This paper from Frank Dodd (Tony) Smith, could be called "the paper from
another planet"...or maybe it is Tony himself who is from another planet...
well, Georgia actually. His credentials are impressive.
I hope he applies his unique understanding of LENR specifically to the Mizuno
See:
https://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/thread/6017-mizuno-replication-and-materials-only/?postID=115073#post115073
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Fri, 19 Jul 2019 23:05:52 +0200:
Hi,
[snip]
>In nuclear transformation (LENR) D* adds like a double proton and H*
>adds like a neutron. That's what we see (exactly measure) from the gamma
>radiation signature of complex reactions.
Could you give a
In reply to JonesBeene's message of Fri, 19 Jul 2019 08:14:19 -0700:
Hi,
[snip]
>The energy release per atom would be useful, to narrow down the
>possibilities.
>
>Yes. No doubt this detail would be very useful to know, but is it even
>possible to know?
I think that with careful work, it is
Am 19.07.19 um 19:32 schrieb Jones Beene:
Which is to say: until we get mass spec readings for significant
amounts of helium after a long run, fusion remains just a fall-back
assumption based on old electrolysis results - and possibly
unjustified for anything else.
Surprisingly, even with a
The elements transmuted by the LENR reaction are usually calcium,
magnesium, sulfur, carbon, iron, aluminum. Helium is not usually found. In
nature, supernova nucleosynthesis: the nucleosynthesis of chemical
elements in supernova explosions are the usual nature generators of these
heavier
Jürg Wyttenbach wrote:
> In the Mizuno case we can exclude this behavior, as clustered D-D,
inside larger clusters, always will undergo fusion...
Always? ... doubt it. There is no evidence from Mizuno of helium and it makes
no sense to be dogmatic on the issue until evidence arrives.
Which
Jones—
I agree with your observation regarding multiple simultaneous events and the
apparent lack of the involvement of single nuclei in a LENR event.
Magnetic coupling between multiple particles (nucleons and atomic and or
plasmonic electrons or other magnetic dipoles) can allow sharing
Jurg-
Thanks for that instructive reference to the Berkley etal. Paper. It suggests
likely plasma LENFR mechanisms and connects metal hydride LENR with the Rossi,
Mills, ball lightening folks, etal. LENR like events. The list of
references is also revealing as to who is doing the
Am 19.07.19 um 17:14 schrieb JonesBeene:
There are other alternative mechanisms for gain not involving fusion.
These researchers also suggest or imply that clustering “alone” can
produce significant excess energy with no fusion and/or a delayed
nucleon annihilation event. Here, we
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAsceiIMY2I
The question is "how can microorganisms produce enough power to transmute
elements".
The answer to this question could involve a global Bose condensate (BEC)
that forms throughout the entire extent of the bug colony. This BEC
connects each bug through
“The energy release per atom would be useful, to narrow down the possibilities.”
Yes. No doubt this detail would be very useful to know, but is it even possible
to know?
Probably NOT as of now – since it makes a fundamental assumption which is not
proved.
That fundamental assumption is that
My criticism allows for such a possibility. Harry
On Wed., Jul. 17, 2019, 4:06 p.m. , wrote:
> In reply to H LV's message of Tue, 16 Jul 2019 19:49:22 -0400:
> Hi Harry,
>
> You are making the assumption that it actually has something to do with
> nuclear
> structure. However it is by no
If it can be exactly calculated, why do you say "about 500 eV"?
There are almost always different energies that couple. The formulas
give the exact energies for then individual contributions but depending
on the interaction you have to count in the change in charge induced
classic potential
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