Jones--

Well I think the magnetic properties are most important, since large magnetic fields are allowed along with the allowable spin quantum states and the various (higher) energy states associated with such a system.

Bob

-----Original Message----- From: Jones Beene
Sent: Monday, February 17, 2014 7:45 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Vo]:Re: The Rossi effect as an Inverted Mossbauer Effect

-----Original Message-----
From: Bob Cook

Jones-- You sound like you must be Dan Brown in real life.

Well, Bob - if I was getting royalties from Di Vinci code, they would go to
solving the Rossi code...

BTW - Blaze wants to know: what is "real life"? :-)

Jones


Worth repeating for those who do not appreciate the significance (of what
could be the unholy grail of new energy).

The 7 physical anomalies of nickel which could be related to LENR.

1) It is ferromagnetic - one of three elements

2) Has a Mossbauer isotope

3) Has the heaviest ratio stable isotope in the P.T. for nuclei containing
neutrons (as a % of the amu of the most common isotope of that element -
Ni-58 vs Ni-64) - a singularity

4) The main isotope is lower amu than a lower z element (Ni-58 is lower amu
than Cobalt) which is extremely rare in the P.T.

5) Has the highest innate stability isotope (Ni-62 has highest binding
energy per nucleon in the PT 8.8 MeV) - a singularity

6) Has an unstable isotope with gammaless EC decay- very rare

7) Has adjoining Rydberg levels in electron orbital ionization potentials -
one of three elements ... and curiously the other two are also
ferromagnetic.

Could this combination be coincidental to the Rossi effect?

Is there a common denominator in the this range of properties... such as
spin?

BTW - an associate has told me that nickel is one of two elements in the PT
with two isotopes which are "double magic" Ni-56 and Ni-48, but because
neither of these are stable, it was deemed to be not important to LENR -
only further proof of nickel's oddities.


Reply via email to