and a waste of time.  A comment
attributed to Wolfgang Pauli describes the reaction of most physicists at
the time: “it’s not right; it’s not even wrong”.  Without a coherent theory
to explain it, it wasn’t even science at all.

This all changed in 2006 with the publication of a paper in the
peer-reviewed The European Physical Journal by Allan Widom and Louis Larsen
titled “Ultra low momentum neutron catalyzed nuclear reactions on metallic
hydride surfaces”.

In this paper for the first time a theoretical basis was put forth that
explained many of the anomalous results being reported by experimentalists
in the new field of Low Energy Nuclear Reactions (LENR) – and the common
explanatory action was the weak force.

As explained by Dennis Bushnell, Chief Scientist at NASA Langley Research
Center in his article “Low Energy Nuclear Reactions, the Realism and the
Outlook”:

“The Strong Force Particle physicists have evidently been correct all
along. “Cold Fusion” is not possible. However, via collective effects/
condensed matter quantum nuclear physics, LENR is allowable without any
“miracles.” The theory states that once some energy is added to surfaces
loaded with hydrogen/protons, if the surface morphology enables high
localized voltage gradients, then heavy electrons leading to ultra low
energy neutrons will form– neutrons that never leave the surface. The
neutrons set up isotope cascades which result in beta decay, heat and
transmutations with the heavy electrons converting the beta decay gamma
into heat.”

Brief Description of Widom-Larsen Theory

Not everyone agrees that the Widom-Larsen Theory (“WLT”) accurately
explains all, or even most, of the observed phenomenon in LENR
experiments.  But it is worth a brief look at what WLT proposes.

In the first step of WLT, a proton captures a charged lepton (an electron)
and produces a neutron and a neutrino.  No Coulomb barrier inhibits the
reaction.  In fact, a strong Coulomb attraction that can exist between an
electron and a nucleus helps the nuclear transmutation proceed.

This process is well known to occur with muons, a type of lepton that can
be thought of as very heavy electrons – the increased mass is what pulls
the lepton into the nucleus.  For this to occur with electrons in a
condensed matter hydrogen system, local electromagnetic field fluctuations
are induced to increase the mass of the electron.  Thus, a “mass modified”
hydrogen atom can decay into a neutron and a neutrino.  These neutrons are
born with ultra low momentum and, because of their long wavelength, get
caught in the cavity formed by oscillating protons in the metal lattice.


These ultra low momentum neutrons, which do not escape the immediate
vicinity of the cavity and are therefore difficult to detect, yield
interesting reaction sequences.  For example, helium-3 and helium-4 are
produced often yielding large quantities of heat.  WLT refers to these as
neutron catalyzed nuclear reactions.  As Dennis Bushnell explains:  “the
neutrons set up isotope cascades which result in beta decay, heat and
transmutations.”  Nuclear fusion does not occur and therefore there is no
Coulomb barrier obstruction to the resulting neutron catalyzed nuclear
reaction.

Brief Description of Brillouin Theory

Robert Godes of Brillouin Energy Corp., claims that WLT explains some, but
not all, of the observed LENR phenomena.  As Godes understands the process,
metal hydrides stimulated with precise, narrow, high voltage, bipolar pulse
frequencies (“Q-pulse”) cause protons or deuterons to undergo electron
capture.  The metal lattice stimulation by the Q-pulse reverses the natural
decay of neutrons to protons, plus beta particles, catalyzing an electron
capture in a first endothermic step.  When the initial proton (or deuteron)
is confined in the metal lattice and the total Hamiltonian (total energy of
the system) reaches a certain threshold level by means of the Q-pulse
stimulation, an ultra cold neutron is formed.  This ultra cold neutron
occupies a position in the lattice where dissolved hydrogen tunnels and
undergoes transmutation, forming a cascade of transmutations – deuteron,
triton, quadrium – by capturing the cold neutron and releasing binding
energy.  Such a cascading reaction will result in a beta decay
transmutation to helium-4, plus heat.

The Q pulse causes a dramatic increase of the phonon activity, driving the
system far out of equilibrium.  When this energy reaches a threshold level,
neutron production via electron capture becomes a natural path to bring the
system back to stability.

Theory and Experiment

Other well-known LENR theorists have implicated the weak force, including
Peter Hagelstein, Tadahiko Mizuno, Yasuhiro Iwamura and Mitchell Swartz.
The project now, as with all scientific endeavor, is to match experimental
evidence to theory.  The hope is that the electron capture/weak force
theories will help guide new, even more successful experiments.  This
process will also allow theorists to add refinement and new thinking to
their models.  I am reminded of the two “laws” of physicists proposed by an
early weak force pioneer:

1. Without experimentalists, theorists tend to drift.
2. Without theorists, experimentalists tend to falter.
(T.D. Lee, as quoted in “The Weak Force: From Fermi to Feynman” by A.
Lesov).

Experimentalists have been reporting anomalous heat from metal hydrides
since before Pons and Fleischmann.  But without a cogent theory, they have
had to rely on ad hoc, trial and error methods.  Given this state of
affairs, the progress made in the LENR field in the last twenty years is
remarkable.  Perhaps we are now at the beginning of a new era in which
theoretical models will guide a rapid transformation of the science.

Conclusion

Scientists have focused on the strong nuclear force due to the immense
power that can be released from breaking the nuclear bond.  Less attention
has been paid to the weak force, which causes transmutations and the
release of energy in more subtle ways.  Recent theories that explain many
of the phenomena observed in low energy nuclear reactions (LENR) implicate
the weak force.  We are now at the stage where theory and experiment begin
to complement each other to allow for the rapid transformation of the new
science of LENR.

By. David Niebauer

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