Jones,
Brightsen's Clustron Model of the nucleus also has antimatter in the nucleus.

I have pdf's of all his papers if anyone is interested.
Ron

--On Tuesday, October 06, 2015 5:58 PM -0700 Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote:


Of interest - wrt the "9 muon model" of the proton is an old paper
by Harold Aspen where he came up with the same conclusion.

http://www.aetherscience.org/www-aspden-org/books/Asp/1988c.pdf

Aspden missed the important detail about binding energy showing up as
mass deficit, but still it is more than coincidental to Stubb's model.

One more point for John Berry about antimatter and matter coexisting in
the nucleus without annihilating. It turns out that the standard model
of physics has the quark and antiquark coexisting without annihilation,
so there is an exact precedent for this, already in place and no good
reason the muon and antimuon cannot do the same.

I haven't had the time to review exactly how Don Hotson imagined the
proton to be constructed, but epo pairs are likely to be involved – so
here too we have a similar situation of bound matter and antimatter
showing up as building blocks. Stubbs mentions something like this in
one of his papers but rejects electrons in favor of muons, yet the muon
itself could be imagined to be 103 epos plus an electron .

Instead of "turtles all the way down"… it's looking more and
more like "leptons all the way down"

For the turtle challenged:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turtles_all_the_way_down



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