Something you see on an X-ray film must happen quite often. The real mystery radiation look like a neutral particle with much higher energy in the 32MeV range. The other is the 3.5keV peek from "may be" dark matter.

This can easily be derived from 500eV together with the energy of the second proton magnetic momentum collapse step that delivers 4034 eV This energy can only be transported by a local electron at a -500eV orbit so it results in 3.5kev. Remember that dense hydrogen forms clusters.

J.W.

By the way Mills has the best measurement tools for all frequency/Energy ranges also for 1 ...1000eV !



Am 25.10.19 um 16:54 schrieb Jones Beene:
 Jürg Wyttenbach wrote:

+ R.Mills 505/496eV (inside his business reports...)
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OK but are you suggesting this ~500 eV level is a good candidate for the characteristic mystery radiation?

Unless RM has changed course - this level could be an ultimate theoretical stage of shrinkage but not a characteristic of any particular device. Plus it is in a range which is difficult to detect due to lack of proper instrumentation. The difficulty of identifying a characteristic energy spectrum in general  (a so-called mystery radiation) based on Mills would exist because there are actually no peaks in practice but instead a graph of step-wise noise punctuated with periodic drop-offs ... and to make things worse, all emissions are thermalized rapidly. Thus you have a large overlapping array of output levels which can show up as fogging on film but further analysis is nearly impossible. For Mills of course - actual fusion is not expected (or common).











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